The Christians are actually the Friends you have. Don't fight those who love Isreal, and have not given you cause to say otherwise. Some comments might be way out there, to foster anti-semitic sentiments, but let's keep this discussion in perspective. thank God, this info did not get into the hands of some wacko nations that hate us. Isreal, I know, will never hurt the USA. I see this as an aggressive survival effort against all the odds of living in an extremely belligerent and violent region, by Isreal. 'Not justifying the betrayal, though.
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A New Twist on an Old Spy Case
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Among the classified documents that Kadish allegedly provided to the Israelis, the FBI says, were an item containing "restricted data" relating to nuclear weapons, a document with information about a modified version of the F-15 fighter jet that the United States had sold to an unnamed foreign country (most likely Saudi Arabia), and a document relating to the Patriot antimissile system, which the United States deployed to protect Israeli cities against Saddam Hussein during the Gulf War.
The FBI document does not identify CC-1. But in perhaps its most intriguing passage, it notes that before his arrest in November 1985 Pollard supplied classified information to the same Israeli official. That official, the complaint states, "left the United States and has not returned" since.
Ron Olive, a former U.S. official who worked on the Pollard case, tells NEWSWEEK that CC-1 could be only one person: Yosef Yagur, a former official of Israeli Aircraft Industries who served from 1980 to 1985 as science adviser at the Israeli consulate in New York. Olive, who was the Navy Criminal Investigative Service investigator in charge of the Pollard spy inquiry, says the person described in the new FBI documents as Kadish's handler "has got to be" Yagur. "There's no doubt it's him," Olive says. He adds that he identified Yagur as Pollard's handler in his book “Capturing Jonathan Pollard,” published by the Naval Institute Press. In 1986 Yagur was also identified as one of Pollard's Israeli handlers in a U.S. Justice Department sentencing memorandum.
Efforts to locate Yagur in Israel on Tuesday were unsuccessful. An Israeli Embassy official declined comment, saying only that "we were formally informed" about the charges against Kadish and "we conveyed the information to Jerusalem."
Olive says that in the Pollard case the evidence indicated that the Israelis had supplied Pollard with the titles—and in some cases the serial numbers—of secret documents that they wanted Pollard to get for them. The fact that the Israelis allegedly asked their informants to acquire specific secret documents created deep suspicions among investigators that Israeli intelligence might have had a highly placed mole somewhere deep inside the U.S. government who could identify very sensitive secrets that more expendable informants could then steal, according to Olive. But Olive says U.S. investigators never discovered whether such a high-level Israeli source existed; nor did they try very hard to find him.
In its court complaint requesting a warrant to arrest Kadish, the FBI indicates it has no evidence that Kadish leaked any classified material to his Israeli contacts anytime after about 1985, when Pollard was arrested and his handler, "CC-1," is believed to have fled the United States. The FBI complaint says that late last month, during an interview with the FBI, Kadish acknowledged providing CC-1 with between 10 and 100 classified documents from the Picatinny Arsenal library, saying he believed the information would "help Israel." Shortly after the FBI first interviewed Kadish, the FBI document says, Kadish got a phone call from CC-1, in which the alleged Israeli handler told Kadish to lie to the cops. "Don't say anything. Let them say whatever they want. You didn't … do anything … What happened 25 years ago? You don't remember anything," the FBI document alleges CC-1 told Kadish.
The complaint says Kadish told the FBI that although he never leaked classified documents after 1985, he kept in touch with CC-1 after the Israeli left the United States 23 years ago and visited his alleged handler in Israel in 2004. Kadish also told the FBI he had never been paid to deliver classified documents, but instead had received small gifts from his handler, as well as an occasional dinner at a restaurant in the Bronx.
U.S. officials said that at this point the evidence suggests the classified material that Kadish allegedly supplied to Israel was far less important or voluminous than the boxes full of highly secret material supplied to the Israelis by Pollard, who worked at sensitive Navy intelligence bases in the Washington area. Pollard had clearances for top secret and even more highly classified material, including some of the most sensitive U.S. counterterrorism information. According to the FBI complaint, Kadish was never cleared for information higher than the "secret" level.
Terror Watch appears weekly on Newsweek.com
© 2008
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