by Michael Saba
The case of Jonathan J. Pollard,
the U.S. naval analyst caught passing classified documents to
Israel, has been called a "rogue operation" by the Israeli
government, which claims not to have known that it was receiving
classified information illegally. To call the case a "rogue
operation," however, is to ignore the fact that Jonathan
Pollard is neither the first nor the only U.S. government employee
to be investigated for passing classified information to Israeli
officials.
In 1978, in a Washington, D.C.
restaurant, I overheard Stephen D. Bryen, then a Senate Foreign
Relations Committee staffer and now a deputy assistant secretary of
Defense, offering "Pentagon documents on the bases" to
officials of the Israeli government. After I reported this incident
to the Justice Department, FBI and Justice Department investigators
gathered sufficient evidence on Dr. Bryen's activities to recommend
he be brought before an investigative grand jury for espionage. The
case was quietly closed, however, by Philip Heymann, the assistant
attorney general in charge of the Justice Department's Criminal
Division, a close personal friend and associate of Dr. Bryen's
attorney. Bryen was never formally charged or made to account for
his actions under oath.
Since the closing of the Bryen
investigation left many important questions unanswered, the National
Association of Arab Americans (NAAA) filed a Freedom of Information
Act suit to obtain the investigative documents, When the Justice
Department refused to release these documents, the NAAA took the
matter to court and eventually won at every level.
These events led to the
publication of my book, The Armageddon Network, which
describes the Bryen investigation, his current activities, and the
Justice Department role in the affair. It raises the question of a
possible cover-up by the Justice Department of Israeli espionage
activities.
Examination of the Bryen and
Pollard cases reveals many parallels. Both were in positions to
request and receive highly classified military information. The FBI
investigation of Stephen Bryen revealed that he requested
information which was outside the scope of his position as a Senate
staffer. Likewise, the indictment of Jonathan Pollard stated that
"Pollard gathered and obtained classified national defense
information and documents, many of which were unrelated to his
assigned duties ... in order to provide these materials to ... the
government of Israel."
Another similarity is the close
relationships of both men with high-level Israelis. FBI agents
discovered that Stephen Bryen met regularly with Zvi Rafiah, a
counselor at the Israeli Embassy, two or three times a week. This
close relationship with an Israeli official with military and
intelligence connections reinforced FBI suspicions of Bryen's
activities.
Jonathan Pollard had close
relations first with Colonel Aviem Sella and later with Joseph Yagur,
Israeli Embassy attaches in the U.S. who worked for Rafi Eitan, a
well-known Israeli intelligence officer. Eitan headed the top-secret
science and technology spy unit known as LEKEM. Since the Bryen
investigation, Zvi Rafiah is reported to have become a consultant to
Israeli defense industries whose specialty is advice on how to
obtain U.S. Pentagon contracts. Aviem Sella has been promoted to
Brigadier General running the Israeli air base in the Negev. Rafi
Eitan has been appointed to head one of the Israeli Government's
largest industrial companies.
In The Armageddon Network, I asked
whether the Pentagon document which Bryen spoke about with the
Israelis, which included a detailed analysis of Middle Eastern air
defense and radar systems, may have assisted in the 1981 Israeli
bombing of an Iraqi nuclear reactor. New York Times columnist
William Safire reported recently that then Colonel Sella, one of
Jonathan Pollard's main contacts, was a major player in the attack
on Iraq.
Israeli espionage in the U.S. is
not a new phenomenon, and such activities are directed not only at
obtaining damaging information on Arab nations, but on the U.S. as
well. In opinions pertaining to the Bryen investigation obtained
through the Freedom of Information Act, the Defense Intelligence
Agency reported that the documents Bryen had requested "could
prove to be a major embarrassment to the U.S. government" and
"placed in the wrong hands, such information would not serve
the best interests of the U.S. government." One document was
described as "particularly damaging to the U.S.
government."
Likewise, it was revealed that
the information supplied to Israel by Jonathan Pollard contained
highly sensitive information. In 1979 a CIA report stated: "The
Israelis devote a considerable portion of their covert operations to
obtaining scientific and technical intelligence. This has included
attempts to penetrate certain classified defense projects in the
United States and other Western nations..." The investigation
into the Pollard case reveals that such espionage activities
continue to take place. In fact, former U.S. Government officials
state that Israeli espionage activities in the U.S. are second only
to those of the Russia and other.
The same 1979 CIA report went on
to note: "The Israeli intelligence service depends heavily on
the various Jewish communities and organizations abroad for
recruiting agents and eliciting general information ... Israeli
agents usually operate discreetly within Jewish communities and are
under instructions to handle their missions with utmost tact to
avoid embarrassment to Israel." Apparently, agents for Israel,
such as Jonathan Pollard, also operate within the U.S. Government.
Michael Saba directs the
Washington-based Attiyeh Foundation and is the author of The
Armageddon Network which is available from the American
Educational Trust.
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