April/May 1997 pg. 30
From the Israeli Press
Current Translations and Commentary From Hebrew-Language
Newspapers
by Dr. Israel Shahak
Maariv, Dec. 23, 1996, by Eli Kamir
The main headline of the Sunday Times (London)
yesterday said that since the 1970s the Israeli army has supplied
tons of hashish to soldiers of the Egyptian army.
This information aroused great interest in Egypt.
Even before the paper appeared, the SKY TV network quoted the main
headline of the Sunday Times. But as soon as the item was
published, all the main electronic media in the world began to quote
the story again and again, despite denials by the Israeli army spokesman.
In one of the most bizarre situations in the
Middle East conflict, wrote the Sunday Times on its
front page, Israel has flooded Egypt for decades with cheap
hashish. The goal was to drug Egyptian soldiers so that they would
be unable to fight effectively. The operation, so claimed
the Sunday Times, was called Operation Blade.
The most interesting part of the affair was that it was revealed
by the papers Israeli correspondent, Uzi Mahanaimi, the son
of Col. Gideon Mahanaimi who died of an untimely heart attack.1
According to Uzi Mahanaimi, for years many tons of hashish have
been smuggled from Lebanon to Egypt through Israel. He said he has
testimonies of eight Israeli officers, directly involved in Operation
Blade, on which the Sunday Times article was based.
The Israeli army spokesman has strongly denied these
allegations. Israeli army officers were never involved in
drug dealing, he said. The article claimed that Israel came
up with the idea for Operation Blade on the eve of the Six-Day War
when pressure from the Egyptian border increased on Israel.2
Since then, according to the Sunday Times, the Israeli army,
even after the signing of peace with Egypt in 1979, has continued
to supply hashish to Egyptian soldiers. Only in the late 1980s,
the paper added, did Israel end this operation.
I have no remorse for what was done, a
senior reserve officer who was in charge of military operations
of this nature in the 1970s told the Sunday Times. It
allowed us to control the inflow of drugs to Israel and to increase
drug use among the Egyptians....
According to the Sunday Times, in the 1960s,
the Israeli army still was making great efforts to seal the border
between Lebanon and Israel to hashish smuggling. The intention was
to close the border crossings and increase the naval patrols to
catch the shipments of hashish on Lebanese boats. But we quickly
understood, explained a senior Israeli reserve officer, that
we were missing a golden opportunity. We reached the conclusion
that we could obtain the drugs ourselves and transfer them to dealers
whom we favored to sell at low prices to Egyptian army staff. That
way, we believed, we would manage to weaken the Egyptian soldiers.
The proposal to use hashish for this purpose, said the mentioned
Israeli officer, passed through the entire chain of command and
was officially sanctioned.3 Operation Blade quickly began.
All financial profits it generated were transferred into a secret
Israeli army fund to be used for additional secret operations.
Despite denials of the Israeli army spokesman, the
Sunday Times has continued to insist that the facts are
correct. According to Mahanaimi, the officers admitted to him that
they had participated in the operation on orders from above and
not for personal gain....Among the officers who spoke with the papernone
of their names were publishedtwo are still serving in the
Israeli army. One of them told Mahanaimi that drugs smuggled from
Lebanon to Egypt were transferred in trucks driven by Israeli officers.
Another officer told the Sunday Times that he had sat in
a van next to a Lebanese drug dealer when the hashish was being
taken south. In the case of another shipment, he said, Israeli navy
ships accompanied Lebanese drug boats from the area from which the
drugs were smuggled to Nahariya.
We were forced, so claimed an officer
ordered to transfer important material from Lebanon
to the Egyptian border, to sign a declaration of secrecy,
according to which if I spoke about what I saw, I might be sentenced
to 20 years imprisonment. According to him, a lieutenant-colonel
named Yaakov accompanied them to Lebanon. He ordered
us to start loading our trucks with material on the Lebanese trucks,
which came up close to ours. When the Lebanese removed the cover
from their loads, I was utterly shocked. The baggage compartments
were filled with hundreds of small packages. I immediately identified
them as hashish. Yaakov told me to shut up and continue loading
our trucks.
Once, another Israeli officer said, the Israeli forces
in south Lebanon received an order to impose a curfew in an area
of the Lebanon valley. At the same time, local drug dealers arrived
there with their goods and gave them to Israeli army officers who
were waiting for them. According to the Sunday Times, the
Israeli army transferred the merchandise to Egyptian drug dealers
who were instructed to distribute it among Egyptian soldiers stationed
in the area between Sinai and Cairo.
The Egyptian army spokesman told the Sunday Times
that in the late 1960s and early 1970s the use of drugs among
Egyptian senior officers had reached 50 percent, and two out of
three soldiers regularly smoked hashish. In Cairo,4 so
the Sunday Times stated, there have been rumors for many
years that the Israeli army was involved in increasing drug use
in the Egyptian army.5
Notes:
- Colonel Gideon Mahanaimi, an almost legendary figure, was the
chief founder of the Arabic part of the military intelligence
of the Israeli army. He didnt get the rank of general because
he quarreled with Moshe Dayan. His son, for years a correspondent
for Hebrew papers, inherited many intelligence sources from his
father.
- Although I believe the story I doubt the date on which drug
smuggling started. I strongly suspect that it had started, perhaps
under another name or in a less organized manner, much earlier.
- This means, under the usual Israeli decision-making system,
that it was approved by Rabin (chief-of-staff), Moshe Dayan (defense
minister) and Levy Eshkol (prime minister). Very probably, the
foreign minister, Abba Eban, that great dove, was notified about
the drug smuggling.
- Not only in Cairo. In Tel Aviv and Jerusalem too.
- One of the favorite methods of the Hebrew press to circumvent
the military censorship is to quote reports from foreign papers
about issues which Israeli papers cannot publish. The method of
hinting to the readers that the story is true consists of refusal
to deny it. Maariv duly quoted the denial of the
Israeli army spokesman as it had to, but it carefully refrained
from saying that it disbelieves the story.
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