• Saudi Arabia Finances Most of Israel’s Weapons Build-Up Against Iran Tikun-Olam Tikun Olam-תיקון עולם
    http://www.richardsilverstein.com/2014/03/08/saudi-arabia-finances-most-of-israels-weapons-build-up-against-i

    Over the past months, the level of intense cooperation between Israel and Saudi Arabia in targeting Iran has become clear. I’ve posted here http://www.richardsilverstein.com/2013/11/17/israel-saudi-arabia-threaten-war-as-west-prepares-for-iran-nucle about secret meetings between top Israeli and Saudi intelligence figures which have allowed coordination of the campaigns involving both Syria and Iran. But Shalom Yerushalmi, writing in Maariv, dropped an even more amazing bombshell.

    Saudi Arabia isn’t just coordinating its own intelligence efforts with Israel. It’s actually financing a good deal of Israel’s very expensive campaign against Iran. As you know, this has involved massive sabotage against IRG missile bases, the assassination of five nuclear scientists, the creation of a series of computer cyberweapons like Stuxnet and Flame. It may also conceivably involve an entire class of electronic and conventional weapons that could be used in a full-scale attack on Iran. Who knows, this might even include the sorts of bunker buster bombs only the U.S. currently has access to, which could penetrate the Fordo facility. It might include scores more super-tankers which could provide the fuel necessary for Israeli planes to make it to Iran and return. All of this is expensive. Very expensive.

    Here is how Yerushalmi referred to Bibi’s thinking on the matter as expressed in his recent Aipac speech:

    Netanyahu spoke there, for the first time in his life, about the benefits of peace, the prosperity that will follow, about the possibility that Arab states, which today maintain better relations with us than those in the European Union, but in private, will do so publicly if we only reach an agreement with the Palestinians. Netanyahu referred almost certainly to Saudi Arabia, which finances the expenses of the enormous campaign which we are conducting against Iran.

    In the past, I’ve noted that George Bush allocated $400-million in 2007 for just such sabotage directed against Iran. I presumed that a good deal of that funding might end up supporting similar sorts of Israeli efforts. It’s possible that the new Obama administration cut off this funding after assuming office in 2008. Whatever the reason, Saudi Arabia is now a critical funder of Israel’s military effort against Iran.

    The question is how far is Saudi Arabia willing to go. If Bibi ever decided to launch an attack, would the Sunni nation fund that as well? The answer seems clearly to be yes.

    The next question is, given there is airtight military censorship in Israel, why did the censor allow Maariv to publish this? Either someone was asleep at the switch or the IDF and Israel’s political and intelligence officials want the world to know of the Saudi-Israeli effort. Who specifically do they want to know? Obama, of course. In the event the nuclear talks go south, Bibi wants Obama to know there’s a new Sugar Daddy in town. No longer will Israel have only the U.S. to rely on if it decides to go to war. Saudi Arabia will be standing right behind.

    This isn’t the first time that foreign sources played a major role in subsidizing critical Israeli efforts to develop such game-changing weapons systems. In the early 1960s, Abraham Feinberg, a wealthy American Jew whose name now graces a building a Brandeis University, coordinated a major fundraising effort on behalf of Israeli Prime Minister Ben Gurion. As a result, American Jews played an instrumental role in paying for Israel’s first nuclear weapons.

    Frankly, I don’t think this news substantially alters the military calculus. Israel, even with unlimited funding, still can’t muster the weapons and armaments it would need to do the job properly. That will take time. But Israel isn’t going to war tomorrow. This news reported in Maariv is presumably Bibi playing one card from his hand. It’s an attempt to warn the president that the U.S. is no longer the only game in town. Personally, it’s the sort of huffing and puffing that I can’t imagine plays well in Washington. But it’s the way Bibi plays the game.

  • Israeli Drones Fallin’ from the Skies Like Flies: Third UAV Sabotaged by Hacking
    http://www.richardsilverstein.com/2013/10/09/third-israeli-drone-sabotaged-by-hacking

    Israeli media have announced that the IAF has “lost” (Hebrew and English) yet another of its advanced drones, the Hermes-450, one of the most advanced of its fleet. This marks the third vehicle lost in a similar manner in the past six months. A fourth drone was “lost” two years ago and reported in a post I published here. I note my Israeli source reported originally that the drone was operated by Hezbollah and deliberately crashed into the base. It’s also possible that Hezbollah or Iran took control of an Israeli drone and crashed it into the base; or that its Israeli controllers crashed it purposely because its navigation system had been hacked. I’ve previously reported (and here) on the various crashes.

  • Jordanian Journalist Who Fabricated Syrian Rebel Chemical Weapons Story, Wrote Recent Jerusalem Post Column Lauding Israel Tikun-Olam Tikun Olam-תיקון עולם
    http://www.richardsilverstein.com/2013/09/23/jordanian-journalist-who-fabricated-syrian-rebel-chemical-weapon

    Jordanian Journalist Who Fabricated Syrian Rebel Chemical Weapons Story, Wrote Recent Jerusalem Post Column Lauding Israel

    by Richard Silverstein on September 23, 2013 · 0 comments

    in Mideast Peace

    I’ve been following the story of a few weeks ago, claiming that Prince Bandar of Saudi Arabia was shipping chemical weapons to the Syria rebels, which they were using on the battlefield. As so much of the reporting on this subject, this story really stank. But I didn’t give it much thought until I learned more about the professional histories of both Dale Gavlak, the AP reporter who helped birth the story; and Yahyah Ababneh (aka Yan Barakat) who allegedly “reported” it from Syria.

    The quick background on this is that Gavlak, who works for a number of news organizations including AP, recommended that the Mint Press publish a story she’d received written in Arabic, purporting to describe a Syrian rebel chemical weapons attack. After the story had circulated for a week or so journalists began questioning various elements of it. Eventually, Gavlak dissociated herself from the story even though she played a critical role in getting it published. Mint Press was hung out to dry because it hadn’t done due diligence itself and couldn’t say whether the story was true or false. It had relied on Gavlak and trusted her judgment.

    Antiwar.com also republished the story on its website. But it apologized to its readers within a few days of the controversy beginning. That was more than its editors offered me when they yanked my published profile of Meir Javedanfar, under the censorious direction of Justin Raimondo.

  • Israel’s « Prisoner X » provided info to Hezbollah : report
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/israels-prisoner-x-provided-info-hezbollah-report

    Israel’s “Prisoner X,” the former Mossad agent who was found hanging in his jail cell shortly after his arrest in 2010, had provided Hezbollah with the identities of Lebanese informants, helping crack at least two major spy rings in the country, Germany’s Der Spiegel revealed on Sunday.

    Citing an internal Israeli record, the report said that Ben Zygier, an Australian national recruited by the Israeli spy agency in 2003, was suspected of having passed on the names of Ziad al-Homsi and Mustafa Ali Awada prior to his secret arrest and detention in Israel.

    Lebanese authorities arrested the two suspects in 2009 on charges of espionage and sentenced them each to 15 years in prison.

    Je trouve cette info particulièrement douteuse. M’enfin bref, si c’est dans le journal…

    • Voilà ce que publie Haaretz aujourd’hui

      Report: Zygier gave Hezbollah intel about two Lebanese agents working for Mossad

      Der Spiegel expose on Prisoner X affair reveals that the Lebanese agents, Ziad al-Homsi and Mustafa Ali Awada, were subsequently arrested in May 2009 and sentenced to lengthy prison sentences for espionage.
      Alleged Mossad agent Ben Zygier, known as Prisoner X before committing suicide while jailed in solitary confinement, handed Hezbollah sensitive information that led to the arrest of Lebanese agents in Israel’s service, according to previews of an expose to be released by Der Spiegel on Monday.

      The German news weekly alleges that before his death in an isolated Israeli prison cell, Zygier managed to transfer to Hezbollah the names of two Lebanese agents also operating at the Mossad’s behest. The two Lebanese agents, Ziad al-Homsi and Mustafa Ali Awada, were subsequently arrested in May 2009 and sentenced to lengthy prison sentences for espionage.

      The article, which cites an internal investigative report obtained by Der Spiegel, brands Zygier as “Israel’s biggest traitor” and describes how the “Zionist turned into a defector.”

    • Je trouve l’exposé de Silverstein tout aussi improbable, pour tout dire un scénario fabriqué pour cacher autre chose (je ne sais quoi) :
      – d’abord je ne pige pas pourquoi, parce qu’il aurait commis une énorme « bourde » (et pas une trahison volontaire), le gars serait devenu le nouveau Masque de fer dans une prison israélienne ; Mordechai Vanunu a eu un procès pour tout de même bien plus « grave » ;
      – ça permet de remettre la Hezbollah dans l’histoire, avec un « agent du Hezbollah dans les Balkans » ; hum, et pourquoi pas en Bulgarie tant qu’on y est, en train de prendre des photos des cars de touristes israéliens ?
      – le gars prend contact avec un agent du Hezbollah dans les Balkans depuis Tel Aviv, alors est assigné dans un bureau ? Quoi, il lui a téléphoné ? Skypé ?
      – les réseaux d’agents israéliens qui se sont fait prendre au Liban, ça n’est pas deux types, ça doit avoisiner les 200 ;
      – Silverstein suggère (c’est fait pour ?) que le gars se serait suicidé par sentiment de culpabilité, parce qu’il a trahit son pays (involontairement) et provoqué la mort de deux agents du Mossad. Je comprends que le gars n’a pas été suicidé a l’insu de son plein gré.

      Pour moi, c’est une trop belle « narrative » pour être vraie.

      Sinon, les « fuites » de Der Spiegel impliquant le Hezbollah, c’est justement par là qu’est sortie la première mise en accusation du Hezb dans l’affaire Hariri. Pour moi : pas crédible, sauf si on aime les communiqués de presse du Mossad.