
Trump Pardons Israeli Colonel Who Helped Recruit Spy Jonathan Pollard
A White House statement says the request for clemency for Aviem Sella, who introduced Pollard to his Mossad recruiter, was supported by Netanyahu, ambassadors and Miriam Adelson
A White House statement says the request for clemency for Aviem Sella, who introduced Pollard to his Mossad recruiter, was supported by Netanyahu, ambassadors and Miriam Adelson
In his book, the late Rafi Eitan recounts central events in his life and that of Israel. But many stories are censored, so readers don't really get to know the Mossad man who nabbed Eichmann and was behind the Pollard affair
Government Press Office photographers were conspicuously missing from the spy Jonathan Pollard's reception in Israel. Who does it benefit to leave the event out of the official record?
Jonathan Pollard, who served 30 years in prison, was greeted by PM Netanyahu at Ben-Gurion International Airport and received Israeli ID card
The celebration this week over the end of Pollard’s parole reminded some officials of a less known incident in 1998
No future civics teacher will reveal the destiny that Zionism has foisted on diaspora Jews – to serve as a protective vest for Israel
Jonathan Pollard is free to leave the U.S. after 30 years in prison and five years' parole for spying for Israel, and may soon immigrate to Israel
It would be a serious miscalculation for Israel to call attention right now to one of the most damaging sagas in both the history of the American-Israeli alliance, and in U.S. Jews’ relations with Israel
Israel’s actions forced American Jews to defend themselves against accusations of divided loyalties – and that type of blatant disregard continues to this very day
The U.S. decision not to extend restrictions against Jewish American spy Jonathan Pollard is the correct one. Israel now has the chance to do likewise for Mordechai Vanunu. An epilogue to the affair that shook Israel-U.S. relations in the 1980s
The American authorities have decided not to extend parole restrictions on Pollard, the former U.S. Navy intelligence analyst who served a 30-year prison term for spying for Israel
Convicted for spying for Israel when he served as an intelligence analyst in U.S. Navy’s counterterrorism center, Pollard served 30 years in prison and five on strict parole
Pollard’s five-year parole ends on Friday and the Jewish-American spy will be a free man if restrictions aren’t renewed. Even if they are renewed, President Trump could still pardon him during his last weeks in office
Jonathan Pollard, who spied for Israel in the United States, has suffered more than enough for his adventurous tendencies and should be allowed to move to Israel
The former cabinet member was a founding member of the Israeli intelligence community
Joseph diGenova has promoted conspiracy theories about a ‘deep state’ attempt to ‘frame’ Trump and his campaign for criminal activities
Pollard's lawyer tries to win a relaxation of conditions requiring Pollard to submit to a curfew and monitoring of his workplace computer and his whereabouts
At separate meeting on Thursday with Vice President Pence, Netanyahu discussed U.S. support for Israel at the UN and efforts to secure U.S. recognition of Israeli sovereignty in the Golan Hts., Israeli sources said.
Pollard's plans to argue that the parole requirements are arbitrary and Pollard poses no security risk, since he has not had access to classified government information for more than three decades.
American convicted of spying for Israel would continue to wear electronic tracking device, submit computer to monitoring, after judge rules he still poses flight risk and that documents compromised by him 30 years ago were still highly classified.
Pollard's lawyer argued in court that the parole commission imposed arbitrary requirements that he wear an electronic tracking device and submit his work computer to monitoring.
U.S. Parole Commission fails to prove that Pollard continues to carry classified information 31 years after he was jailed, brief filed with U.S. federal court says.
In response to a petition to ease some of Pollard's parole restrictions, official says he had access to human intelligence that could still prove harmful should it be disclosed.
The information is sensitive enough to justify severe restrictions on Pollard's movement and its disclosure could harm U.S. national security, James Clapper writes in letter to parole commission.
According to the proposal, Israel will pay Pollard a monthly pension to ensure he lives out the remainder of his life in dignity: 'We have a moral debt,' lawmaker says.
The gathering was in no way meant to convey the Jewish establishment’s embrace of the former spy, much less any aspect of the crimes for which he was convicted, says community head Malcolm Hoenlein.
Expected to give first speech after 30 years in prison, former Israeli spy defers to his wife who details his difficult parole conditions.
Pollard, who will wear a Shabbat-friendly electronic monitoring bracelet, will discuss the status of his legal battle with Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish American Organizations.
U.S. reportedly listened in to phone conversations between top Israeli officials, Washington lawmakers and American-Jewish groups.