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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: michael97123 who wrote (262527)4/24/2008 2:41:55 PM
From: c.hinton  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 281500
 
Michael you are right ...shame on me and my apologies to nadine and the thread for not reading the article carefully enough .



To: michael97123 who wrote (262527)4/24/2008 2:43:51 PM
From: one_less  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Israel fears U.S. hearings on Syrian reactor will expose top-secret data

By Amos Harel, Shmuel Rosner, and Barak Ravid, Haaretz Correspondents, and AP

Defense officials in Jerusalem have expressed concern that classified details of Israel's bombing of a Syrian nuclear facility last September will be revealed during Congressional hearings on the incident Thursday in Washington.

The American administration is slated to provide Thursday, for the first time, extensive details about the nature of the compound destroyed by the Israel Air Force on September 6.

The Los Angeles Times reported Wednesday that Congress will hear from the Central Intelligence Agency that the facility destroyed in the Israel Air Force attack was a nuclear reactor for producing plutonium.

Israel, however, does not intend to break the official silence it has maintained on the matter for the past seven months. Security sources told Haaretz on Wednesday night that the government will not go public with new information in the case.

The Prime Minister's Office declined to comment on the matter Wednesday, and referred Haaretz to Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's statements last week in his Pesach interview with media outlets, in which he said that "the Syrians know what our position is, and we know what their expectations are."

Thursday's briefings of the Senate and House Intelligence committees, as well as the Senate Armed Services Committee, will deal for the first time with evidence that North Korea was helping Syria build a nuclear reactor similar to its facility at Yongbyon - in the west-central part of the country - a U.S. government official familiar with the matter said Tuesday. That reactor has in the past produced a small amount of plutonium, which can be a component in nuclear weapons.

Since Israel learned of the planned Congressional hearings three weeks ago, defense officials have expressed concerns that publication of classified details about the attack could compel Syria to resort to a violent response, or at any rate reignite tensions between Jerusalem and Damascus.

Partly as a result of Israeli defense establishment pressure on the government, the Americans eventually agreed to hold closed-door briefings. But apparently a representative of the American intelligence community will conduct a background news briefing afterward for senior Washington-based security affairs commentators.

Israel presumes that this news briefing will result in a lot of information that will later be published in the American media.

The information from the U.S. will evidently focus on questions relating to the type of facility that was attacked, the extent of the nuclear partnership between North Korea and Syria, and the quality of the intelligence Israel and the U.S. had about the Syrian program.

The administration will probably volunteer fewer details about the manner in which the attack was carried out, and the forces and units that participated in it. For now, Israel's policy in the matter remains unchanged, and no official reactions are expected from Jerusalem revealing further details about the bombing raid.

Nor, as far as is known, will Israel's military censorship office alter the blackout it imposed on this case, so the Israeli media will be allowed to cite only details that are published in the U.S., without adding any information of their own.

A senior U.S. administration official said that Thursday's briefing was scheduled because the intelligence community had been deluged for months with congressional requests for information about North Korean activity in Syria and the Israeli air strike, and felt it was now time to brief lawmakers.

Middle East experts in the administration are worried that the timing of the briefing might upstage visits to Washington this week by Jordanian King Abdullah II and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, and hurt Arab-Israeli peace prospects with allegations of nefarious activity by an Arab nation with the aid of North Korea, the official said.

haaretz.com



To: michael97123 who wrote (262527)4/24/2008 2:55:16 PM
From: geode00  Respond to of 281500
 
Oh baloney, the Israeli government will spy on the US if it can and if it thinks it will be of any benefit to itself. This came to light now why? It's ridiculous to be so naive.

=============FBI Claims a Confession in Israel Spy Case

BY JOSEPH GOLDSTEIN - Staff Reporter of the Sun
April 23, 2008

An 84-year-old New Jersey man is facing federal criminal charges that a quarter-century ago he passed along secret Army documents concerning nuclear weaponry to the Israeli consulate in Manhattan, an act of espionage that prosecutors say is connected to the case of the most famous American spy for Israel, Jonathan Pollard.

A criminal complaint filed yesterday against the man, Ben-Ami Kadish, offers no clues about when law enforcement officials first learned of the alleged spying or what prompted them to investigate the case at this late date. Yet FBI agents managed to get a confession out of Mr. Kadish last month, the complaint claims. A former Justice Department official who has investigated Israeli spying told The New York Sun that he believes the government's investigation of Mr. Kadish's arrest was likely triggered by a wiretap of a former Israeli consular official, Yosef Yagur, who allegedly served as Mr. Kadish's handler. Mr. Yagur fled America in 1985 at the time of the arrest of an American naval analyst, Pollard, who spied for Israel in the early 1980s, during the same period of time that Mr. Kadish allegedly spied. Both Pollard and Mr. Kadish reported to the same Israeli official: Mr. Yagur, according to information in the complaint.

Mr. Kadish apparently stayed in touch with Mr. Yagur in the intervening years, according to the complaint. Mr. Kadish traveled to Israel in 2004 and met with Mr. Yagur there, the complaint said.

"I think they found Kadish through Yagur," the former Justice Department official, Joseph diGenova, who investigated and prosecuted Pollard, speculated. "That's the only way that makes much sense."

The complaint indicates that law enforcement has intercepted phone conversations between Mr. Kadish and Mr. Yagur, although no information about a wiretap warrant was publicly available.

In his long life Mr. Kadish has served in three militaries: he fought with the Jewish Haganah as well as with British and American militaries during World War II, according to a profile of him in the New Jersey Jewish News in 2006. He grew up in British mandatory Palestine, according to the article, which said he was active in the Jewish Federation of Greater Middlesex County and the Jewish War Veterans. Prosecutors say he was born in Connecticut.

Leaving from his arraignment in U.S. District Court in Manhattan yesterday, Mr. Kadish walked briskly by a throng of reporters without commenting and left in a banged-up Chevrolet Monte Carlo.

Mr. Kadish has admitted to the FBI that when he worked at an Army arsenal, he did pass along national security documents to Mr. Yagur, an FBI agent working the case, Lance Ashworth, claims in the complaint.

The complaint said that Mr. Kadish told agents in their first interview, which occurred late last month, that he "believed that providing classified documents to CC-1 would help Israel," referring to the co-conspirator. The complaint does not identify the co-conspirator by name, but Mr. diGenova said corroborating information in the complaint indicates that the co-conspirator is Mr. Yagur, who served as the consul for science affairs at the Israeli consulate in Manhattan.

As a mechanical engineer at the Army's Armament Research, Development, and Engineering Center at the Picatinny Arsenal in Dover, New Jersey, Mr. Kadish had access to classified documents, the complaint said. Library records from 1979 to 1985 indicate that Mr. Kadish checked out at least 35 documents including one "concerning nuclear weaponry," and another that dealt with the U.S. Patriot missile air defense system, the complaint said, adding that some of the information was classified above Mr. Kadish's "Secret" level of clearance.

In a March 20 interview with Agent Ashworth, Mr. Kadish said he would take the documents by briefcase to his home in New Jersey, where Mr. Yagur would come to photograph them in his basement, according to the complaint. He says that he met Mr. Yagur, his handler, through his brother in the 1970s. Both Mr. Kadish's brother and Mr. Yagur were then colleagues for the company now known as Israeli Aerospace Industries, which is an Israeli state-owned defense manufacturer.

Mr. Kadish said he did not receive any payment from Mr. Yagur, beyond small gifts or dinner for Mr. Kadish and his family at a restaurant in the Riverdale section of the Bronx.

Mr. diGenova said he never came across Mr. Kadish's name while investigating and prosecuting Pollard.

The allegations against Mr. Kadish cast doubt on Israel's public claims that Pollard was the only American spying on this country on Israel's behalf. The Israeli daily Haaretz reported yesterday on its Web site that in 2004, Israel secretly acknowledged to American authorities that Pollard was not the only spy.

Exactly why Mr. Kadish would speak to the FBI at this late date is unclear.

"At an advanced age, he may have thought, I'm not going to play games," Mr. diGenova, who is now in private practice, said. "I'm going to tell him what I did and see where the chips fall."

Mr. Kadish was arrested yesterday on charges of conspiring to disclose documents related to the national defense, which carries penalties up to a death sentence, as well as charges of conspiring to act as agent of Israel and of lying to a FBI agent.

A spokesman for Israel's foreign ministry, Arye Mekel, said of the case against Mr. Kadish: "We were updated by the American authorities on the situation," declining to comment any further.

After the first interview last month with FBI agents, Mr. Kadish received a phone call from Mr. Yagur, according to the complaint.

During that conversation Mr. Yagur gave instructions to Mr. Kadish about how to deal with the agents.

"Don't say anything," Mr. Yagur said in Hebrew, according to the complaint. "You didn't do anything. What happened 25 years ago? You didn't remember anything."