Mossad operation persuaded some Jewish men in Egypt to burn U.S.
Information Service libraries on the assumption that Egyptian President
Jamal Abdul Nasser would be blamed. But one of the incendiary devices
went off prematurely, and the young spies were caught.
[Zionist way of blaming others, this is not the only case, tens of them
recorded in history, so who did 9-11? It is not a stupid question!]
Had Mossad,
Israel’s secret intelligence organization, succeeded, it would have been
the perfect crime—the crime of the century. The plan was breathtaking in
concept: to assassinate the American ambassador to Lebanon, in Lebanon,
with American weapons, intended for Israeli’s defense only. Everything
about it would point to Lebanon as the culprit.
But fate
intervened, and things went wrong. The tires on Ambassador John Gunther
Dean’s limousine automatically reinflated when they were shot out in
1979 (see November 2002 Washington Report, p. 15). The
light tank shell simply bounced off the car’s armor. And, horror of
horrors, Lebanese intelligence had retrieved the empty shell casing on
which was written, “Made in the United States of America.”
Mossad’s
specialty was dirty tricks, even if (or perhaps because) it was not very
good as an intelligence organization. Its modus operandi had
always been the same: pull off a dirty trick but make it appear somebody
else had done it. An early example was the Lavon Affair, named for
Pinhas Lavon, Israel’s minister of defense back in 1953. This Mossad
operation persuaded some Jewish men in Egypt to burn U.S. Information
Service libraries on the assumption that Egyptian President Jamal Abdul
Nasser would be blamed. But one of the incendiary devices went off
prematurely, and the young spies were caught. Some of them were
executed. This provoked a scandal in Israel, and in the ensuing
investigation it eventually turned out that Lavon’s signature
authorizing the operation had been forged at the behest of Prime
Minister David Ben-Gurion. A dirty trick within a dirty trick!
Then came
the
June 8, 1967 attack on the USS Liberty, killing 34
Americans and wounding 171. Perpetrated by the Israeli air force and
navy, this was not a Mossad operation, but it was suffused by the same
spirit of stealth and trickery. During the Arab-Israeli war of 1967,
unmarked Israeli jets raked the all-but-unarmed spy ship
Liberty,
steaming
slowly off Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, with napalm and machine gunfire.
The
Liberty
was
flying a large American flag, and the ship’s designation, in English,
was clearly visible on a cloudless day. But Israel said it thought it
was attacking an Egyptian transport ship. Israel pleaded “a tragic
accident” and still pleads that miserable lie today.
Now,
thanks to Ambassador John Gunther Dean, the full taste of Mossad’s evil
will be available at former President Jimmy Carter’s Presidential
Library in Atlanta, Georgia. A part of the National Archives, the
Carter Center will
contain 42 files on Dean’s service as ambassador to Lebanon. The
overwhelming majority of the material is unclassified and thus readily
available to researchers, scholars and journalists.
The Dean
papers—which include documents, messages, reports and
telegrams—constitute hard evidence on the stultifying influence of the
Israeli lobby as Dean tried to get answers from the Department of State
on the Israeli assassination failure. Nobody was willing to talk with
him because the subject was just too “sensitive.”
The
papers include documentation of efforts by the Palestinians to help the
U.S. with the American hostages in
Iran. They
demonstrate that, unlike today, the United States administration
considered the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) “valid
interlocutors” in the search for a negotiated settlement of the
Palestine-Israel conflict. In fact, PLO leader Yasser Arafat and an
assistant made a special visit to Iran, where they succeeded in gaining
the immediate freedom of several of the American diplomatic hostages.
Arafat performed a real favor for the United States for which he never
received any thanks—perhaps because, once again, it would have been too
“sensitive.”
By June
2004 all other papers in Dean’s possession will be housed in the
National Archives. Among the information they will contain will be the
role of certain congressmen with respect to nuclear proliferation. Some
of the American legislators struck Dean as motivated more by fear of
Pakistan obtaining “the Islamic bomb” than they were by defending U.S.
policy of preventing the proliferation of arms.
*
Andrew I. Killgore, a retired foreign service officer and former U.S.
ambassador to Qatar, is publisher of the
Washington Report.