Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, May/June
1998, Pages 37, 118
Defense and Intelligence
Pressure for Pollard, More Money for the Arrow,
and UAE Fighter Buy Top the News
By Shawn L. Twing
Pressure has been building for the early release of
Jonathan Pollard, the American naval counterintelligence analyst
currently serving a life sentence in a Butner, North Carolina prison
for passing an estimated 800,000 highly classified documents to
Israel in the 1980s. Prior to Vice President Al Gores April
visit to Jerusalem for Israels 50th anniversary celebrations,
some Israeli officials even suggested that Pollard be released as
a birthday present to Israel and make a triumphal arrival in his
new homeland on Air Force Two.
The campaign to free Pollard gained momentum last
year when he was given Israeli citizenship, an event many interpreted
as the first step in eventually securing his release. Since then
he has been visited by several Israeli officials, including Minister
of Absorption Yuli Edelstein, Finance Minister Yaakov Neeman and
Communications Minister Livnor Livnat. The Israeli government remains
unwilling to recognize Pollard publicly as having functioned as
its agent, however, and Pollard refuses to accept anything less.
I did not spend 13 years in prison to endorse a lie,
Pollard told the Jerusalem Post. The truth is simple
and clear: I was an Israeli agent employed by the Lakam branch of
intelligence in an operation that was fully sanctioned by the government
of Israel. Anything less than that is a distortion of the truth.
In March Israeli Minister of Industry and Trade Natan
Sharansky asked Vice President Gore to intervene on Pollards
behalf, and in April a letter from Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin
Netanyahus cabinet urged President Clinton to release Pollard
on humanitarian grounds. Shortly after, President Clinton
received a letter from representatives of the American Reform, Conservative,
and Orthodox Jewish communities also asking for a commutation of
Pollards sentence.
Things are happening, Edelstein told
the Forward, a Jewish community newspaper in New York. I
wont claim that Pollard is in prison for nothing, but its
high time for the [Clinton] administration to rethink what its position
on Pollard should be.
Despite the recent flurry of activity on Pollards
behalf, however, there still is widespread opposition to his release,
particularly within the U.S. intelligence community. Jonathan
Pollard betrayed his sworn oath to the United States by passing
state secrets to a foreign government, a Defense Intelligence
Agency officer told Tim Kennedy of the English-language daily Saudi
Gazette. Pollard broke the law. He confessed to it. And
now hes in jail. And what makes Pollards spy activity
all the more reprehensible is that it ultimately aided the Russians:
24 hours after Pollard stole a document from the Navy it was in
Tel Aviv...Another 24 hours later, it was in Moscow.
Among the most damning witnesses against Pollard was
Reagan administration Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger, who
submitted a memorandum to the sentencing judge saying that Pollards
theft of U.S. secrets was the most devastating blow ever delivered
by an American spy to U.S. national security interests.
Nor are all American Jewish leaders ready to embrace
efforts to free Pollard and deny the damage he inflicted on the
United States. National Director Abraham Foxman of Bnai Briths
Anti-Defamation League told the Forward that the ADL objected
to lionizing Pollard. To fly him with the vice president would
be an insult to the U.S.-Israel relationship, Foxman said.
The arrest resulted with the activities that were contrary
to the relationship....Our leadership have said this is not an issue
of anti-Semitism.
U.S. May Fund Third Arrow Missile Battery, Laser,
and Boost Phase Intercept Program
Despite an earlier agreement that limits U.S. financial
assistance to the Arrow anti-tactical ballistic missile program
only to research and development, Israeli officials and lobbyists,
with substantial congressional assistance, are pushing for a U.S.
commitment to fund the procurement of a third Arrow missile battery
in Israel.
Representatives Jane Harman (D-CA) and Michael Pappas
(R-NJ), along with 24 colleagues on the House National Security
Committee, wrote a letter to President Clinton expressing
support for building cooperation between the United States and Israel
in the area of ballistic missile defense, according to Near
East Report, the biweekly newsletter of the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee. That support so far includes an additional
$10 million for the Arrow missile added to the Iran Missile Protection
Act, above the $50 million for the Arrow already in the Pentagons
International Cooperative Programs budget and $45 million in emergency
supplemental aid to purchase an Israeli-made radar, which was approved
by the Senate March 23. Neither of these congressional add-ons was
requested by the Pentagon, according to the U.S. trade weekly Defense
News.
The $105 million in additional Arrow funding will
bring total U.S. aid to the Arrow missilea program U.S. officials
repeatedly have said the United States will never use to protect
its own forcesto more than $800 million since U.S. aid for
the program began in 1988. (For a breakdown of U.S. assistance to
the Arrow program, see the October/November 1995 Washington Report
on Middle East Affairs, pp. 12, 106-107.)
During a March trip to Israel, U.S. Secretary of Defense
William Cohen expressed the Clinton administrations tacit
approval for the additional funding. In a quote appearing in the
Jewish Week of Queens, New York, Cohen said that the United
States is committed to maintaining Israels qualitative
edge and we...concur that there is a need for Israel to acquire
a third Arrow battery, and we will cooperate as best we can to see
that occurs.
Other U.S. officials are not as supportive. A Pentagon
official interviewed by Defense News said that U.S. aid for
the Arrow was supposed to end in 1999, but then was stretched to
2001. Now theyre talking to us about extending the program
through 2006. Its like a car loan that we keep paying on,
and just when we think were approaching the last payment,
we get hit with another few years, he said.
Members of Congress also plan to add more money for
the Tactical High Energy Laser, formerly the Nautilus laser, and
the Boost Phase Intercept program, both U.S.-Israeli projects that
have received tens of millions of dollars in the past. (From 1996
to 1998, the THEL program received $116.5 million and the Boost
Phase Intercept program received $62.3 million from the United States.)
The Pentagon did not include funding for these programs in its draft
funding request for fiscal year 1999, which may lead several members
of Congress to insert funding for the programs in committee meetings
as they have done repeatedly in the past.
The White House and the Pentagon are not living
up to their rhetoric, Rep. Curt Weldon (R-PA) told Defense
News. Ive told the folks over at the Pentagon that
I want to see [THEL] funded, but theyve refused so far to
provide any numbers for 1999. Can you believe I had to go to AIPAC
and get a funding line for the program? Representative Weldons
office refused to return repeated calls by the Washington Report
to request an explanation of the benefits of these programs to the
United States.
In related news, Israeli officials recently denied
reports that they are planning to share U.S. technology with Turkey
in a joint Turkish-Israeli anti-tactical ballistic missile program
based almost entirely on the U.S.-Israel Arrow missile. Israels
Ministry of Defense denied news stories that appeared in the Turkish
and Israeli media claiming that during a March 30 visit to Ankara
by Israeli defense officials the two countries signed a preliminary
agreement to co-develop an anti-missile system.
Because the Arrow missile is a joint project, American-made
components are subject to U.S. export permission. Were
not talking about technology transfer in a feasibility study,
a U.S. industry representative told Defense News. There
is no way the [U.S. Ballistic Missile Defense Organization] will
separate between what Israel says is its own data, and what is joint
Arrow data.
Israeli officials disagree. For Turkish presence
in the project, U.S. permission might be necessary for the missile
itself and the launcher, Israeli defense specialist Gonen
Ginat told Defense News. But for the radar, developed
by our Elta, and the control systems developed by our Tadiran, no
such permission is required for the transfer of Israeli technology
to Turkey.
UAE To Buy F-16s
United Arab Emirates officials will announce during
a May visit to Washington, DC that U.S. defense contractor Lockheed
Martin has won a contract for up to 80 F-16 multi-role combat aircraft,
U.S. defense officials told Defense News in April. Premature
reports that the F-16 had been awarded the estimated $6 billion
contract in competition with the French Rafale and multi-nation
Eurofighter 2000 have appeared repeatedly during the last two years,
only to be retracted later. This time, however, U.S. and other officials
are confident that the decision has been made and that Lockheed
Martin has won.
Many of the problems that have hindered the award
to Lockheed Martin apparently have been worked out. These include
an advanced avionics and electronic warfare suite, as well as the
inclusion of the highly capable Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air
Missile (AMRAAM) and the High Speed Anti-Radiation Missile (HARM),
which are among the most advanced weapons in the U.S. Air Force
arsenal.
According to Defense News, the decision will
be formalized by Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Khalifa bin Zayed Al-Nahayan,
who is deputy commander of the UAE armed forces, during a May 12
visit to the United States to be hosted by Vice President Al Gore.
During his visit, Sheikh Khalifa, the highest ranking official to
visit the United States officially in the UAEs 26-year history,
also is scheduled to meet with President Bill Clinton.
Iran Tops Terrorism List Again
Iran was the most active sponsor of state terrorism
in the world in 1997, killing 13 people and supporting terrorist
organizations in Lebanon, Egypt and the occupied territories, according
to the U.S. State Departments annual report on terrorism released
in April.
Iranian agents assassinated at least 13 people, most
of them opposition members of the Peoples Mojahedin of Iran,
an organization that reportedly has a 30,000-strong army near the
Iranian border in Iraq. Iranian agents also killed members of the
Kurdish Democratic Party, the report said.
Although the August 1997 accession of President
Khatami has resulted in more conciliatory Iranian public statements...Iranian
support for terrorism remains in place, according to the State
Department. Terrorist groups allegedly receiving financial and other
assistance from Iran include the Lebanese Hezbollah, Palestinian
Islamic Jihad, Hamas, and Egypts Gamaat Al-Islamiyya.
The State Department also noted, however, that Iran
had condemned the November 1997 attack in Luxor that killed 57 tourists,
and that President Mohammed Khatami voiced his opposition to terrorist
attacks against Israeli women and children in his January 1998 interview
on Cable News Network.
U.S. Denies Israeli Charge That Iran Has Nuclear Warheads
U.S. officials denied Israeli reports that surfaced
in April claiming Iran received nuclear weapons and enriched uranium
from the former Soviet republic of Kazakhstan in the early 1990s.
Under an April 9 front-page headline saying Iran has the Bomb,
Israels Jerusalem Post reiterated claims first made
in a Jan. 20, 1992 report by the U.S. Task Force on Terrorism and
Unconventional Warfare that Russian technicians were maintaining
up to four tactical nuclear warheads sold to Iran by Kazakhstan
with assistance from the Russian mafia.
The reports are based on documents obtained by the
Post that allegedly are copies of high-level Iranian correspondence
deemed authentic by Israeli experts and unnamed U.S.
congressional analysts.
Following the Post story, the Pentagon denied
that Iran received nuclear warheads or enriched uranium from Kazakhstan
in the early 1990s. We have no evidence that Iran has been
able to purchase nuclear warheads from Kazakhstan or from other
Soviet republics, Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon said.
A spokesman for the Russian government dismissed the
Israeli reports as nonsense. The initial reports made
in January 1992 also were dismissed shortly after they were made
public.
New Mossad Tell-All Book to be released
in May
A controversial new book by an alleged former Mossad
agent is scheduled for release in May by HarperCollins publishers.
In Hostile Territory: Business Secrets of A Mossad Combatant
reportedly is a guide to succeeding in business that uses the tactics
of Israels Mossad intelligence agency as examples.
In Hostile Territory was written under the
pseudonym Gerald Westerby (a character in John Le Carres spy
novel Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy), who probably is former
Israeli naval commando and Mossad operative Jerry Sanders, according
to an exclusive article in the Jewish Week of Queens, New
York. The book recounts several alleged exploits of the Mossad in
general and the author in particular, some of which have been verified
and others which seem to be impossible, according to the Jewish
Week.
Among the authors claims are that he placed
a homing device for Israeli missiles in Iraqs Osiraq nuclear
reactor that was bombed by the Israeli air force in 1981, that he
blew up a communications link between Syria and Egypt in a Beirut
harbor during the 1973 Yom Kippur war, and that he posed as a French
officer to debrief a Syrian chemical weapons scientist after infiltrating
NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium.
Another of the authors claims, that a Mossad
operative bribed Syrian President Hafez Assads son Basil with
$14 million to convince his father to release Syrian Jews and that
the plan died with Basils death in 1994, has a problem,
according to the Jewish Week article: Assad had already
allowed most of Syrias Jews out by then.
Former Mossad case officer and author of By Way
of Deception and The Other Side of Deception both
tell-all books about his experience in the MossadVictor Ostrovsky
also challenged some of Sanders claims. The Jewish Week
article quoted Ostrovsky as saying that Sanders did not speak French,
which would have made it difficult for him to make a Syrian scientist
believe he was a French military officer.
For his part, Sanders, who now is a partner in a medical
equipment company in San Francisco, denies having written the book.
Two months before the Jewish Week article appeared, however,
he told Israels Hebrew-language newspaper Haaretz
that he planned to write a book about his experiences in Israeli
security organizations to teach business executives how to succeed
with aggressive techniques. Subsequently Sanders
friend and business partner confirmed that Sanders was the author
in an interview with Israels Yediot Ahronot newspaper.
Shawn L.
Twing is the news editor of the Washington Report on Middle East
Affairs. He can be reached by e-mail at stwing@washington-report.org |