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Spy
Rumours Fly on Gusts of Truth
Americans Probing Reports of Israeli Espionage
By MARC PERELMAN FORWARD STAFF
Despite angry denials by Israel and its American supporters,
reports that Israel was conducting spying activities in the United States
may have a grain of truth, the Forward has learned.
However,
far from pointing to Israeli spying against U.S. government and military
facilities, as reported in Europe last week, the incidents in question
appear to represent a case of Israelis in the United States spying on
a common enemy, radical Islamic networks suspected of links to Middle
East terrorism.
In
particular, a group of five Israelis arrested in New Jersey shortly after
the September 11 attacks and held for more than two months was subjected
to an unusual number of polygraph tests and interrogated by a series of
government agencies including the FBIs counterintelligence division,
which by some reports remains convinced that Israel was conducting an
intelligence operation. The five Israelis worked for a moving company
with few discernable assets that closed up shop immediately afterward
and whose owner fled to Israel.
Other
allegations involved Israelis claiming to be art students who had backgrounds
in signal interception and ordnance.
Sources
emphasized that the release of all the Israelis under investigation indicates
that they were cleared of any suspicion that they had prior knowledge
of the September 11 attacks, as some anti-Israel media outlets have suggested.
The
resulting tensions between Washington and Jerusalem, sources told the
Forward, arose not because of the operations targets but because
Israel reportedly violated a secret gentlemens agreement between
the two countries under which espionage on each others soil is to
be coordinated in advance.
Most
experts and former officials interviewed for this article said that such
so-called unilateral or uncoordinated Israeli monitoring of radical Muslims
in America would not be surprising.
In
fact, they said, Israeli intelligence played a key role in helping the
Bush administration to crack down on Islamic charities suspected of funnelling
money to terrorist groups, most notably the Richardson, Texas-based Holy
Land Foundation last December.
I
have no doubt Israel has an interest in spying on those groups,
said Peter Unsinger, an intelligence expert who teaches justice administration
at San Jose University. The Israelis give us good stuff, like on
the Hamas charities.
According
to one former high-ranking American intelligence official, who asked not
to be named, the FBI came to the conclusion at the end of its investigation
that the five Israelis arrested in New Jersey last September were conducting
a Mossad surveillance mission and that their employer, Urban Moving Systems
of Weehawken, N.J., served as a front.
After
their arrest, the men were held in detention for two-and-a-half months
and were deported at the end of November, officially for visa violations.
However,
a counterintelligence investigation by the FBI concluded that at least
two of them were in fact Mossad operatives, according to the former American
official, who said he was regularly briefed on the investigation by two
separate law enforcement officials.
The
assessment was that Urban Moving Systems was a front for the Mossad and
operatives employed by it, he said. The conclusion of the
FBI was that they were spying on local Arabs but that they could leave
because they did not know anything about 9/11.
However,
he added, the bureau was very irritated because it was a case of
so-called unilateral espionage, meaning they didnt know about it.
Spokesmen
for the FBI, the Justice Department and the Immigration and Naturalization
Service refused to discuss the case. Israeli officials flatly dismissed
the allegations as untrue.
However,
the former American official said that after American authorities confronted
Jerusalem on the issue at the end of last year, the Israeli government
acknowledged the operation and apologized for not coordinating it with
Washington.
The
five men ˜ Sivan and Paul Kurzberg, Oded Ellner, Omer Marmari and Yaron
Shmuel ˜ were arrested eight hours after the attacks by the Bergen County,
N.J., police while driving in an Urban Moving Systems van. The police
acted on an FBI alert after the men allegedly were seen acting strangely
while watching the events from the roof of their warehouse and the roof
of their van.
In
addition to their strange behaviour and their Middle Eastern looks, the
suspicions were compounded when a box cutter and $4,000 in cash were found
in the van. Moreover, one man carried two passports and another had fresh
pictures of the men standing with the smouldering wreckage of the World
Trade Center in the background.
The
Bergen County police immediately handed the suspects to the INS, which
turned them over to a joint police-FBI terrorism task force set up after
September 11 to deal with all possible links with the attacks.
The
five Israelis were detained in the high-security Metropolitan Detention
Center in Brooklyn in solitary confinement until mid-October. On September
25, they all signed papers acknowledging violations of Immigration law.
At the end of October, the INS issued a deportation order which was enforced
a month later after a review by the Justice Department and prodding by
Jewish and Israeli officials However, the former official said, this is
just the official story.
In
fact, he said, the nature of the investigation changed after the names
of two of the five Israelis showed up on a CIA-FBI database of foreign
intelligence operatives, he said. At that point, he said, the bureau took
control of the investigation and launched a Foreign Counterintelligence
Investigation, or FCI.
FBI
investigations into possible links to the September 11 attacks are usually
carried by the bureaus counterterrorism division, not its counterintelligence
division.
An
FCI means not only that it was serious but also that it was handled at
a very high level and very tightly, the former official said. That
view was echoed by several former FBI officials interviewed.
Steven
Gordon, an American lawyer hired by the families to help secure their
release, said he could not confirm which FBI division was in charge of
the investigation. However, he acknowledged that there were a lot
of people involved, including counterintelligence officials from the FBI.
The
men all underwent at least two polygraph tests each, the lawyer added.
He said one of the Israelis took the test seven times, a very unusual
total according to several polygraph experts interviewed by the Forward.
After the men were arrested, FBI agents searched the warehouse of Urban
Moving Systems in Weehawken, N.J., seizing computer hard drives and documents.
The warehouse was closed on September 14, said Ron George, a spokesman
for the New Jersey State Division of Consumer Affairs.
On
December 7, a New Jersey judge ruled that the state could seize the goods
remaining inside the warehouse. The state also has a lawsuit pending against
Urban Moving Systems and its owner, Dominik Otto Suter, an Israeli citizen.
The
FBI questioned Mr. Suter once. However, he left the country afterward
and went back to Israel before further questioning. Mr. Suter declined
through his lawyer to be interviewed for this article.
Earlier
this year, the New York State Department of Transportation revoked Urban
Moving Systems license after discovering that the companys
midtown Manhattan base was only a mailing address.
After
they returned to Israel at the end of November, the five men told local
media that they were kept in solitary confinement, beaten, deprived of
food and questioned while blindfolded and in their underwear.
Mr.
Ellner, one of the five Israelis, said on two occasions in recent weeks
that the five men had decided not to grant any interviews right now because
we went through a very difficult period and we are not ready for this.
Their
Israeli lawyer, Ram Horwitz, told the Forward he was still waiting for
the results of the medical tests undertaken by the men in Israel to make
a decision on an eventual lawsuit in the United States for mistreatment.
Mr.
Horwitz insisted the men were not intelligence officers.
Irit
Stoffer, an Israeli Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, said the allegations
were completely untrue and that there were only visa
violations.
The
FBI investigated those cases because of 9/11, Ms. Stoffer said.
Charlene
Eban, a spokeswoman for the FBI in Washington, and Don Nelson, a Justice
Department spokesman, said they had no knowledge of an Israeli spying
operation.
If
we found evidence of unauthorized intelligence operations, that would
be classified material, added Jim Margolin, a spokesman for the
FBI in New York.
One
leading expert in American intelligence operations, Chip Berlet, a senior
analyst at the Boston-based Political Research Associates, explained that
there is a backdoor agreement between allies that says that if one
of your spies gets caught and didnt do too much harm, he goes home.
It goes on all the time. The official reason is always a visa violation.
© Forward
MARK IAN BIRDSALL COMMENT: Though both official US and Israeli spokespersons
have denied that Mossad was operating the spy ring, it is fairly certain
that many of the young Israelis were in search of information. The main
talking point relates to the connection with al-Qaida. Is it really conceivable
that the young men and women removed by the FBI, were indeed seeking the
agents of terror? Mossad has an extremely long arm, and often carries
out daring operations, it would not surprise me, if some of the students
were indeed aware of the likes of Mohammad Atta. The primary question
of course, is did the spy ring have any knowledge of the September attacks?
Like MI5 in the UK, I suspect that evidence had been acquired on an operation,
though even Mossad did not know when... but they may well have known where.
I
suspect this puzzling affair will run and run.
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