Controversy Sells: Jerusalem’s Hasmonean Tunnel a Hot Tourist Spot

Nearly 10 months after Palestinians waged a bloody campaign against Israel for opening the Hasmonean exit to Jerusalem’s Western Wall tunnel, the site has become one of the country’s hottest tourist attractions for Jews, Christians and, yes, Arabs. Visitors can’t help but notice the obvious:

“People are seeing for themselves that the Palestinian claim (that the Hasmonean tunnel goes beneath the Temple Mount, home to Muslim and Jewish holy sites) does not hold water anymore,” said Arik Bar Chen, head of Israel’s foreign press department who occasionally takes diplomats and journalists on tours of the tunnel. “Nobody’s claiming anymore that it goes under the Temple Mount.”

Still, many in the Palestinian establishment refuse to acknowledge this publicly, including the Islamic Wakf in eastern Jerusalem, which warned Israel that the opening would spur violence. “The tunnel was built on the blood of Arabs and Muslims and our rights,” Wakf director Adnan Husseini told the Middle East News Service on July 11. “The file (on this issue) is still open.”

Several Israeli guards currently man the Hasmonean exit on the Via Dolorosa, but mainly for show. The tunnel today is mobbed only by tourists. There has been no violence here since last September, when the opening sparked riots that killed 15 Israelis and 70 Palestinians in the most heated battles since the Intifada.

“The Palestinians were picking at straws at the time, searching for any cause to get the people behind the flag,” said Bar Chen.

Based on misinformation regarding the tunnel’s proximity to the Temple Mount – spread by the Palestinian Authority and fanned by erroneous news media reporting – the tunnel opening became the last straw at a time of growing frustration amongst Palestinians towards the stalled peace process. What started with Arab youths hurling stones off the Temple Mount at Jews praying at the Western Wall turned to bloodshed as PA police opened fire on Israeli soldiers in the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

“Fifteen (Israeli) boys died, and for what?” asked Fegi Kahane, who has led tours through the Western Wall tunnels since the mid-1980s. “Fabrications and terrible lies.” After the 1967 Six Day War, Israel began work on the tunnel to expose the western retaining wall to the Second Temple. Only about 20 percent of the Western Wall, 67 meters, is visible from the Western Wall Plaza. A single tunnel entrance was opened beside the plaza in 1985.

In 1988, the government opened an exit through the Hasmonean tunnel in the Muslim Quarter that was closed one hour later due to Arab rioting. With the new exit, visitors no longer have to double back to the plaza after reaching the end.

“Three to four times as many tourists use the tunnel today,” said Arye Banner, an official with the Western Wall Heritage Foundation, responsible for the tourist sites in the Old City. He has taken scores of foreign diplomats through the tunnel since September.

Ironically, in February 1996, Sheikh Abdel Azzim Salhab, head of the Islamic Wakf, warned that: “The opening of such a tunnel will lead to confrontations and disturbances which will severely hurt the city’s economy….”

Now, waiting up to four months to get a ticket, more than 1,000 people view the tunnel each day, paying about $13 for a guided tour. Demand is so high that the tunnel is often kept open until midnight, with groups of 30 shuttled along the route every 20 minutes. While the majority are Jewish, Banner says that Palestinians and visitors from Arab countries come every day.

“The new exit has been good for everyone – good for us, good for visitors who want to touch history and good for (Palestinians) who work and live there,” added Banner.

Jerry Dheodorie, an agent with Lawrence Tours in eastern Jerusalem who books tunnel tours for primarily Arabs, says the situation is less than cordial. A group of his Arab friends, who bought tickets, were recently turned away for refusing to wear kippas, he claimed. “I doubt that they require non-Arabs to wear kippas,” he said.

Banner denies that anyone has been refused entry. “We ask everyone to out on a kippah, but no one will tell them to leave if they don’t wear one,” he said.

Local Arab merchants vigorously deny that they have benefited from the increased traffic, claiming that guides swiftly usher tourists back to the Jewish Quarter.

Old City resident Barnea Selavan, who led the first tour through the exit last September, is an exception. Running tours every Friday, he directs his groups to a nearby refreshment-souvenir store called “Step Back in Time 2000 Years,” run by an Arab friend named Mike.

Mike complains that they buy nothing but Cokes. The dozen or so adjacent shopkeepers, who striked for two weeks in September to protest the tunnel opening, claim they too have suffered since September.

“No tourists exit the tunnel except the Jews, and they don’t buy from Arabs,” said the owner of the Via Dolorosa Souvenir Shop, who sells crosses, kippas and turbins.

According to Selavan, while tension over the tunnel has eased, rage is rising in the Old City amongst Arab residents. In recent weeks, he said, Arabs have been intentionally “bumping into Jews” and “casing” the Western Wall Plaza as if they are preparing for violence.

Another Arab merchant near the new exit, fuming over the tunnel opening and the Israeli actions, warns: “There is a big war gonna happen and I pray for a big war. That’s the only way to banish them.”

Now the peace process is stalled again. With the tunnel controversy apparently cleared, Palestinians are focusing their attention on other flash points – Har Homa and Hebron.

Israel’s 1967 Close Call

Six weeks after the Six Day War a U.S. – U.S.S.R. resolution concerning the peace was rejected by the Arabs, thus saving Israel from a political disaster potentially undoing the military victory.

Israel’s immediate post-war euphoria may well have contributed to the near disaster. It produced a Cabinet June 19 position furnished to the U.S., giving the Sinai to Egypt, most of the Golan to Syria and leaving West Bank issues to be negotiated.

Friday, July 20,1967 found Israel’s Foreign Minister Abba Eban in “one of the most embarrassing discussions that ever took place between the United States and Israel” when Arthur Goldberg, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N., revealed the draft resolution he and Gromyko had agreed on. [All Abba Eban quotations are from his 1992 book “Personal Witness”]. All parties were to immediately withdraw their forces from territory occupied after June 4 and were to immediately acknowledge their right to maintain an independent national state and to live in peace and security.

Eban “vehemently” objected that this would give up all the positive results to date since “withdrawal of our forces was no longer to be conducted in peace with secure boundaries”. The word “Israel” was not in the draft, “the Arab states would have no difficulty in making a general statement and then claiming its inapplicability to Israel”. It was “Kosygin’s call for unconditional withdrawal against which the U.S. and Israel had battled successfully in the United Nations…. It was a terrifying moment for me when all of the gains of the June and July sessions appeared to be slipping away, not as a result of enemy pressure, but as a consequence of an American ambition to achieve an accord with Russia.”

The Gromyko-Goldberg draft was the Soviet formula minus provisions for Israeli war reparations to the Arab states and condemnation of Israel, a compromise Secretary of State Dean Rusk, a few days before, characterized as trading “a horse for a rabbit”. The horse was Israeli withdrawal and the rabbit what Israel would receive.

As Eban’s meeting with Goldberg was about to end in an “indignant departure”, Goldberg received the message that Egypt and Libya would not accept a resolution acknowledging the rights of all the states in the area.

While the Arab rejection of the proposed agreement was publicized, Israel’s severe negative reaction was not reported. AIPAC’s Near East Report (July 25,1967) had good coverage of the episode but reported not so much as a hint of Israel’s unequivocal dislike of the resolution.

The 1968 American Jewish Yearbook reported in the same vein, adding that the “episode was to have one positive result: it demonstrated to Moscow that Washington did not intend to humiliate it… but would support any constructive move to achieve a just peace in the Middle East.” Because the Arabs rejected the proposal, it was not introduced. To give it and its rejection status, on August 30 Goldberg sent a letter to U.N.General Secretary U Thant advising that “while the U.S.S.R. was still saying harsh words about us in public, [it] joined with us for an acceptable resolution… the readiness of the Soviet Union to propose it for favorable consideration by the Arab states was a very significant step though it was rejected.”

Although the U.S. severely compromised itself in the joint proposal,the subsequent record does not suggest any amelioration of the Soviet’s hard line in response.

Why the U.S. acceptance of a “horse for a rabbit” at Israel’s expense? Why the continued Arab belligerency which preceded the war? Ironically, a key factor may have been Israel’s euphoria inspired June 19 peace setting terms volunteering to give up much of its win: Syria would obtain the Golan to its international boundary and Egypt would recover Sinai; both subject to demilitarization. West Bank issues would be negotiated. On June 22 Eban presented Israel’s proposal to Secretary Rusk who was pleased that Israel had formulated it without external pressure. Rusk promptly made it available to Egypt and Syria.

Also, the U.S. was optimistic about the U.S.S.R. and the Arabs. Both Israel and the U.S. underestimated Egypt’s basic attitude. In his July 23 address at the 15th anniversary celebration of the Egyptian Revolution President Nasser charged that the Zionists and the big powers sought to “crush the Arab revolution, to do away with Arab aspirations and to place our countries within the sphere of their influence.” On November 25,1967 he told his generals: “don’t pay any attention to anything I may say in public about a peaceful solution.”

Eban says the September 1,1967 Khartoum declaration providing for Israel no peace, no recognition, no negotiation, and no territorial bargaining was a “direct answer” to Israel’s offer which Rusk had conveyed to Egypt and Syria. Still, Eban would find a domestic benefit in Israel’s June 19 proposal seeing it as answering “Israeli liberals who fault the Eshkol government with insufficient zeal for peace.” But that consideration had little impact since the proposal was kept “secret”. There was no news coverage. Yitzhak Rabin first learned of it in 1968 from some Americans when he was ambassador.

Paradoxically, Israel’s generous proposal may well have figured importantly in the willingness of the U.S. to accept the “horse for rabbit” exchange at the expense of Israel. Also, it signaled the Arabs that Israel was voluntarily ready to give up more than all the parties had expected — a sign of weakness to be exploited. Peace making must be realistic, not euphoria-based.

Dr. Joseph Lerner, Co-Director
I.M.R.A. (Independent Media Review & Analysis)
P.O. Box 982, Kfar Sava
Tel (+972-9) 760-4719, Fax (+972-9) 741-1645
e-mail: imra@netvision.net.il

Dr. Lerner, a leading economist, was a senior US government official from 1952 until 1976. Dr Lerner relocated to Jerusalem in 1986.

Palestinian Survey Results

The following are the results of the Palestinian Arab agency known as Jerusalem Media & CommunicationCentre [JMCC] Public Opinion Poll Number 21 of a random sample of 1,197 Palestinians age 18 and over in the West Bank [758] and Gaza [439] who were interviewed face-to-face on 3 and 4 July 1997. The statistical error is +/- 3 percentage points.

1. In general, to what extent would you say you are optimistic about the future? Would you say you are very optimistic, optimistic, pessimistic, or very pessimistic?

Total W.Bank Gaza
Very optimistic 6.7% 6.1% 7.7%
Optimistic 60.1% 57.0% 65.4%
Pessimistic 25.7% 29.3% 19.6%
Very pessimistic 6.9% 6.9% 7.1%
No answer 0.6% 0.7% 0.2%

2. In general, do you support or oppose the current peace process between the Palestinians and Israel? Do you strongly support, somewhat support, strongly oppose, or somewhat oppose the peace process?

Total W.Bank Gaza
Strongly support 22.3% 21.4% 23.9%
Somewhat support 46.4% 44.9% 49.2%
Strongly oppose 13.6% 14.2% 12.5%
Somewhat oppose 12.9% 13.9% 11.4%
No answer 4.8% 5.6% 3.0%

3. Which Palestinian political or religious faction do you trust most?

Total W.Bank Gaza
Fateh 34.8% 34.8% 34.9%
Hamas 11.3% 11.1% 11.6%
PFLP 3.1% 3.7% 2.1%
DFLP 0.8% 1.3%
Islamic Jihad 2.6% 2.0% 3.6%
PPP 0.8% 1.1% 0.5%
FIDA 0.7% 0.8% 0.5%
Other Islamic Org. 2.3% 2.6% 1.6%
Others 1.0% 1.1% 1.0%
Do not trust anyone 31.2% 30.3% 32.6%
No answer 11.4% 11.2% 11.6%

4. Which Palestinian political or religious personality do you trust most?

Total W.Bank Gaza
Yasser Arafat 37.6% 34.6% 42.8%
Ahmed Yassin 6.7% 6.2% 7.5%
Haidar Adbur Shafi 3.7% 3.8% 3.4%
Hanan Ashrawi 2.6% 3.3% 1.4%
George Habash 2.5% 2.9% 1.8%
Sa’eb Erekat 1.8% 2.0% 1.4%
Fasal Husseini 0.9% 1.2% 0.5%
Abu Mazen 0.8% 1.2% 0.2%
Nayef Hawatmeh 0.6% 0.7% 0.5%
Others 8.9% 7.2% 11.4%
Do not trust anyone 24.2% 26.9% 19.6%
No answer 9.7% 10.1% 9.6%

5. In general, how would you rate the overall performance of the Palestinian Authority? Would you say that its performance has been very good, good, bad or very bad?

Total W.Bank Gaza
Very good 7.7% 7.0% 8.9%
Good 59.7% 61.3% 56.9%
Bad 21.7% 21.1% 22.8%
Very bad 7.4% 7.0% 8.0%
No answer 3.5% 3.6% 3.8%

6. In general, how would you rate the overall performance of Palestinian President Yasser Arafat?

Total W.Bank Gaza
Good 49.5% 43.8% 59.5%
Average 33.0% 35.5% 28.7%
Bad 12.8% 15.6% 8.0%
No answer 4.7% 5.1% 3.9%

7. In general, how would you rate the overall performance of the Palestinian Legislative Council? Would you say that its performance has been very good, good, bad, or very bad?

Total W.Bank Gaza
Very good 4.4% 4.6% 4.1%
Good 42.3% 43.7% 39.9%
Bad 29.7% 29.6% 30.1%
Very bad 13.4% 10.6% 18.2%
No answer 10.2% 11.5% 7.7%

8. Now that the Oslo agreements for the transitional period have been implemented for some time, to what extent do you support or oppose these agreements?

Total W.Bank Gaza
Strongly support 8.2% 7.4% 9.6%
Cautiously support 54.2% 55.4% 52.2%
Do not support 30.4% 29.9% 31.2%
No answer 7.2% 7.3% 7.0%

9. How was your opinion of the following changed in comparison with last year? Has it improved, worsened, or remain the same as last year?

Total

Improved Worsened Same Don’t know No answer
Yasser Arafat 42.0% 14.5% 37.4% 4.3% 1.8%
Security forces 36.3% 29.7% 24.6% 7.5% 1.9%
Peace process 7.5% 71.0% 16.6% 3.7% 1.2%
Oslo 4.3% 65.2% 21.0% 8.1% 1.4%
PLC 18.0% 34.6% 33.9% 11.6% 1.8%
PNA 31.7% 28.4% 32.7% 5.4% 1.9%
Opposition 15.5% 27.8% 40.8% 13.0% 2.9%
Fateh 24.8% 25.5% 37.0% 10.2% 2.5%
Hamas 17.8% 27.1% 39.0% 13.2% 2.9%
Haider Abdul Shafi 16.4% 11.8% 38.8% 28.7% 4.3%

West Bank

Improved Worsened Same Don’t know No answer
Yasser Arafat 34.4% 17.2% 40.9% 5.4% 2.1%
Security forces 34.7% 29.2% 24.9% 9.2% 2.0%
Peace process 6.9% 72.6% 14.9% 4.4% 1.2%
Oslo 4.0% 65.7% 19.9% 9.1% 1.3%
PLC 17.3% 34.6% 32.6% 13.9% 1.6%
PNA 31.9% 29.7% 30.6% 6.2% 1.6%
Opposition 12.7% 31.7% 38.1% 15.2% 2.3%
Fateh 24.5% 26.6% 34.7% 11.6% 2.6%
Hamas 14.8% 29.7% 38.1% 14.4% 3.0%
Haider Abdul Shafi 12.7% 12.4% 38.5% 31.3% 5.1%

Gaza Strip

Improved Worsened Same Don’t know No answer
Yasser Arafat 55.1% 9.8% 31.4% 2.3% 1.4%
Security forces 39.2% 30.8% 23.9% 4.6% 1.5%
Peace process 8.7% 68.3% 19.6% 2.5% 0.9%
Oslo 4.8% 64.5% 22.8% 6.4% 1.5%
PLC 19.4% 34.6% 36.2% 7.7% 2.1%
PNA 31.2% 26.2% 36.2% 4.1% 2.3%
Opposition 20.3% 21.2% 45.3% 9.3% 3.9%
Fateh 25.3% 23.5% 41.0% 7.7% 2.5%
Hamas 23.0% 22.6% 40.5% 11.2% 2.7%
Haider Abdul Shafi 22.8% 10.7% 39.2% 24.1% 3.2%

10. Some Palestinians think that the level of corruption in the Palestinian Authority is high; others think that there is corruption but it is not widespread; while others think that there isn’t any corruption. What do you think?

Total W.Bank Gaza
There is a great deal 44.9% 42.0% 49.9%
There is a fair amount 40.7% 40.9% 40.3%
There is hardly any at all 6.6% 7.9% 4.3%
No answer 7.8% 9.2% 5.5%

A Parent’s Day in Court

A personal message from Stanley and Joyce Boim, the parents of David Boim, whose son was gunned down by Amjad HaNawi, an Arab who has found safe haven in the Palestine Authority.

We want to take this opportunity to thank the many people who have helped us win the first stage of our legal battle, which has resulted in a court order to force our government of Israel to file for the arrest and “hand-over” of Amjad HaNawi, the man who murdered our son.

Our battle is not over. We will need further funds and political support, to make sure that the Israeli government indeed fulfills the court order to file the formal request for Hanawi to stand trial. Please continue to give generously to the legal fund that has been formed to continue with this case and others like it (Tzedek Tzedek, P.O. Box 2265, Jerusalem, Israel)

We have had many strange feelings during our year of litigation.

It was a strange feeling that we had to go to court to get our own government to file for the arrest of our son’s murderer.

It was a strange feeling to be told last July by the IDF commander of the central region that the IDF had indeed identified and located the whereabouts of David’s killer and that all is being done to bring him to trial and then to be told by the Israel Minister of Justice in March 97 that he knows nothing about it.

It was a strange feeling that the Israeli police issued an arrest warrant only six days before the court hearing, with the precise evidence that they had a year ago.

It was a strange feeling that we had to have the Israel High Court of Justice issue a mandatory court order to force the government had to draw up papers to demand that the PA hand over our son’s killer to stand trial.

It was a strange feeling that the Israeli Prime Minister personally assured us in October 1996 that demanding the arrest if killers inside the Palestine Authority would be next on the agenda after the Hebron agreement.

It was a strange feeling when the new head of Israel’s Labor opposition looked us in the face and said that “you cannot expect the Palestinians to be 100% perfect”, when we asked him about the fact that the Palestine Authority had given refuge to the killers of our son and other Israeli citizens

It was a strange feeling, as American citizens, to be officially informed by the American embassy in Tel Aviv and the American consulate in Jerusalem that the Palestine Authority has arrested and imprisoned David’s killer, and then to be informed by all levels of the Palestine Authority that no record of Amjad’s arrest exists.

It was a strange feeling to hear a senior US diplomat tell us, that, “well, you know, we have had many drive-by killings in California”

It was a strange feeling that news of the murder of our son and other Israelis and their escape to the Palestine Authority safe havens has taken a back burner to an Oslo process which seems to have very little to do with peace

We continues to have a strange feeling that we will have to continue the effort and expense of a legal fight to make sure that the Israeli government indeed fulfills the terms of a court order to bring our son’s killer to justice.

What could be more elementary than to expect that the governments of Israel and the United States of America will pursue the demand that admitted killers of their citizens will indeed be brought to a court of law to stand trial?

Israeli Family Seeks Justice for Slain Son

Jerusalem – Ouside a settlement north of Jerusalem about 14 months ago, high school junior David Boim was waiting for a bus when a gunman in a car shot and killed him.

His American-Israeli parents have been trying to bring the Palestinian killer to trial ever since. They say they have met much resistance — not from the Palestinian Authority, but from the Israeli government.

This week, the Boims’ case finally moved ahead — but only after they filed a lawsuit that led to an Israeli Supreme Court order Wednesday for Israel to start pressuring the Palestinians to hand over the suspect.

The government has three months to take its first steps.

The case, according to families of terror victims, is one of several instances in which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government has shown little or no initiative for pushing the Palestinian Authority to adhere to part of the Oslo peace deal: turning over suspects for trial in security cases involving Israelis.

The irony is that Netanyahu won election a year ago partly on the promise that he would be much tougher on Palestinian violations of the Oslo accord.

But families of terror victims — most of them Netanyahu supporters say the government is doing nothing for them.

“What is so aggravating is, this is a government we fought for,” Joyce Boim, David’s mother, said Thursday. “Our own government is not cooperating. We really think this is politically motivated, that the government doesn’t want to push the Palestinians on this.”

Bureaucracy blamed

Government spokesman Moshe Fogel denied Thursday that there were political reasons for not requesting the transfer of the Boim murder suspect.

Fogel blamed bureaucracy.

“It’s not a reluctance on our part,” he said. “It has more to do with inefficiency. I admit there isn’t the sense of urgency because we don’t expect anything to come out of it. And it is true that the Boims had to go to the Supreme Court to push it forward.”

The Palestinian Authority has said that it won’t turn over suspects to Israeli officials, but instead will bring them before its own courts. The suspect in Boim’s murder, Amjad Hanawi, is believed to be in a Nablus jail, Israeli officials say.

“You can have a situation now when you can kill a Jew in the middle of Jerusalem, expect the Palestinian killer to be welcomed inside Palestinian Authority territory, and the Israeli government won’t do anything for you,” said David Bedein, a media analyst who is assisting the Boim family.

“It is part of the Oslo mentality: You can sacrifice the individual for the greater good of peace process,” Bedein said. “[But] this has never been a country that said if we lost a few people, it’s OK. The Talmud teaches us that he who has taken a human life has taken a universe.”

The Boim family moved to Jerusalem from the Lower East Side of Manhattan in 1985. David Boim was 6 years old then, the fifth of seven children, who grew up to be the most outgoing of all his brothers and sisters.

Political concerns

On the day of his death, May 13, 1996, the 17-year-old was standing with three of his friends at a bus stop outside the Beit El settlement, about 10 miles north of Jerusalem and the Biblical site of Jacob’s ladder.

He had just finished a study session at the settlement, which is bordered by several Arab villages.

The shots were fired from a compact car at about 3 p.m. Two of his friends were wounded.

Last July, the chief military officer in the territories, Uzi Dayan, told the Boims that one of the suspected killers had been apprehended by Palestinian police.

On Oct. 8 last year, the Boims and several other families met Netanyahu to press for action. According to Bedein, Netanyahu told the families that once the Hebron troop withdrawal arrangement was complete, he would ask for the transfer of suspects. Fogel denied Thursday that Netanyahu linked the transfer to the Hebron pullout.

But another high government official said Thursday that there were some political concerns about the timing of the requests.

“It’s true that we didn’t want to turn that into a crisis at certain periods,” the official said. “We weren’t going to say in the middle of the Hebron negotiations, if you don’t honor this part of the agreement, it’s over.”

The Boims’ lawyer, Nitzana Darshan-Leitner, said the Israeli government now must act on the court order.

“This is a request from parents whose child was murdered,” she said. “Every family would like this basic request fulfilled, that the state work to indict the person who killed their child. If the murder was committed in Tel Aviv or Ashdod, the police would have arrested him immediately. Because the murderer was a Palestinian, there is a special law for him, and our government is not helping.”

John Donnelly is a Miami Herald Staff Writer

Boims Sue the Israel Minister of Justice

The Boims sue the Israel Minister of Justice in the Israel High Court of Justice to demand that the Israeli government demand the arrest of Amjad Hanawi, the Arab who murdered their teenage son and took refuge inside the Palestime Authority.

Do you know where Amjad Hanawi is?

If you answered yes, then you can provide information to the US State Department; or t the Israel Ministry of Justice. Neither of them have a clue.

For those readers not familiar with the case, both U.S. and Israeli intelligence fingered Hanawi as one of the two murderers of David Boim, a sixteen year-old American/ Israeli citizen who was murdered on May 16, 1996 while waiting for a schoolbus near his Beit El Yeshiva, en route to his home in Jerusalem. After shooting Boim, Hanawi took refuge in the Palestinian Authority, where presumably he expected to receive better treatment than if he remained in an area under Israeli jurisdiction.

Yet according to State Department officials, Hanawi guessed wrong; the PA locked him up.

Last month, Kol Yisrael news, the Israel state radio newsreel, reported that while on leave for a Muslim holiday, Hanawi, perhaps thinking that the PA was not that concerned with keeping him in jail, decided not to return. Upon hearing the report, David’s mother, Joyce Boim, wrote the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv, inquiring if her son’s killer was still behind bars. In a briefly worded statement, the US embassy consul assured Mrs Boim that the Palestine Authority had assured the US consul in Jerusalem that Hanawi remained imprisoned.

The story should have ended there. However, the US State Department has been unable to provide any documentary evidence that Hanawi is in fact in jail or that he ever was in jail. A US consular official involved in the case commented that she did not even know which jail Hanawi was in, although she said her Palestinian counterparts had assured her that Hanawi was locked up. When asked if she could provide any records that would prove this assertion, such as an arrest report, a police file, or prison photograph, she declined. Instead, she suggested contacting someone within the P.A., since, she said, this was their concern. The press spokesperson for the US consulate in Jerusalem also could not to provide any documentary evidence of Hanawi’s incarceration, stating that the State Department has been in touch with people in the P.A. on this issue.

When the P.A. was contacted, the P.A. justice and police spokespeople said that they also could not provide any information concerning Amjad Hanawi’s arrest, nor could they provide reporters with visits to the various PA jails to check out the matter first hand.

The US consulate officials responded rather nonchalantly to this development, saying that all countries have their own policies of releasing documents to the press.

Meanwhile, the Israeli government has refused to issue any statements on the whereabouts of Hanawi. Spokepeople from the Justice Ministry, Foreign Ministry, Defense Ministry, Army, and Police all pointed in different directions, saying they did not possess any information on the subject. A spokesperson from the Prime Minister’s office, sounding curiously like my State Department contact, said that Hanawi was the PA’s responsibility, not theirs.

Since the beginning of the Oslo process, Israel has made 37 requests for the transfer of killers from the P.A. to Israel. So far the P.A. has refused to honor any request, stating it prefers to try them themselves, even though this is a violation of the Oslo agreement. Of the 37 suspects, ten are now serving in the Palestinian Preventive Security Forces, despite the fact that Palestinian courts convicted each one of them of attacks against Israelis.

According to Likud Knesset member Michael Kleiner, the current government – learning from the former government’s experiences – has dramatically lowered its expectations about the P.A.’s willingness to comply with Oslo and hand over terrorists. However in the case of David Boim, the government has not even taken the first, elementary step of asking for Hanawi’s arrest. Israel and the United States now appear not only reluctant to pursue this matter, but eager to prevent the public from discovering what happens to Palestinians who kill Israelis.

In early June, David Boim’s father, Stanley Boim, issued his first public statement since his son’s murder, blaming the Israeli government for failing to take any action in the case.

On July 9, 1997, Stanley and Joyce Boim are being given a hearing at the Israel High Court of Justice. The Boims are suing the Israel Minister of Justice and demanding that he order the arrest of the man who murdered their son. As they say to friends and family alike, what happened to their family could happen to anyone, and that unless the Israeli government raises an objection, such a hit and run murder could become a precedent.

While the Israel Ministry of Jutsice gives the impression that it has done everything in its power to pursue the matter, the facts are otherwise. No request has been made by the state of Israel for the arrest of Amjad Hanawi. Moreover, the current Israel Minister of Justice has added no names to the lists of wanted killers that were submitted by the previous Israeli government. The spokesperson for the current Israel Minister of Justice could give no explanation why, for example, the ministry has not asked for the arrest of Muhammad Deif, the Gaza-based Palestinian Hamas leader who planned the abduction and murder of Nachson Wachsman in October, 1994.

Tzachi Hanegbi, Israel’s Minister of Justice, has stated on countless occasions that he will resign his position and call for an end to the Oslo process if the PA refuses to arrest and hand over killers of Jews who have taken refuge in the Palestine Authority. Yet PA Minister of Justice Freich Abu Medein has made it clear that the PA will arrest none of these killers, let alone hand them over. And Palestine Police Commander Nassir Yusef has told me that he is under direct orders from Yassir Arafat not to arrest Muhammad Deif.

Is that why HaNegbi has not acted?

The Refugee Dilemma: A Day in the UNRWA Arab Refugee Camps

Iyad Qadi, a Ramallah resident who fought against Israel during the intifada riots of the late ’80s through early 90s, returned to the Palestinian refugee camps that raged so violently in those years – this time in a different capacity, as assistant public information officer for the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA).

At Ramallah’s Jelazoun camp, lifetime inhabitant Ali Shereka, 26, complains about the camp’s dire conditions – the overcrowding, the filthy air and littered streets. Convicted and jailed between 1989-91 for throwing Molotov cocktail bombs at Israeli soldiers, Shereka, now an Arabic language instructor, warns of a renewed intifada.

“By being in the camps, we show people outside the country that we are not living free and not living in peace,” says Shereka, sitting outside his brother’s butcher shop, a hole-in-the-wall with flies swarming the hanging carcasses. “We are living in misery.”

Qadi affirms this line of thinking. “Palestinians strengthen their claim to a right of return,” he says, “by staying in the camps.”

Qadi offered to show me the camps. Shortly after leaving UNRWA’s Jerusalem field office, we reach the Shuwafat camp in eastern Jerusalem, sandwiched between Jewish neighborhoods’ Newe Ya’aqov and French Hill. “You feel very near the situation, then you understand very well what’s going on,” he tells me of his exposure to the volatile refugee issue, now on the agenda of the Oslo peace process.

We pass what he terms a “flying checkpoint” where three armed Israeli soldiers are inspecting passing vehicles. “I believe this checkpoint has to do with the land agents issue,” he said, alluding to the recent attempted kidnappings of Palestinian land dealers from this camp. (Palestinian Authority Justice Minister Freih Abu Medein declared that the punishment for selling land to Jews is death).

“They deserve to be killed,” Qadi claimed, “but it should be through a decision of the courts, not by youths in the streets.”

In Shuwafat, Jerusalem’s little known Arab refugee camp, occupants hold city identity cards that provide them access to jobs in Israel. With lower unemployment – less than half of the inhabitants work – this camp is apparently better off than others. UNRWA supplies housing, schooling, health care and other services to the approximately 8,000 residents.

Started in 1950 as a “temporary relief program,” UNRWA now runs 18 refugee camps in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. Employing a staff of 22,000, 99 percent of whom are Palestinian, the agency spends more than $700 million annually – the United States, the largest contributor, kicks in $64 million a year – on 3,308,133 registered Palestinian Arab refugees in the West Bank and Gaza, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria. A third of the refugees live in the camps.

[Over the years, UN officials say, thousands of registered refugees have passed away and still receive stipends.]

Shuwafat’s population growth has strained the camp’s existing boundaries – the area is jammed with dilapidating concrete buildings, often housing more than a dozen people per unit. Paradoxically, that’s precisely the way residents want it.

“The refugees’ main concern,” Qadi declared, “is to show the whole world that they are still living in the camps, that their situation is very terrible.” In one schoolhouse, a classroom, with potholes in the floor, is so filled with desks that children must climb over them to get to the blackboard.

Essentially, the camp inhabitants want to remain in limbo until a final settlement on refugees is reached with Israel. “Their main goal is to implement United Nations resolution 194,” said Qadi, claiming the internationally-backed resolution entitles “three million” refugees, including those from 1948, 1967 and descendants, to repatriation rights to pre-1948 Palestine. Still in the books, 194 makes no mention of compensation, only the right of return.

“If three million refugees were to return, Israel would not be Israel anymore,” Qadi said, grinning. “For Israel, this is bullshit, but the refugees believe this is their right.”

At a workshop on refugees last April in Jericho, hosted by PA Municipality Minister Saeb Erakat, camp officials rejected a government recommendation to expand the camps, fearing that they would merge with adjacent cities and become part of the current Palestinian entity. The camp refugees also refused a proposal to vote in the next PA municipal elections.

“By voting, they were afraid of being considered part of the country,” said Qadi, who attended the meeting. “They see this as the first step in supporting Israel’s claim – that there is no refugee issue.”

Entering the 7,000-member Jelazoun camp, we pass a one-room UNRWA home that has seemingly been spackled to the side of an older structure, which is deteriorating like most at the camp. Down the street is an exception – a privately funded, two-story home with a $2,000 satellite dish on the rooftop.

Nearby, PLO and Hamas graffiti adorns the front wall of the local UNRWA office. “Fatah, Hamas, the Popular Front – all are very strong here,” Qadi said. This camp was extremely active during the intifada, undergoing curfews for as long as 40 days. “In various camps, Fatah and Hamas have their own clubs, their own social activities in which they focus on the poorest in the camps,” he said. “It’s a way to gain support for their political parties.” The agency is aware of this activity, he added, but “UNRWA can’t act as a police. It’s not in the UN mandate to interfere.”

Around the corner, locals are vegetating outside the butcher shop, sweaty and swatting bugs. Ali Shereka tells me he lives with 14 people, including wife, mother, two brothers and their wives, and seven children. Chatting amiably with a half dozen friends, Shereka senses a calm before the storm. “If Israel continues its present policy,” he predicted, “there is going to be another intifada very soon.”

Muhammad Shereka, Ali’s brother and the butcher, says he feels victimized by all in authority – Israel, the PA and UNRWA, all of whom he claims do nothing for the camps. “The big fish eat the small fish,” he says. “The little man, he can’t get nothing.”

One resident tells me that he’d leave the camp if he had the money – pessimistic that he will ever return to Palestine. “Israel has to give us the West Bank and Gaza, but we can do nothing about the ’48 border because the politicians don’t want to talk about it,” he lamented. “(PA Chairman Yassir) Arafat gave it up.”

The crowds ears perked when one man asked me, matter-of-factly; “Are you with the Mossad?” (as if I’d tell him if I was) He said Israeli secret agents have infiltrated this camp to identify “security threats.” Qadi claims Israeli soldiers routinely raise havoc in the camps, at times rolling in with tanks and throwing tear gas cartridges through windows. “The peace process has not changed the way Israeli soldiers think towards the Palestinians,” he said. “They are still ready to kill anyone easily, to harass anyone easily, for silly reasons. It’s a daily problem.” Last year, UNRWA sent a protest letter to Israel’s civil administration after soldiers “harassed” residents at the Fawa’ar camp outside Hebron, where two suspected suicide bombers lived. On lesser occasions, Qadi said, the Palestine Liberation Army police force has arrested Hamas militants in the camps.

Headed back towards Jerusalem, we make a final sweep past the Ama-ari camp, which blends into the West Bank city of El-Birah. There is no fence and members run a few private businesses that are like any in El-Birah. With overcrowding in this camp too, Qadi fears that inhabitants might seek apartments elsewhere in the city. He looks me sternly in the eyes and says: “It is a very serious and dangerous problem if people start to think about moving out of the camps.”

Qadi, who makes frequent tours for the press, conveys a clear message. People stay in the squalor of refugee camps to advertise the fact that they remain the proverbial fly in the ointment of the peace process. Even if Arafat were to get control of the entire West Bank and Gaza, Qadi makes it clear that the refugees’ demands would press onward.

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency

Like many other UN relief agencies, UNRWA was founded in the midst of a refugee emergency that occurred in the wake of war. The UN organized UNRWA as a special relief agency that was mandated to tend to the needs and establish “temporary refugee shelters” for the estimated 650,000 Palestinian Arab refugees who abandoned their homes and villages during the War for Israel independence in 1948. This occurred at a time when 450,000 Jews left their homes in the Arab countries and emigrated to Israel, while more than 600,000 Jews arrived from war-torn Europe to the new land of Israel.

By the mid-1990’s, the UNRWA camps operated on a $320 million annual budget, providing services as incentives for Palestinian Arabs to remain in the camps – free education, free health services, free housing, free electricity and free water. The budget is broken down as follows: 57% education, 19% health, 9% welfare payments, and 10% for transportation servicesLucky Patcher Apk for Android

UN Resolution 194 that established UNRWA was written in both contexts: to help Palestinian Arab refugees and to keep them there as refugees. No clause allowed for any permanent solution except for repatriation. These two tenets of 194, re-enacted every two years, remain very much alive.

Many people were surprised when the US state department, in the midst of the Oslo peace process, issued countless statements that supported the status quo of the refugee situation and the absolute right of Palestinians to return to the property that they left in 1948. Indeed, an emergency resolution of the UN general assembly in 1985 dealt with Israeli violations of 194, when Israel launched its first major effort to make housing improvements in the camps. Thirteen hundred homes were built for Arab refugees in Gaza and in the Nablus region, with funds raised by Israel through international relief agencies. These housing initiatives followed a two year study conducted by a special task force of the Israeli government in the early 1980’s that recommended an ambitious program to rehabilitate the housing and sewage facilities in all UNRWA refugee camps.

However, The UN resolution that was enacted on December 16, 1985 against Israel violations of ‘temporary refugee shelters’ transformed the hills of new homes just south of Nablus into ghost towns that remain uninhabited to this day, with an UNRWA guard who watches to make sure that no Arab refugee will ever move in.

Throughout 1986 and 1987, the Israeli government initiated wide ranging discussions about the necessity to take unlilateral action to address the issue of Palestinian refugee squalor. Besides being a humanitarian embarrassment, the camps were quickly becoming a potential powderkeg. UNRWA officials had their own “explanation” as to Israel’s programs for improvement: UNRWA officials issued weekly memos to the refugee residents that the Israeli government was making plans to “exile them once again.”

It was no coincidence that the intifada riots broke out in the UNRWA refugee camps in December, 1987. There is widely circulated opinion within the Israeli intelligence community that the intifada broke out as a direct result of a program that was about to be implemented, calling for the massive overhaul and improvement of camp conditions.

Indeed, the Palestinian Arab rebellion was openly organized on UNRWA premises. Under the terms of a special UN resolution that was passed in February, 1988, UNRWA was allocated $21 million to hire special R.A.O.’s ( refugee affairs officers) to protect the local population from Israeli forces. Israeli security reports issued in 1989 and 1990 accused UNRWA personnel of using UNRWA vehicles to faciliate violence, by blocking roads, providing surveillance of IDF facilities, and actually instigating riots.

Palestine Authority officials today openly acknowledge that the intifada leadership was made up almost entirely of UNRWA personnel.

Indeed, it was the RAO’s operating popular committees that decided who will get aid/assistance, it was the RAO’s who issued frequent memos on “starvation” in the camps, and it was the RAO’s who organized the Hamas and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine to take over the UNRWA workers union that comprises more than 18,000 employees of UNRWA.

It is therefore no surprise that UNRWA schools are decorated with Hamas and PFLP graffitti along with pictures of machine guns spread over a full map of Palestine. In Jerusalem, it was the RAO’s who organized the people in two Jerusalem-based refugee camps to refuse Jerusalem muncipal services.

As a matter of policy, the new Palestinian Authority refuses to provide for any kind of housing aid to the UNRWA camps, since these camp are temporary Palestinian “shelters” where Palestinian Arab refugees are mandated to dwell until they realize their “right of return”.

At a time when the matter of Palestinian refugees enters into the next stage of the Oslo peace process, Arab refugees who live in camps throughout the Middle East have had their hopes raised that they are returning to the homes and villages that they left in 1948. On a recent visit to Palestinian refugee camp, a lifetime resident and school teacher told me that “people laughed at us a few years ago when they said we are going to have our own Palestinian Liberation Army here. Now people laugh at us when we say that we’re going back to the village that we left in 1948.”

The Ayatollahs allowed Drug traffic as a Weapon Against Israel

The special religious edict to distribute hard drugs as an ideological weapon in the war against Israel and the west probably originated in Iran. The Goal: to destabilize society and hit the youth. According to a western intelligence agency, in addition to selling drugs, Hizballah is involved in counterfeiting money using American machinery transferred to Iran in the past. A new assessment states that the terrorist attacks in buenos aires were carried out by local crime “contractors” hired by drug dealers tied to Hizballah.

In early May, not long after the snows began to melt in the mountains of Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran and Turkey, thin wisps of smoke began to rise up above the central valley of Lebanon. This is an annual event: as winter ends and the drug smuggling routes to Asia are passable once more, the heroin distilling season begins again in the Beka valley.

Until four years ago, farmers in this part of Lebanon grew tens of thousands of acres of cannabis, used for the production of marijuana, as well as large quantities of opium poppies. However, the Lebanese and Syrian governments are currently cracking down on drug growers, so that farmers in the Beka valley are now concentrating on producing drugs from imported raw materials. During the winter, their work is sluggish, confined mainly to the distilling of cocaine for the European market from raw coca paste, which arrives from South America under Syrian protection by air and sea. When spring comes, however, the leading Asian and Lebanese drug dealers start to send large quantities of opium poppies from the fields of south-east and central Asia, and heroin production becomes the main priority. Heroin is currently regaining its position as the most popular drug in the world markets.

The raw material is a brown paste known as “morphine base,” and it comes from Turkey, directly or via Syria, to the large purification plants in the Beka valley of Lebanon, where it is transformed into white heroin or “Persian coke” (a lower-quality product).

Right now dozens of “laboratories” are being used to purify drugs in and around the towns of Balbek and Berital. To these one must add the small home laboratories which lay unused during the winter and are now renewing their activity to meet the demand for “White Death” in Western Europe, the U.S.A. and the Middle East.

This industry exports hard drugs to the tune of between $3-7 billion a year. In itself, this business is nothing new. Recently, however, intelligence information has been accumulating in the U.S. suggesting that this field has for a long time branched out from the international drugs scene to the work of the ideological, strategic and economic war being waged by Islamic extremism against the West in general and Israel in particular.

There is now reasonably reliable information, for example, showing that the Hizballah uses its drug connections on the international scene in order to carry out terrorist attacks outside Lebanon against Israel, the U.S. and other Western countries. The drug smuggling infrastructure is also exploited to circulate counterfeit banknotes throughout the world, with the intention of weakening the economies of the West. Even the act of exporting hard drugs to the West and to Israel is perceived as a way to destabilize the social fabric and resilience of the “corrupt Western societies.”

Another question currently being asked is whether Israel could exploit the drugs channels in order to fight the Syrian-backed Lebanese guerrilla movement more effectively than it has done to date.

The growth and production of hard drugs in Lebanon is a relatively recent phenomenon. Until the Lebanese civil war, which began in 1975, cannabis was grown in Lebanon and used for the production of high-grade marijuana, which the Lebanese saw as just another agricultural product, alongside cherries and grapes, which are also grown in great quantities in the Beka region. After the civil war virtually destroyed all other economic fields, however, the production of marijuana became a key import sector in which almost all the ethnic communities and forces involved in Lebanon played a part.

The turning point came when the Syrian army entered Lebanon in 1976 in order to restore order to the country. The Special Division (the Revolutionary Defense Corps) under the command of Rifat Assad, the Syrian president’s energetic brother, was placed in charge of the Beka valley. Rifat saw the cannabis fields and realized the financial potential of his complete control of the region. He allowed the farmers to grow opium poppies without restriction. Within less than ten years the percentage of cultivated land in the Beka valley used for growing drugs increased from 10% to 90%.

It is not enough to grow drugs. They must also be purified and exported by official and not-so-official air and sea ports, all of which were under the forceful control of Syrian officers and clerks. This led to the emergence of a complete business of bribery and protection money involving almost the entire Syrian administration. This impressive list is headed by such names as Mustafa Talas, the Syrian defense minister, who issued transmit permits for drug traders to use Syrian roads. These drug traders transported smuggled “Morphine Base” from the Turkish border to the Beka region of Lebanon, where it is purified. The purified heroin is then returned via Syria to Turkey, from where it is exported to Europe. Rifat Assad continued to be involved in drug trafficking through his sons after he left Syria and settled in Geneva in 1984. Other key names include the head of Syrian military intelligence, General Ali Duba, and the senior Syrian military representative in Lebanon, General Ghazi Kena’an.

In 1992-93, for example, when the Americans estimate that the Beka region produced approximately 720 tons of marijuana and approximately 15 tons of heroin per annum, the Syrian economy took a hefty slice of the profits, amounting to some $3-4 billion each year.

In 1993, however, Syria dramatically changed its attitude to the growing of opium and cannabis in Lebanon. Assad, who had previously not lifted a finger to stop the involvement of his country and his own senior staff in protecting this trade and providing transport facilities for drug dealers, decided — under strong pressure from the Clinton administration — to take serious action against the opium and cannabis growers in the Beka valley. Assad’s very clear goal was to achieve the long-desired removal of Syria from the State Department’s list of countries encouraging the export of drugs.

Assad appointed his (now-deceased) son Basal and General Ali Duba to head the campaign to destroy the drug crops. In the past (and to some extent even today) the Syrian and the Lebanese authorities used to carry out show- piece campaigns in which cannabis and poppies were destroyed before the Western television cameras, in order to free themselves of American pressure. Now, however, according to Western intelligence sources, Assad told his son to “eliminate the drug problem in Lebanon.”

Under Basal’s command, the Syrian troops and Lebanese policemen raided the drug fields of the Beka region, engaging in a thorough and systematic destruction of drug crops. However, a year after this campaign began, Basal — who had been earmarked by President Assad as his successor — was killed in a mysterious road accident. Basal was driving his Mercedes on the way to the Damascus airport in the early morning before dawn, when he suddenly swerved off the road. His car overturned and he was killed.

Intelligence information reaching the West recently has suggested that Basal’s road accident was actually a well-planned assassination ordered by Lebanese drug dealers as revenge against Basal (and as a warning to his father) for being over-zealous in their destruction of the Lebanese drug harvest.

Not only did Assad lose his beloved son, but Syria lost a charismatic and gifted successor who would one day have taken his place in the presidential palace.

>From 1993, the Syrians and the Lebanese authorities have engaged in the genuine destruction of much of the drug harvest, and have also severely limited the areas where new harvests may be grown. The American administration has responded in kind, awarding both countries substantial compensation (most of which will probably never reach the growers). Spokespeople for the American administration have sung the praises of the anti-drug campaign on every possible platform. Despite all this, Syria and Lebanon have still not been removed from the State Department’s list of drug exporters, since drug purification in the Beka region continues as in the past, and has even expanded. The Lebanese drug industry has simply shifted from an emphasis on the “agricultural production” of poppies and cannabis to “industrial manufacture” concentrating on the purification of drugs from heroin and cocaine bases imported from Asia and South America.

Dozens of laboratories are active in Lebanon, including full-scale industrial facilities as well as mobile home-based installations (located in strongly Shiite regions under the total control of Hizballah).

Interpol, for example, has stated that Lebanon is a world center for the storage and marketing of a chemical substance known as “acetyanhydride” — a vital component in the purification of heroin. Lebanon’s proximity to the European Union, and its location in the center of the Asian drug trade are additional advantages that make the country an attractive base for processing and exporting the finished drugs to consumers in Europe, the U.S., Canada and Australia.

This advantage even applies in the case of cocaine, which originates in South American countries such as Brazil, Colombia and Venezuela. An intelligence source in the Israel Police states that a kilogram of heroin base (prior to purification) in the Beka region cost $8,000 – 10,000 last year. The price of a kilogram of purified heroin in Lebanon during the same period was $20,000, and the price of the same kilogram on the security fence when it is smuggled to Israel was in the range $25,000 – 35,000.

American sources estimate that during 1996 Lebanon exported approximately 60 tons of heroin and 100 tons of marijuana, with a total value of more than $12 billion. It is reasonable to assume that the Syrians pocketed a significant percentage of this sum, probably more than $1 billion.

Hizballah has pocketed a more modest amount — between several tens of millions of dollars and up to $200 million a year. The Islamic organization’s involvement in drugs began immediately after its establishment toward the end of the Lebanese war in 1982 as an Iranian initiative to oppose the Israeli occupation. Since most of the drug- growing areas in the Beka region of Lebanon are populated entirely by Shiite Muslims, the Hizballah rapidly became the main armed militia in these areas. Entire families, among the most respected and important in the movement, are associated with, and sometimes involved almost directly in all stages of production, transportation and marketing of drugs in the Beka and southern Lebanon (particularly Nabatiya).

However, Hizballah sees itself primarily as a social and political organization, not as an armed militia. Accordingly, and unlike the Syrians, it does not demand protection money (or it does so only on a limited scale). Hizballah receives its share of the drugs profits mainly through membership fees and donations from dealers, or from direct marketing. These two sources alone are enough to fund the health, education, religious and social services Hizballah provides to the Shiite population of Lebanon. These activities — which, in the southern neighborhoods of Beirut (the Dahaya) and in the Balbek region effectively replace the Lebanese government — give Hizballah its political power base.

But it does not end here. Hizballah has also recently become the political representative of the marijuana and opium producers of the Beka region, whose activities have been hampered by the Syrians and the Lebanese government. The leading spokesman for the growers, who claim that they have been deprived of their source of income and are not receiving the compensation from the U.S. or any other proper compensation, is none other than the former secretary of Hizballah, Sheikh Tufaili.

Tufaili’s militant stance in favor of the resumption of the large-scale growth of opium and cannabis in the Beka region is reported every day in the Lebanese press. Only the day before yesterday, Tufaili announced the “Rebellion of the Hungry” the expansion of drug growing and production in Lebanon and the refusal to pay attention to any restrictions. Recently reports even reached the West that growers have been encouraged by Tufaili and have received armed protection from Hizballah in recommencing their cannabis and opium crops in large areas of the northern Beka, in the Harmal region.

It is also known that disagreements emerged between Tufaili and Hassan Nasrullah, who replaced him as secretary of Hizballah. These serious disagreements almost caused a split in the movement. Intelligence reports reaching the West suggest that these disagreements were not ideological or personal, but concerned the Lebanese drug business that Tufaili sought to promote despite the wrath of the Syrians and the Hariri government, in order to promote the interests of the Shiite farmers. Nasrullah — a more cautious and moderate figure — saw the drug business mainly as an ideological weapon in the war against Israel and the West.

This aspect of the Hizballah’s drug activities — i.e. the movement’s use of the business and its commercial infrastructure as a weapon in its ideological war against the “Great Satan” (the U.S.) and the “Small Satan” (Israel), has been almost completely ignored in the media. The use of hard drugs is likely prohibited by the Koran, and drug trafficking must also be considered a sin. Accordingly, the leaders of the political and military wing of Hizballah made sure at an early stage that a religious “edict” was received, in the form of a Fatwa from religious leaders permitting the marketing and distribution of drugs in Israel and in the West in general. The express goal of this policy was to weaken resistance and encourage rapid social degeneration in these countries.

Further evidence of this objective can be found in ideological publications and material disseminated by Hizballah. It is not known which religious authorities published the permit allowing the distribution of drugs as an ideological weapon, but all the evidence suggests that they are Iranian Ayatollahs rather than Lebanese religious scholars.

Iranian influence can also be seen in another aspect of the ideological weapon used by Hizballah, and one that has hardly been mentioned until now: The counterfeiting of U.S. dollars and European currencies intended to disrupt Western economies by impairing international trade and tourism. These activities are also centered in the Beka region of Lebanon, in Balbek and Barital. “This is high-quality counterfeiting,” stated a recent report prepared by a Western intelligence agency for American decision makers. “It may reasonably be assumed that American machines for making bills sold and transferred to Iran in the past have reached the Beka region, and that the Iranians are involved in the counterfeiting business.”

It has emerged that Hizballah directly runs a large printing center in the town of Barital (in the drug purification area) producing large quantities of $100 bills, as well as German marks, and French and Swiss francs.

The Americans are very concerned by this development, and have been trying to halt the counterfeiting campaign for five years. They even established a special branch of the Secret Service — the section of the U.S. Treasury responsible for defending the national currency — with the objective of fighting this phenomenon. A delegation of the American administration visited Israel in connection with the campaign, but to date no real results have been achieved.

Not long ago, $100,000 in counterfeit bills was sent to Paraguay, in an attempt to distribute the money. It is unclear whether the attempt was successful, but the mere fact of this dispatch points to another way in which Hizballah is combining its drug trafficking with its ideological activities, namely terrorism.

It is well known that South America is home to a large population of Lebanese immigrants, many of whom are Shiites who identify with Hizballah or with the secular Shiite Lebanese movement Amal. Many of these Lebanese expatriates, by chance or otherwise, are involved in the drug trade. It was only natural that when Hizballah began to take control of the growth and export of drugs from the Beka region, they found sympathetic support among the Lebanese diaspora in South America.

A recent Interpol report notes that much of the cocaine base sent for purification in the Beka originated in Brazil, in the border regions with Argentina and Paraguay. Another important source of raw materials for the purification of cocaine, according to Interpol, comes from Venezuela; here, too, particularly in the island of Margarita, there is a Lebanese immigrant population that maintains drug trade links with Hizballah and forwards donations to the movement.

One area of concentration of Shiite Lebanese immigrants is in the triangle formed by the borders of Brazil, Paraguay and Argentina, around the city of Foz do Iguasu, close to the Iguasu waterfalls — the largest and most impressive in the world, and which attract millions of tourists each year. Most of the Lebanese immigrants in this region live in Paraguay, where law enforcement is extremely lax. A few years ago, I myself crossed the borders between the three countries at Foz do Iguasu repeatedly. Neither myself nor my luggage were ever examined.

A virtually unguarded border between three poor South American countries is an invitation to drug traffic and other underhand activities. One of these activities is evidently terrorism, by means of local contractors. A recent assessment by sources in the West suggest that both the explosions in Jewish and Israeli institutions in Buenos Aires were not carried out directly by the Iranians or Hizballah, but by local professional assassins hired as contractors by Hizballah in order to carry out the attacks.

Those who hired the local assassins were probably local Lebanese involved in the Lebanese drug trade and familiar with the local crime scene. This would also explain why those who carried out the attacks have not been discovered to this day.

It may be noted that Hizballah employs exactly the same method in another part of the world. After Goldstein’s massacre in the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron, the organization used its contacts in drug circles in Thailand to place a booby-trapped truck outside the Israeli Embassy in Bangkok. This attack was foiled due to an accident in which the truck was involved on its way to the site, and due to a disagreement that emerged between the Thai contractors and those from Iran and Lebanon who ordered the “job.”

The facts detailed above raise a number of question marks concerning the way Israel has reacted to and used information about the drug trade in Lebanon and the implications of this business. Why have the Israeli security services not used the drug channel to secure information and carry out counter-terrorist activities? Is this not a regrettable failure?

Another question relates to the fact that Israel has refrained from reminding the Americans that it is their duty to apply pressure on the Syrians to uproot the drug scourge in Lebanon. The American administration walks on eggs shells in relating to the Syrian involvement in the drug trade, since it does not want to lose an important partner in dialogue in the Middle East or to push Syria away from the peace process. The question is whether this policy is wise, and whether Israel should not encourage the Americans to take a different approach that might soften the Syrian President’s attitude and encourage flexibility in the peace process, among other areas.

Finally, it must also be asked whether Israel could not have been more creative and used different methods to hit Hizballah in its pockets by impairing the export or even production of drugs, thus pressuring the organization to moderate its activities in southern Lebanon.

There is no need to go into detail, but it is no secret that Israel has imposed a naval siege on Lebanon several times, and has also acted on occasions against Hizballah facilities in the heart of the Beka region. Such actions, might win the gratitude of the Americans and Europeans, who have for some time had their eye on the Lebanese drug stores.

The Addict Son of the Head of Syrian Intelligence

In Lebanon and Syria, drug trafficking and even the extortion of protection money are considered not only a profitable business, but also one that brings honor to the individuals and families involved in this trade. The stigma attached to drug traders in the West becomes a status symbol and source of pride in the Levant.

Some of the most respected families in Lebanon, all of whose children are declared and well-known Hizballah supporters, such as the Abdullah family from Nabatiya, the Hamiya, Shams, Za’itar and other families, are involved in the drug trade and dutifully pay their tithes to the Islamic organization. This practice is not confined to Hizballah, however. Every ethnic community in Lebanon has highly respected representatives in the drug industry: for example, the Maronite Christian families Franjiya and Jumail, and the Druze Jumblatt family. Even the Palestinian faction led by Abu Nidal has its own drug purification plants that provide a useful income.

It is no surprise, then, that the founding generation of the Syrian- Lebanese drug industry and protection racket have raised a younger generation following in their parents’ footsteps. Firstly, one might mention Rawi Harari, the son of the Lebanese president, who is an international drug dealer. The list also includes Fars and Darir Al-Assad, the two sons of Rifat Assad (brother of the Syrian president), who combine drug trading in Europe with the marketing of stolen cars and weapons. Far more impressive in his activities is Muntazar Al-Kazar, a close associate of the president, whose father was involved in the drug trade when he served as an ambassador. Muntazar himself (currently in jail in Spain) has become a legend in his own life in the fields of drug trafficking, weapons dealing and involvement in terrorism.

Not all the younger generation have been so successful. Ali Duba, for example, the head of Syrian military intelligence — who was described by an American Congress report as “responsible for inventing the organized protection racket for Lebanese drug dealers” — was bitterly disappointed when one of his sons became a drug addict. His son was hospitalized on a remote farm in northeast Syria, but the shame and sorrow have cast a shadow over the family.

A Conversation with Jonathan Pollard

Federal Correctional Institute, Butner, NC.

Last Friday (March 21, 1997) a little after one o’clock in the afternoon, the side door of the visiting room at the prison opened, and through it walked prisoner number 09185-016, Jonathan Pollard, accompanied by a guard.

For nearly seven years I had waited for this moment. At times I had despaired that it would ever occur. Then suddenly, it happened. Jonathan Pollard stood before me.

We sat around a small table in the modest cafeteria-like room that is used for family visits at the prison. The guard who accompanied Pollard spoke briefly with the American Naval Intelligence officer who had come especially from Washington, DC. Nearly 12 years have elapsed since Pollard was arrested, and the Americans are still fearful of Pollard — or at least they pretend to be fearful of him. That’s why a special agent was sent from Naval Intelligence (the last place that Pollard worked) to monitor our meeting. “Think of me as a fly on the wall,” the officer said, as he mumbled a few words of politeness.

I didn’t have any problem with his presence, any more than I had any intention of prying any state secrets out of Pollard. Twelve years have passed since the start of this affair, and the only thing that matters at all to Pollard is coming home. And his only home, his true home, his longed-for home, in spite of it all, is the State of Israel.

“What scares me the most,” said Pollard, “is that we won’t have time — Esther and I — to have a family. I want so badly to have children. I want to be a father. Time is running out. I’m not interested in adopting or in anything like that. The whole point is to have our own children. I want to live among my people in Israel, to share in what happens to Israel — the hardships, the tragedies, the explosions. To be an Israeli. That’s all.”

For seven years I have been closely following the Pollard case, and I have never been able to understand the intense uncompromising love Pollard continues to feel for the State of Israel. Even though he was betrayed by the state in the cruelest way imaginable; even though he was exploited by the state over an extended period of time, and then just thrown to the dogs; even though he was thrown out of the Israel Embassy in Washington into the waiting arms of the FBI; and even though in the end he was incriminated by the state he had served and risked his life, his family and his future for. In spite of all this, Pollard continues to speak of the state with great adoration as one would speak of a long-lost love.

He is a true patriot. When the conversation has to do with Israel or with Tzahal (the Israel Defense Forces), his eyes sparkle. He expresses himself in terms that were more common in the early days of the state. Zionism, in his eyes, is not a dirty word, but a true ideal, and he is not ashamed to call himself a patriot.

Only now, after so many years, has Pollard begun to receive some recognition — a kind of breast-beating “mea culpa” flowing in dribs and drabs from “his nation” sharing in his pain. Nevertheless, even his Israeli citizenship had to be fought for, and he only received it because of the threat of the petition he had filed with the High Court of Justice. After he pleaded for a visit from the Israeli ambassador, they finally sent some low-level underling, a junior diplomat. The prime ministers continue to bring up his name only under coercion, and even then only in a whisper.

“So how do you explain it,” I asked him. “Why do you still love us so?”

“Nothing will ever change that,” he said with a smile, “even if tomorrow a Mossad hit team comes to target me, I will continue to love Israel. Israel is my country. That is the way I was born, the way I was brought up and the way I was educated. I wish all Jews would feel this way. I hate the Diaspora; I detest living outside the land. America is a luxury hotel — five stars. But Israel is home. Look, they say a man can only truly love one woman, and it’s true. I have a lot of respect and appreciation for America. I’ve expressed remorse for my deeds. I never did and I never would do anything to harm the United States. But for Israel, I am ready to lay down my life, here and now.”

Butner is a small, typically American town in the middle of nowhere. In order to get there you have to fly into the airport at Raleigh, the capital of North Carolina, and from there drive west. The countryside is pretty — poetic and green. Little towns dot the countryside, secluded and peaceful.

The town of Butner has only one main street, lots of brown wooden homes, two or three restaurants for wayfarers and a few gas stations. A little farther on, beyond the picturesque curve in the road, the prison appears.

Some 5,000 prisoners are held at the Butner prison complex. On the outside, the place looks like a quality, well-kept vacation guest house. Grass-lined roads, decorative shrubbery, signs pointing the way.

The entry road splits, at a certain point, into two roads. The road to the right leads to the low security facility where prisoners who are not considered dangerous are held. To the left the more secure branch of the prison is laid out. This facility is defined as “medium to high security.”

Pollard is held in the more secure branch of the prison. Squat, gray concrete buildings surrounded by high fences and giant piles of razor-wire piled up in amazingly careful order. Silvery and sparkling in the sunlight.

Everything shines, well-kept, lightly oiled. There’s not a speck of rust or even the slightest hint of neglect or any disorder whatsoever.

Guards patrol the perimeter in white Ford vans. A large team of gardeners bustles between the lawns and gardens on small tractors and cares for the greenery. The overall atmosphere is peaceful, almost pastoral. America.

“Don’t be impressed by what you saw outside,” Pollard later told me. “Inside, things are completely different.” In recent years Pollard’s daily routine in prison has become more and more difficult. A number of prisoner uprisings in neighboring federal prisons that took place about two years ago have caused FCI Butner to be flooded with dangerous prisoners who were transferred to the facility where Pollard is held.

The level of personal security that Pollard feels is very low. Pollard won’t go into the prison dining hall if he is not sure that there are enough guards around at the time. Pollard doesn’t have any special problem with the guards or the prison officials. His main problem is with his fellow prisoners. His Jewish appearance and the kipa on his head do not help matters any. He has to live by his wits to survive.

In the entry hall of the prison a smiling guard received me, and helped me to fill out the required forms. Afterwards another guard named Kerry Mottern came to escort me into the prison. I had to check all my belongings in a small locker. Even my wallet. It is permissible to bring in only up to $20 in small bills for use in the coffee and sandwich machines that are lined up in the visiting room.

It is forbidden to bring the prisoner anything. No food. No drink. No money. It is forbidden to have any physical contact with the prisoner beyond a handshake, a brief kiss or embrace at the beginning of the visit and again at the end of the visit. Visitors are asked to show good taste in their dress or they may not be permitted to visit.

A long corridor leads to the visiting room. The guard, Mottern, polite and efficient, entrusted me into the hands of the special agent from Washington. We sat together and chatted and waited. The special agent was slightly bored, and I was in a high state of expectation.

Pollard arrived about 10 minutes later. He looked exactly as he did in the many pictures Esther had sent me. A long beard frames his face, his hair is overgrown, and he wears a small kipa. I’m not sure if our embrace was a brief one, as the prison rules stipulate, but the guards turned a blind eye. Pollard sat down, quickly wiped away a lingering tear, shook hands with the monitor from Washington and began to speak. “I’m glad you came, Ben. After seven years, it’s time that we should finally meet one another.”

I was glad, too. Jonathan Pollard spoke for nearly five hours. Fluently, quickly, clearly. He spoke about everything and did not avoid a single question. He spoke about Shimon Peres, Benjamin Netanyahu, Yitzhak Shamir, Yitzhak Rabin, Ariel Sharon. He spoke about Aviem Sella, Rafi Eitan, Irit Erb, Yossi Yagur. He spoke about Esther, about Anne (his ex-wife), about Amnon Dror, about his parents and his sister. He spoke about Zionism, about freedom, about love and about disappointment. He spoke about life and death — and about what sustains him between the two.

One thing needs to be made perfectly clear: For five hours I scrutinized his words, carefully looking for any hint or any sign of emotional instability. Over the last few years, Pollard has been the victim of an ugly smear campaign orchestrated by certain individuals in Israel and the USA. They claim he is mentally disturbed, not stable, lives in his own world and is not responsible for his words and deeds.

This was never true, nor will it ever be true. Jonathan Pollard is a thoroughly focused individual; he is clear, he is gifted, and he is astonishingly intelligent. He knows what he is talking about, and he is equipped with an endless reservoir of knowledge in many diverse areas. He understands; he is discerning; he reacts and he responds.

No, he is not happy. And why should he be? He is quite angry, as a matter of fact. And he has more than his fair share of bitterness. But Jonathan Pollard is a completely normal person, and all those who try to claim otherwise merely compound their guilt by heaping another grievous sin upon their great iniquity.

A few hours before we met, a suicide bomber had blown himself up at the Apropo Cafe in Tel Aviv. A few minutes before he came into the visitor’s room, Pollard had heard about it on the news. “I’m enraged!” he told me. “He blew himself up in the middle of a coffeehouse, killed three innocent women, and who do they interview on the news? [Palestinian activist] Hanan Ashrawi! As if we’re the guilty ones! We are always the guilty ones! They kill us and still we’re to blame! I just couldn’t believe it! I was sitting there watching TV with a cup of tea in my hand and I had to leave the room because I was afraid I was going to throw it at someone!”

Arab terrorism and the Arab war on Israel were the main motivating factors in Pollard’s decision to work for the state. Within the framework of his job as a strategic analyst for American Naval Intelligence, he would routinely come across vital intelligence information concerning the arming of Arab countries and their efforts to acquire nuclear, biological and chemical weapons.

When Pollard came across information on the arming of Iraq with chemical weapons, and when he understood that the Americans were not passing this information on to Israel, he decided to act. Not to hurt America, but to save Israel. That’s how it all began.

Six years after he was arrested and imprisoned, Pollard sat in a dungeon cell in the federal prison at Marion, IL, and watched on CNN as Scud missiles rained down on Ramat Gan and Tel Aviv.

“It was the worst experience of my life,” he remembers. “I was helpless to do anything. My worst nightmare was realized before my very eyes. Look, I knew it would happen. I warned them that it would. And they all laughed at me. Avi [Israel Air Force attache Aviem Sella] came down hard on me. He didn’t believe me. I argued with him for hours about this. He just didn’t take the Iraqi threat seriously. I told him that they had the capability to reach Tel Aviv. He dismissed me with a condescending wave of his hand. Avi was a wonderful person, but he had the mind-set of a fighter pilot. He was sure that all you had to do was drop a half-ton bomb on any problem and that’s how to solve it. And that’s not true.

“When I saw the Scuds falling on Tel Aviv I felt I had failed. I paced my cell like a madman. This was precisely what I had worked to prevent. What I had sacrificed my life for. Where did I go wrong? I prayed that the Scuds did not contain chemical warheads. I knew exactly what would happen if a chemical missile fell. I knew all of Israel’s response plans. I knew what they would activate, I knew what they would use. And I was afraid of that.”

“Do you think Israel reacted appropriately by not responding to the Scud missiles?”

“I will never forgive Yitzhak Shamir, Moshe Arens and Ariel Sharon for not responding. It was a huge mistake — a fatal one. It was catastrophic. It dealt Israel’s deterrence a fatal blow. Look at what has happened to us today. Where is Israeli deterrence? When does any country allow another country to drop close to 40 missiles on its head and let it pass in silence?”

For close to 12 years Jonathan Pollard has languished in prison. He spent the first years in one of the harshest, most infamous prisons in the United States, FCI Marion. He was held there in solitary confinement, in a dungeon cell, without ever seeing another living soul. It has only been a few years since he was moved to Butner. When he was moved to Butner, his conditions improved, but prison life continues to be living hell on a daily basis. The nightmare continues — an unending saga of suffering, loneliness and frustration.

“How do you explain the antipathy on the part of Israel, the fact that the prime ministers have done so little, so late, on your behalf. Is it possible that there is something we don’t know? Some skeleton in the closet that causes everyone to flee as if you had the plague?”

“There is no such thing. I cannot hurt anyone. A lot of time has passed. I have no desire to do anyone any harm. I don’t hate anyone.

“In Israel there are all sorts of groups of people, each with their own special interests. There are those with dirty hands in my case, and as these things go, they have no interest in seeing me free. Then there are those who don’t want to harm the U.S.-Israel relationship. They behave like peasant subj ects of a vassal state of ‘The Empire.’ And if it costs the life of one man, so what? It’s bizarre, but each group has its own reason why not to act on my behalf. The right fears that if the Americans free me, that will prove their commitment to the peace process and thereby intensify Israel’s commitment. The left is totally self-effacing where the Americans are concerned, and fears making waves, so Pollard, they believe, has to be sacrificed. I fall somewhere in the middle, right between the cracks.”

“What about Benyamin Netanyahu? Why is it that he promised you and Esther the sun, the moon and the stars before the elections and now he scarcely remembers how to pronounce your name on his trembling lips?”

“Oh. I do not like that man. I do not know why, but I do not like him. He is all theatrics and posturing. He is not genuine. With Shimon Peres at least you always knew where you stood — for good or evil. What you see is what you get. With Netanyahu, who knows?

“Don’t forget, Netanyahu was the Israeli ambassador to the United Nations during my operation. And don’t forget that Moshe Arens was deeply involved with my activities. He knew everything. He okayed everything. Arens’ fingerprints were on all of the tasking orders I received, on all the operations, on all the directions. And Netanyahu, you mustn’t forget, was Arens’ ‘poodle.’

“Several sources have told me that Netanyahu played a part in the decision to throw me out of the embassy. There is no proof of this; I try to be cautious and I won’t make any accusations in this matter. But I don’t have any doubt that Netanyahu is one of those to be counted with the group that does not approach me with clean hands, and certainly not with clean consciences.”

Pollard asked, “Did you ever hear the real story of how we were expelled from the embassy?”

“Not really,” I replied.

“Then listen now, and you won’t believe…

“Anne and I drove into the Israeli embassy compound through the electronic gate. I was identified at the entrance, and they opened the gate for me. The FBI were following, but they did not enter; they remained outside. I had specific instructions from Avi and Rafi [Rafi Eitan, a member of the intelligence community] on how to behave in such a situation, and that is how I acted. When the electronic gate closed after me, I knew I was home. On safe ground. That I could stop worrying. It was over.

“We went inside. The security officer received us. ‘Do you know who I am ?’ I asked him. ‘Yes,’ he answered. I was glad. I felt relieved. For me and for Anne the tension of the last few days had been overwhelming, and it had exploded all at once. Now Israel was giving me refuge. Now Israel would protect me.

“About five minutes later the security officer went into some room, and he came out a few minutes later. Meanwhile, outside in the courtyard of the compound, there was a big uproar. Israeli security officers were all over the place with guns drawn in their hands. Outside the compound it was possible to make out all the FBI vehicles. Anne and I started to become apprehensive.

“The security officer called to me, ‘You will have to go outside and enter again through the main gate.’ I could not believe my ears. ‘Go outside? What for?! Do you know what is waiting for me outside?!’

“‘I am sorry. Those are the instructions.’

“‘Are you crazy? Have you gone out of your minds?!’ I asked him. ‘You know very well that they are waiting for me outside!’ He lowered his face, and did not answer. I knew I was finished. I knew I was fighting for my life.

“‘Listen!’ I said to him, ‘I’m Dani Cohen!’ [Pollard’s code name under which he was run, and the name under which he was given an official Israeli passport in the course of the operation.] ‘I know,’ he answered. ‘It’s me, Dani Cohen! Jonathan Pollard!’ I told him. He did not answer me. Tears ran down the cheeks of the security officer, and he didn’t answer. ‘Check it again!’ I begged him. ‘Don’t take a decision like this upon yourself! You’ll have it on your conscience for the rest of your life!’ ‘The decision has already been made,’ he said, ‘And not by me. I’m sorry.’

“I looked at Anne. She was devastated. I knew what awaited her. I knew what awaited me. I was less worried about my own fate than I was about hers. I knew she was innocent, that she was not involved, that she didn’t know. And I knew what suffering lay ahead for her.

“We went out. I stopped the car outside of the embassy compound. The FBI agents were upon us at once. They behaved appropriately. They had me bend over the hood of the car and they handcuffed me. I knew it was the end.

“I looked back at the embassy, and I saw my flag, blue and white, proudly flapping in the breeze. I felt the world was collapsing upon me. I raised my eyes to the windows of the embassy. Many pairs of eyes were staring back at me. At least two of the people that were watching me from the window were people I knew very well. People who had been involved in running me. And now that they saw me, the curtains were starting to close. The window blinds were drawn, one by one. Within moments the entire embassy was shrouded and locked up tight. I felt as if a large eye that had been watching over me the whole time had just closed. And I remained totally alone.”

Part II

Conscience is a sensitive word with Jonathan Pollard. He has left behind him many a troubled conscience. Many of the personalities involved in the affair have not been interviewed since the story exploded in November 1985. Such as, for example, Rafi Eitan, who was the chief of Lakam, the bureau of intelligence contacts that ran Pollard throughout the affair. And such as Aviem Sella, the air force officer who discovered Pollard, enlisted him and became his friend, his Secret Service contact and his confidant.

“I really like Avi,” said Pollard, who is in Federal Correction Institute in Butner, NC, for providing Israel with classified U.S. intelligence information. “No matter what, I like him very much. In spite of it all. He is a wonderful person. We spent a lot of time together. We spoke for hours. We were very close. He is a special man, very talented. He’s the kind of man I would be willing to follow into battle; I would follow him anywhere. If Avi ordered me to jump from a helicopter, I would jump. Okay, maybe not jump, but I would know that there was some very good reason that I was being asked to jump. He is a decent person.

“I believe that what happened to me with him was an exceptional case, because with me, in the end, he was not decent at all.

“Avi promised me all along that if something should happen, he would protect Anne [Pollard’s wife at the time] and get her out. We had an agreement that if something would happen, he would take Anne with him. Even if she didn’t want to go, he would put a gun to her head and take her with him, whether she wanted to or not.

“As far as I was concerned, I was prepared to do whatever I had to do in order to protect him, and I did. I did not turn him in; I made it possible for him to escape. I knew he didn’t have diplomatic immunity and that he would be lost if they got to him before he could get out of the country. I knew he was a thousand times more important to Israel than I was. I had already done what I could; he still had lots to offer. He was an outstanding officer and a distinguished pilot — the air force needed him.

“So I was astonished when Anne returned home the day that Avi fled the country. I asked her if he had asked her to go with him. She said that he had mentioned some sort of possibility of that kind but that she had said she wasn’t interested and he backed down. I was very disappointed. Hey, Avi, haven’t you forgotten something? You promised me you would get Anne out!

“Later, when I was being interrogated, they pulled out the testimony Avi had given in Israel. The interrogating agents, for some reason, allowed me five minutes to read it. They simply left it out in front of me and went out of the room. I was in handcuffs and the testimony was composed of more than 100 pages. I scanned the pages and I was floored. His words shot through my head. Bang. Bang. Bang. I had done everything I could to protect him, and he just sold me out.”

“And what about Rafi Eitan?”

Pollard’s face froze. “Look, I don’t want to hate anyone. I don’t have any extra energy to devote to hating. I need to use whatever strength I have to survive here. And believe me, that isn’t easy. Rafi? I am not angry and I do not hate him. What was, was. You know what bothered me more was in the middle of my plea session they suddenly announced that he had been promoted to be the head of Israel Chemical Ltd.

“And in the same breath, they announced that they had promoted Avi to be the commander of a large air force base. This infuriated the Americans. It would have had to infuriate them. Not only did they spy in the United States, they then fled the country and were rewarded with promotions. So why shouldn’t the Americans avenge themselves on me? I think that at such a sensitive time, they simply did not think things through.”

“Speaking of your plea agreement, what was it that happened with it in the end? You were supposed to get a relatively light sentence and ended up with a life sentence. Who betrayed you?”

“It happened in court, on the day that I entered my plea. Suddenly someone came into the room with a James Bond attache case handcuffed to his wrist. He approached the judge, took a bunch of papers out of his attache case and said, ‘One moment.’ He then replaced the original plea agreement with the copy he had brought. There were interesting changes. In the place where I had been described as an ‘Israeli agent,’ a line was drawn through it and the definition had been changed to ‘rogue agent’ [which means an agent who had no official authorization or who worked for officials who were not authorized]. In the place where the operation had been identified as an Israeli espionage operation, an additional line had been drawn to cross it out, and the words ‘rogue operation’ had been penned in.

“With one stroke of the pen they turned me from a foreign agent who had worked on behalf of the State of Israel into a freelancer who worked for himself — some wild-eyed, nationalist fanatic. Hey, that’s not true! Ben, you’re looking at Dani Cohen! At an Israel agent who worked for the Lakam intelligence office, who at one point received a salary and who has an Israeli company registered in his name! Who even had a date for deactivation! December. The month after I was arrested I was supposed to have been deactivated, to leave it all and move to Israel to build a life there.”

“At what point did you start to receive money for your activities?”

“The beginning was not on a monetary basis. My initiative had nothing to do with money. I had no interest in money. Rafi took care to pay me, but he did it in a strange way. He would send me different places, on errands and he would ask me to pay for things with my credit card; he would give me back the money in cash. I told him that it was crazy, that my credit card could incriminate me and he just said that that is the way it has to be done.

“By the way, he tried to convince me to bring him information on American agents in Israel. He said he was willing to pay any price for this. I absolutely refused. I had my red line. It was very clear to me that I would never do anything to endanger America or American lives. That’s not for me. I didn’t work for money; I wasn’t willing to do any such thing. I never had anything against America. I only wanted to save Israel.

“Suddenly they all abandoned me. Suddenly they don’t recognize me any more. Look, everyone knew about my activities, everyone from the bottom right up to the top. So what happened all of a sudden? The paritz [landlord] was angry? They were overcome by fear? Why didn’t they think about that beforehand?

“It was really sad to witness this kind of behavior, the confusion, the panic. Just like all the years in the Diaspora. Nothing had changed. It does not reflect honor. Why die on your knees in the ghetto? Isn’t it preferable to die a proud death on the field of battle? This is the mentality of eternal victims. Those who live in fear of ‘The Empire.’ In fear of the goyim.

“Why not stand courageously in the face of reality? To admit what happened and to move on from there? To stand up and act like a sovereign state, with pride? We have always been ruled over by different foreign empires, even to this day. ‘The Empire’ once sat upon the banks of the Nile, then upon the banks of the Euphrates and Tigris, then upon the Tiber and the Thames. Now it sits on the Potomac.”

“Who in fact was behind the changes in your plea agreement that ultimately resulted in a life sentence?”

“Look, I don’t exactly know. It was done in the usual way. There were two signatures on the two changes. One in blue, which was for the American representative, and one in red, which belonged to the Israeli representative. The signature in blue was the initials A.S. and I recognized them. It was the signature of Abe Sofer. The Israeli signature remains a mystery. I did not figure it or the initials out. I really want to know. I want to understand who the man was who sold me out. Because I want you to know that the man who was capable of selling me out is capable of selling out anything.”

Pollard’s troubles did not begin when the plea agreement was suddenly altered, but in fact well before then. It was Israel that helped to incriminate him. The confusion that gripped members of the political and intelligence leadership in Israel following the exposure of Pollard resulted in their complete loss of composure. A sharp team of Americans that was sent to Israel to investigate succeeded in pressuring the Israeli cabinet and in taking from Israel all the proof and documents necessary to indict Pollard.

“The incriminating evidence against me,” he says, “were the documents that I had given to Israel. After I was arrested, the Americans didn’t have any real way to prove anything. Via my attorney at the time, I sent a message to Israel and offered to make a deal. I asked that Israel not turn over any documents or papers to the Americans, and in return I would remain completely silent and never ever say a single word from now until eternity. As if I didn’t even exist. Believe me, I would have kept this promise.

“Then suddenly, I’m sitting in the interrogation room and they are laying out in front of me all of the documents I gave to Israel with my fingerprints still fresh upon them. I was in complete shock. I was prepared for almost anything, but not for this. I don’t think that there is a precedent in history where one country helps another country to incriminate its own agent.

“Israel thought that by behaving this way it could save itself. It pacified the Americans. And what happened? Nothing. Not only did we force ourselves to eat the rotten stinking fish, but we were still driven from the town. I’m in prison; Avi’s career is shot and where is Rafi? What good came out of this? It is hard for me to understand this kind of behavior. After all, the offer I had made to Israel was excellent all around. I didn’t ask them to free me; I didn’t ask them to do anything on my behalf. Just to be quiet and I would be quiet too, as is accepted practice in these situations.”

And that was not the only deal he offered to make with Israel. During the time when he was first incarcerated, worst of all was that his wife Anne’s health began to deteriorate seriously. At a certain point she dwindled down to 40 kilograms (88 pounds). She was simply fading away.

“I was worried. I sent a clear and desperate message to Israel asking them to send an Israeli medical team here. I sent the message to the prime minister and to the minister of internal affairs, who at the time was Aryeh Deri. I promised that if they would send a medical team to take care of her, I would ask nothing further of Israel and would never make any further contact with Israel. I promised to be quiet forever. To play dead. I intended to honor this promise, but the response I received stunned me. Deri said that he would pray for us. We got no response from the government. We really could have dropped dead for nothing. It wouldn’t have made any difference to them.”

“Is it true that you forced Anne to sign a plea agreement in which she would receive a light sentence while you would receive a harsh one?”

“That is completely true. With this hand that you are looking at right here, I took her hand and put a pen in it and forced her to sign together with me. She didn’t want to. I forced her.”

Jonathan and Anne’s divorce was, as they say, a difficult one. Laden with emotion and tears and obstacles. But in the end the get (Jewish divorce) was granted with the assistance of Rabbi Avi Weiss and another rabbi, an elderly man of 90, who carried out the proceedings with Pollard by telephone from New York.

During the course of our conversation, Pollard expressed interest in Anne’s fate and in what she is doing in Israel. He doesn’t have any complaints against her today. As far as he is concerned, she is a part of the past, part of his former life that keeps growing ever more distant. Pollard is completely engrossed at present, and has been for many years now, in what he describes as the love of his life — his current wife, Esther (Elaine) Pollard (formerly Zeitz).

Part III

Jonathan Pollard works in one of the factories at Federal Correctional Institute, Butner, NC. He stands there every day for eight hours sticking stickers on small boxes for glasses. At least 10,000 stickers a day.

“It gives me time to think,” he joked. “I’m good at it. I’ve developed great dexterity. I can do it very quickly and at the same time, use the time to think.”

His health is not good. One problem after another. Not long ago he had an operation to remove a growth from his nose that was causing him to hemorrhage. For three long months, Pollard, who is in prison for providing Israel with U.S. intelligence information, waited for the operation, which was delayed because of the extensive security that surrounds him.

Unlike what has recently been published in Israel, Pollard is not a prisoner like all other prisoners. He is subject to a number of security regulations that pertain only to him, such as the special agent that was sent from Washington to monitor our conversation. He, for example, is not allowed to wear a watch and he is not allowed to have a radio (so he listens to the one his cell mate has). They still treat him as if he poses some deep dark mysterious security risk that nobody quite knows how to define.

He is highly educated. He reads voraciously. There isn’t a history book, a biographical novel, or treatise on Israel, its rebirth or its military history that he hasn’t read. He speaks about the country as if he had grown up and lived his whole life there. Yet, in fact, he was only there twice; once on a youth program, and once in August 1985, two months before he was arrested.

He knows every nook and cranny of the country. He talks about the army, about Tel Aviv, about the tensions between the religious and the secular, about the political map, about the chances for a national unity government, about the problems of Arab terror — and displays remarkable knowledge, far broader in scope than the average Israeli.

He speaks about the country with great love and great longing. “I just want to be part of the Israeli experience. To live in the land, to have a stake in the issues with you. It is a part of me. All of my life I dreamed of this.

“You know what makes me really sad. I didn’t have to be here at all. Everything that happened didn’t ever have to happen at all. I had decided to move to Israel after college. To make aliya, to go into the army and to do reserve duty. To be an Israeli. But my family was very opposed. ‘After all we invested in you,’ they said, ‘all the best schools, how could you do such a thing to us?’ And I like a fool, put my plans off. And now I’m here. It simply did not have to happen.

“And you know what? I am, all in all, a failure. I am an agent who failed. True, there were mitigating circumstances. I was not trained for my mission; I wasn’t a professional. I made lots of mistakes. But that doesn’t change a whole lot. History will remember me as one who failed, as one who did not fulfill his mission. And that is really a shame. For that reason, it is so terribly important to me to have a family, to have children of my own. To leave my genetic imprint — half mine, half Esther’s — in the world. Not to remain a failure like this forever.”

The flow of Pollard’s words was unaltered throughout our conversation. In the meantime, the visiting room had filled up with prisoners and their families. Small black children were scattered about, chattering and making quite a racket. Couples were secretly “involved” between the tables and trying hard to escape the notice of the watchful eyes of the guards. But Pollard ignored all this and went on talking.

Three hours after we started our conversation, Pollard was called to the four o’clock count of prisoners. When he returned, I bought us each a cup of coffee from the nearby vending machine.

In Pollard’s cup, a medium-sized insect was floating. Pollard didn’t get excited. “It’s protein,” he joked. “I’m used to this.” He flicked the insect out of his cup and drank the rest of the coffee with pleasure.

“So what in fact do you want the government of Israel to do for you?”

“It should fight. It should act as if I exist. It should acknowledge that I worked on behalf of the state and for no one else. It should stand up and face the facts. After all, the Americans already know everything. Without fear, Israel will get results. All it takes is to act like a sovereign state. Why are we behaving like Honduras? Like Nicaragua? Like the smallest, most insignificant banana republic. Why?”

Pollard asked to speak about Yitzhak Rabin. The murder of the prime minister hit him hard. “I remember a letter that Rabin wrote for me to President Clinton. Amnon Dror showed me the letter. Rabin denied that the government had run me, but he did accept moral responsibility for my activities. That was what I had requested. He stated that if I were freed he would guarantee that I would not be interviewed, that I would not speak, that I would not receive a hero’s welcome in Israel, and that I would not run for parliament — Who me? Run for parliament?! Anyway, in short, Rabin was willing to go the whole nine yards. The letter, by the way, was never publicized.”

“Why did you fire Amnon?”

“I don’t really want to get into that. I don’t know who Amnon was taking his orders from; it certainly wasn’t from me. I do know where he was getting the money from. I know that he is in some way connected to the Mossad. The whole episode with Amnon, as far as I am concerned, is part of the past. He has no part in the effort to secure my release.”

“Now you are an Israeli citizen. Finally, the state stands behind you.”

“I wish. Look, even back then, even before I was sentenced to a life sentence, they brought Leonard Garment to Israel; he was appointed legal counsel to Avi Sella. He met with the cabinet, with Shamir, Peres, Rabin and Arens. Even then he told them that according to the evidence, Israel was in trouble and there was no point in trying to avoid it by denying involvement in the affair. They got rid of him. They tried to take his notes, and then they fired him. If they had listened to him then, I would be home today. I am sure of it.”

“What next?”

“I continue to hope. I can’t give up. I’m not built that way. The worst thing that could happen to me would be to accept the situation and just become resigned to it. To wait to see what would happen first, the end of the sentence (at least 20 years) or death. And I don’t want that to happen. I am always working; I am always thinking. Esther and I are always working. It is a shame that so few people are helping us.”

Pollard is about to submit a legal petition in America with regard to the Michael Schwartz case — a non-Jewish American naval officer who was caught not long ago passing classified information to the Saudis.

“He got off without any punishment, and he worked for the Saudis for two years. Has anyone in Israel ever asked themselves just what information it was that Schwartz gave to the Saudis? He worked for the navy at the American base at Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Now what would the Saudis be interested in? About Jordan — they already know everything; also about Egypt.

“The only information that would interest the Saudis would be information on Israel. Exactly the information that the American navy has. I am convinced that Schwartz supplied the Saudis with all the information on the Israeli army, on the Israeli air force, on all of the Israeli military. But when you tell this to Israelis, they laugh and then keep very quiet. They are afraid to even check it out.

“What really saddens me the most is the shattering of the myth. I grew up with the belief that we don’t abandon wounded soldiers in enemy territory. I used to believe it. Yet the fact is that I am here, and no one cares.

“So how can we send our soldiers now deep into enemy territory? Let’s suppose I was in the reserves now and they would say to me, ‘Pollard, you’re going to Lebanon.’ I would think twice about it. Where is Ron Arad? Where is Zachary Baumel? Where are all the rest of our boys? How could Yitzhak Shamir have agreed to attend the Madrid Conference without first of all conditioning our attendance on the immediate resolution of the problem of the Israeli hostages and MIAs? What happened to Israeli pride? What happened to the myth? Where has it disappeared to?

An Israeli soldier who crosses over into enemy territory is simply expendable. He can no longer expect that he will be rescued, that they will do their utmost to save him, that they will take risks to do so.

“I grew up on Exodus, on the new Zionism, on the new sense of national pride, on the new Jew, who is re-vitalized, who isn’t afraid. I detest Diaspora mentality. I detest defeatism and Jews who are motivated by materialism to live in America.

“Not so long ago, I felt I was a front-line soldier forgotten deep in enemy territory, taking a last stand on a small hill. He fortifies himself on the hill surrounded by the enemy on all sides, but he has plenty of ammunition and lots of supplies. And they can’t defeat him. From time to time he ventures out, tries to break through the enemy lines encircling him, but he doesn’t succeed. No one helps him. The rescue column never arrives. But he survives, and continues to do damage to the enemy.”

“And now?”

“Now it’s a little different. My optimism has waned. Now I feel more like a ghetto fighter. Trapped, he knows his fate is sealed, it’s just a question of time. But in the meantime he fights. He inflicts losses on those who oppress him. He will die, but it’s too soon to eulogize him yet.”

And then Pollard pulled himself back, became boyish, smiled and said, “Relax, Ben, I have no intention of going down easily. If anyone in Israel is hoping that I will do him the favor of simply disappearing, of just drifting off into the mist, he should forget it. I’m here and I’m alive and kicking. You can’t escape from me. I have no intention of just slinking off into the night. I am not some worn-out figment of your imagination. I am real. And I intend to continue to fight until the truth comes to light.”

It’s no secret that there has been a major rupture between Jonathan and his wife, Esther, on the one hand, and the rest of the family (his parents and his sister, Carol) and the Israeli establishment that looks after the case, on the other hand. Pollard didn’t avoid this issue either. The things that he said were, in part, quite harsh, and they won’t be repeated here.

In any case, Pollard made it abundantly clear that the only people who represent him are his wife and his Israeli-American attorney, Larry Dub, who resides in Jerusalem. Pollard characterized the attempts that have been made to hurt Esther through the media as “cruel, false, slanderous and divorced from reality.” An article that was recently published in Israel on this subject caused him immense pain.

“I love my parents,” he said, “but at this stage, I have come to terms with the fact that as far as I am concerned they are dead. Not in the literal sense of the word, but as far as our relationship goes. I’ve crossed over the line on this matter. I am alive because of Esther. I am functioning because of her. She is the motivating factor in my life; she is my heart and my inspiration. I don’t understand how it is possible to wickedly attack a woman who has devoted her life to her husband. And I have to sit here, infuriated, witnessing it all, and I can’t defend her; I can’t even lift a finger. It’s a terrible feeling.”

He and his wife manage a sophisticated and broad range of activities, which includes sending out hundreds of faxes and hundreds of letters, making contact with an endless number of sources and keeping up with public opinion. All of this requires enormous amounts of work in public relations, as new ideas continue to sprout in Pollard’s mind with lightning speed.

Their activities, which cost a great deal, are funded by Esther’s modest salary, which she earns as a special education teacher in Toronto. The Pollard couple has never asked for financial help. My request to publicize their financial hardship has been rejected time and time again.

Nevertheless, I am for the first time here breaking my promise to the couple with regard to this matter: They need help. practical help, and financial help. Esther flies to Butner at least once a month. Jonathan’s phone calls cost a fortune, so do faxes and letters and the rest of their initiatives.

“The worst problem of all are the pangs of loneliness. I just miss her all of the time. She is the love of my life, and I just can’t wait for the day to realize that love forever.”

Twice in the course of our meeting, Pollard cried. Once, when he was telling me about a good friend who had made aliya and was killed in the helicopter disaster in the Beka’a a few months ago. “He always wanted me to fly with him on patrol some day,” Pollard recounted. “He was a very special man. Outstanding. When he was killed there in the crash, I felt as if a part of me had been torn away. To this day, I’ve never gotten over it.”

The second time that Pollard cried was when he spoke of several deeply personal matters, and I was asked not to write about them. Both times that he cried, the tears were not abundant nor were they an outburst of weeping. Rather, his tears were few in number, and they rolled down his bearded cheeks and were quickly wiped away. Pollard is a strong man; he won’t be easily broken. Or at least, that’s what he promised me.

I asked him when he intends to get a haircut. His hair has grown wild, almost to his shoulders. “I’ve already been asked that,” he smiled. “I intend to have my hair cut when they take me out of here. I hope that my hair won’t reach down to the floor until then.”

The visit came to an end. Five hours I spent with Jonathan Pollard, and I wanted to spend another 15. Pollard stood, embraced me again and smiled the saddest smile I have ever seen in my whole life. “We’ll see each other soon in Jerusalem,” he said. “Wait for me.”

Shai Bazak, the prime minister’s media adviser, relayed the following response: “The prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, is working tirelessly to seek the release of Jonathan Pollard and has spoken many times with senior officials in the American administration on this matter. The State of Israel is doing all it can to bring Pollard home as quickly as possible.”

Moshe Arens responded to Pollard’s words, saying: “These things are not true and I am not prepared to respond any further than that.”

It was not possible to obtain the response of Rafi Eitan, who was out of the country.

It was not possible to get a response from Aviem Sella by the time the paper went to press.

(C)Ma’ariv
Ben Caspit is a staff writer for the Israeli daily Ma’ariv. His article about his visit with Jonathan Pollard appeared in the March 28 Ma’ariv weekend magazine, Sof Shavu’a. Their meeting marked the first time since Pollard’s arrest that he met with an Israeli journalist; this article, serialized for the past three weeks, marks the first time Pollard is being quoted directly and not through a third party since his last interview 10 years ago with Mike Wallace of 60 Minutes. Reprinted here for the first time in English translation, with permission of Ma’ariv.