Subscribe to Print Edition | Thu., April 24, 2008 Nisan 19, 5768 | | Israel Time: 14:07 (EST+7)
Haaretz israel news English
web haaretz.com
  Back to Homepage
Rosner's Domain
Diplomacy
Defense Jewish World Opinion National
Print Edition
Advertising
Books Arts & Leisure Business Real Estate Easy Start Travel Week's End Anglo File
Last update - 06:18 24/04/2008
Ex-prosecutor: Israel lied about extent of anti-U.S. spying in '80s
By The Associated Press
Tags: U.S., Jonathan Pollard 

New charges that an Army veteran passed military secrets to the same Israeli handler as convicted spy Jonathan Pollard confirms the espionage ring reached further than initially thought, and that the Israelis lied about it, a former prosecutor said Wednesday.

"The similarities are quite eerie," said Joseph E. diGenova, who as U.S. attorney in the District of Columbia oversaw the 1980s-era Pentagon spy scandal that ensnared Pollard, an ex-Navy analyst serving a life sentence for revealing defense secrets to Israel.

A criminal complaint filed Tuesday in Manhattan federal court "clearly indicates there were other Americans being asked at other military installations to do the same things the same way," diGenova said. "This was a much larger espionage operation ... than we understood or could have known at the time."
Advertisement
Ben-Ami Kadish, an 84-year-old from New Jersey, was arrested Tuesday and charged with four conspiracy counts. Prosecutors said he confessed to FBI agents that in order to help Israel, he gave his Israeli contact 50 to 100 classified documents between 1979 and 1985, including information about America's nuclear weapons, fighter jets and missiles.

Kadish worked then as a mechanical engineer at the Army's Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center in Dover, N.J.

Kadish, released Tuesday on $300,000 bail, could face a death sentence if convicted on the top conspiracy charge. He and his lawyer, Bruce Goldstein, declined to comment Wednesday.

Alon Pinkas, Israel's former New York consul, said the charges against Kadish might have been announced to prevent the release of Pollard, whose case remains a blot on otherwise close relations between the countries.

The link between Pollard and Kadish is a now-defunct Israeli intelligence agency known as the Scientific Relations Office, Israeli intelligence expert Yossi Melman said Wednesday. The office was run by Rafi Eitan, a former agent with Israel's Mossad spy agency who is now an Israeli Cabinet minister.

According to court documents, Kadish and Pollard shared the same handler ? Yosef Yagur, who Melman said is now retired and living in Tel Aviv. His telephone number is unlisted.

During the period outlined in the complaint against Kadish, Yagur was working in the Israeli consulate in Manhattan.

"For years, Israel was involved in technological espionage in the U.S.," Melman said. "Kadish and Pollard were not the only ones."

Israel offered its first response Wednesday to the new arrest, a vague statement that did not deny the charges.

"The events in question date to the early 1980s," Foreign Ministry spokesman Arye Mekel said. "To remove any doubt, since 1985 there has been much care taken to observe the directives of the prime ministers not to engage in any activities of this type in the U.S."

Citing court papers, diGenova said Yagur used the same methods with Kadish that he did with Pollard, finding a U.S. citizen with security clearance to take classified materials from the workplace and letting him copy them.

DiGenova said his own probe was stymied by the Israelis when at least four individuals, including Yagur, were flown out of the country despite assurances by Israel that they would remain in the United States during the investigation.

"The Israelis, of course, lied to us. They said there were no other spies and they had destroyed all the documents they got at the time," he said.

DiGenova, now in private practice in Washington, said he and other investigators in the 1980s were so convinced there were other Americans involved in the espionage that they nicknamed the phantom individuals "Mr. X." He noted that Yagur knew exactly what documents he was seeking from Pollard and Kadish.

"It was obvious they had other people supplying the information so they could target the finds," he said. "You want to protect your ultimate source. You don't want someone who deals with these documents every day being your source."

Charles S. Leeper, who was the lead prosecutor under diGenova in the Pollard case, called the Kadish case fascinating.

"I am not aware of any other case where the government has brought espionage charges more than 25 years after the conduct in question," he said.

Leeper and diGenova agreed that it did not matter that classified materials were provided to a U.S. ally. Investigators in the Pollard case suspected his information was traded by the Israelis to South Africa, which then provided it to the Soviet Union in return for helping Israel get Jews out of the then-Communist superpower, diGenova said.

"I would say espionage is a zero-tolerance offense," Leeper said. "It's irrelevant that the recipient of the offense is an ally rather than an enemy."

<Related articles:
  • ANALYSIS: New espionage affair may be old story, but will greatly damage Israel
  • At Kadish's N.J. community, 'espionage affairs scare people'
  • Neighbors: Israeli brother 'patriotic'
  • Bookmark to del.icio.us  
     
    Sex, lies and videotape
    3 kibbutz residents suspected of filming themselves sexually assaulting Danish tourists.
    Big brother is watching
    An IDF soldier has been jailed for posting sensitive photos on Facebook.
      1.   Ofcourse: Jewish Stereotype...Backstabbers 05:16  |  American 24/04/08
      2.   Ben-Ami Kadish 06:12  |  Alexander 24/04/08
      3.   Like Duh Man! 06:19  |  Mark Lincoln 24/04/08
      4.   America is seen as a "soft target" by Israel 08:17  |  Natallie Durson 24/04/08
      5.   Inertia or intent...? 09:00  |  Esther 24/04/08
      6.   Israel lied about extent of anti-U.S. spying in `80s 09:01  |  Scott Havsy 24/04/08
      7.   One thing is certain 09:30  |  Clickfool 24/04/08
      8.   Pollard was pro American- by warning the Israelis 09:47  |  Dani Miller 24/04/08
      9.   "..there has been much care taken to observe the directives .." 09:59  |  Chanalau, Tova 24/04/08
      10.   Esther #5 your usual pertinent comment 10:07  |  S 24/04/08
      11.   Duh! Israel has been lying and stealing from us for years 10:33  |  Mr. Know-It-All 24/04/08
      12.   spy vs spy: The USS Liberty wasn`t there for 10:49  |  dov epstein 24/04/08
      13.   My guess is timing of his capture coincided with AIPAC trial 11:37  |  Joe 24/04/08
      14.   Another possible reason, related to AIPAC trial 12:12  |  Joe 24/04/08
      15.   Everyone spies on everyone else. Israel can not trust anyone... 12:27  |  MANAGEMENT EATER 24/04/08
      16.   Israeli Spying is one thing, String of Jewish Traitors is Another 12:28  |  Ticked off American 24/04/08
      17.   Deception, Lies. 12:49  |  Safia 24/04/08
      18.   #16 Ticked off - good point!! 13:06  |  Joe 24/04/08
     Read & React
    Israel fears U.S. hearings on Syrian reactor will expose top-secret data
    Responses: 40
    Editorial: Removing Syria from the axis of evil could reshuffle the Middle East deck
    Responses: 22
    Ari Shavit: Carter fails to face the fact that sometimes there's evil in the Arab world
    Responses: 26
    UN envoys bolt after Libyan ambassador syas Gaza situation like Nazi Holocaust
    Responses: 44
    Rosner's Domain
    The real numbers of the Jewish vote in Pennsylvania
    New poll: Will the new spy case harm U.S.-Israel ties?
    Why was the new spy arrested now? (WTR)
    Notes on the new Israeli-espionage affair


    More Headlines
    13:22 Assad: Olmert did say Israel would quit Golan
    13:27 Hamas calls on Gazans to storm borders, break siege
    12:40 Israel fears U.S. hearings on Syrian reactor will expose top-secret data
    10:31 U.S. decision / All eyes on North Korea
    12:40 U.S. to demand Jerusalem acknowledge Kadish was an Israeli agent
    11:13 The Timing / Conspiracy theories abound
    13:44 IDF evicts left-wing activists from West Bank outpost
    14:07 Tourism Ministry plan aims to stimulate Galilee development
    10:59 Western UN envoys bolt meet as Libyan rep. likens Gaza to Nazi camp
    11:56 Kiryat Gat man arrested on suspicion of molesting his 6-year-old sister
    12:32 Real estate mogul's daughter Ivanka Trump to visit Israel next month
    06:18 Ex-prosecutor: Israel lied about extent of anti-U.S. spying in '80s
    05:49 Hamas likely to accept Cairo's Gaza-only cease-fire proposal
    Previous Editions
    Special Offers
    Advertisement
    Learn Hebrew online
    with Israel's best teachers Sign up for a trial lesson today
    Pardes Institute Summer Sessions
    Study Jewish texts and issues in Jerusalem, Co-ed, All Levels
    Free the Palestinians from:
    Corrupt Kleptocracy, Tyrannical Theocracy, Abysmal Anarchy
    Fattal Hotel Chain
    Perfectly located hotels on best resorts of Israel.
    ISRAEL BONDS Build Israel
    Israel bonds - a multi-purpose way to celebrate Israel's 60th
    Eldan Rent a Car
    Israel's leading car rental company offers you a 20% discount on all online reservations
    Junkyard
    Junk a car - get free towing nationwide and a tax-deductible receipt
    Home | TV | Print Edition | Diplomacy | Opinion | Arts & Leisure | Sports | Jewish World | Underground | Site rules |
    Real Estate in Israel
    Haaretz.com, the online edition of Haaretz Newspaper in Israel, offers real-time breaking news, opinions and analysis from Israel and the Middle East. Haaretz.com provides extensive and in-depth coverage of Israel, the Jewish World and the Middle East, including defense, diplomacy, the Arab-Israeli conflict, the peace process, Israeli politics, Jerusalem affairs, international relations, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, the Palestinian Authority, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, the Israeli business world and Jewish life in Israel and the Diaspora.
    © Copyright  Haaretz. All rights reserved