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            October 14, 1999
            Israeli Spy Cover-up Crumbles


           By Jack Colhoun

           On Nov. 3, 1989, Ari Ben-Menashe was taking a shower at a friend's
           house in Los Angeles when the police arrived. They ordered the
           dripping-wet Israeli to step out of the shower.

           After letting Ben-Menashe dress, the police took the stunned world
traveler into
           custody. He was charged with violating the U.S. Arms Export
Control Act by trying to
           sell three C-130 transport planes to Iran with a false end-user
certificate.

           Ben-Menashe would later describe his reaction to his arrest as
disbelief. He
           considered himself a significant player in the world of
intelligence, skipping around
           the globe for more than a decade, putting together arms deals that
the Israeli
           government favored and disrupting those that Israel opposed.

           Though little understood at the time, the arrest also created a dan
gerous moment for
           a slew of top-secret U.S. and Israeli intelligence operations.

           Behind the scenes, Israeli officials understood that Ben-Menashe's
knowledge could
           be a serious threat, according to Gideon's Spies: The Secret
History of the Mossad, a
           new book by British author Gordon Thomas.

           Israeli leaders knew from debriefing legendary spymaster, Rafi
Eitan, that
           Ben-Menashe had worked on some of Israel's most sensitive
projects, Thomas
           reported based on his own interviews with Eitan.

           "Rafi Eitan [told his Israeli debriefers] that Ari Ben-Menashe was
in a position to blow
           wide open the U.S./Israeli arms-to-Iran network whose tentacles
had extended
           everywhere: down to Central and South America, through London,
into Australia,
           across to Africa, deep into Europe," Thomas wrote.

           Indeed, Ben-Menashe possessed information that, if corroborated,
could have
           shaken U.S.-Israeli relations and possibly destroyed the
reputation of the sitting
           president of the United States, George Bush.

           But Ben-Menashe kept quiet initially, assuming that the
embarrassing arrest would
           be reversed. After he was transferred to the federal prison in New
York City,
           Ben-Menashe waited for the Israeli government to set matters
straight and arrange
           for his release.

           Ben-Menashe soon discovered, however, that the Israeli government
would not be
           coming to his rescue. So, finding himself in deep trouble and on
his own,
           Ben-Menashe decided to talk with a few American reporters about
what he knew. He
           began to tell a complex tale of international intrigue and
arms-trafficking that involved
           top Israelis and senior U.S. officials.

           Ben-Menashe's most dramatic claim was his insistence that he
spotted Bush at a
           Paris meeting with Iranians in October 1980 as part of a covert
Republican scheme
           to torpedo President Carter's negotiations for freeing 52
Americans then held
           hostage in Iran.

           Ben-Menashe also implicated senior CIA official Robert Gates in
the so-called
           "October Surprise" controversy as well as the Likud government of
Menachem Begin,
           who apparently feared that a second Carter term would lead to a
Palestinian state.
           [See David Kimche’s The Last Option.]

           Beyond the Iran caper, Ben-Menashe dished up other juicy secrets.
He described a
           clandestine U.S. policy to funnel weapons via Chile to Saddam
Hussein's Iraq.

           Ben-Menashe also claimed knowledge of Israeli intelligence
penetration of the U.S.
           government at top levels, Israel's use of press magnate Robert
Maxwell as a spy, and
           the distribution of rigged computer software to extract secrets
from other
           governments.

           All told, Ben-Menashe's accounts represented what could have been
a major
           intelligence breach for both the Israeli and U.S. governments. If
true, his information
           would literally rewrite the history of the Reagan-Bush era and
expose President Bush,
           in particular, to charges of collaborating with Iranian terrorists
to fix the outcome of the
           U.S. presidential election in 1980.

           As the scope of Ben-Menashe's disclosures sank in, the Israeli
government initiated
           a campaign to discredit him. Government officials began telling
Israeli journalists that
           Ben-Menashe was "an imposter" who was fabricating his claims of
official Israeli
           connections.

           In a typical account, The Jerusalem Post quoted an "authoritative"
source as stating
           that "the Defence establishment 'never had any contacts with Ari
Ben-Menashe and
           his activities'." [The Jerusalem Post, March 27, 1990]

           That initial cover story, however, crumbled when reporter Robert
Parry obtained
           internal Israeli documents revealing that Ben-Menashe had worked
from 1977-87 for
           an arm of Israeli military intelligence, called the External
Relations Department.

           Faced with those documents, the Israeli government retreated,
admitting that the
           documents were real and that Ben-Menashe indeed had worked for
Israeli
           intelligence. But authorities in Tel Aviv still tried to minimize
Ben-Menashe's
           importance.

           The Israeli government and the Bush administration grew more
nervous after
           Ben-Menashe won acquittal from a federal jury in New York City on
Nov. 28, 1990 -- in
           part because he established that he had performed intelligence
work for Israel.

           By early 1991, Israel and the White House were turning to their
allies in the U.S.
           press for help. The hope was that friendly reporters could make
Ben-Menashe into a
           laughingstock and consign his dangerous disclosures to the loony
bin of conspiracy
           theories.

           Steven Emerson, a New Republic writer with contacts inside the
Likud, traveled to
           Israel where he was shown derogatory records about Ben-Menashe.
Emerson
           returned to Washington and began ridiculing Ben-Menashe as "a
low-level translator"
           who was "delusional."

           Other U.S. reporters picked up the drumbeat of negative
assessments about
           Ben-Menashe. On three consecutive weeks in fall 1991, Newsweek ran
articles
           attacking Ben-Menashe's credibility. Emerson also repeated his
critical reporting in
           stories for CNN, the Wall Street Journal’s editorial page and the
American
           Journalism Review.

           Despite the attacks, investigative journalist Seymour Hersh used
Ben-Menashe as a
           source in Hersh's 1991 book about the Israeli nuclear program, The
Samson
           Option.

           Ben-Menashe provided details about the top-secret Israeli nuclear
arsenal as well as
           Maxwell's intelligence activities, information that Hersh managed
to corroborate with
           other sources. But even the renowned Hersh came under harsh
criticism from fellow
           journalists for citing Ben-Menashe.

           In 1992-93, a House task force, headed by Reps. Lee Hamilton,
D-Ind., and Henry
           Hyde, R-Ill., buried Ben-Menashe even deeper when the panel
rejected his
           allegations about the October Surprise case, including his
eyewitness claim of
           seeing Bush in Paris.

           The Hamilton-Hyde task force reached those conclusions despite
contradictory
           testimony about Bush’s alibi for the weekend when Ben-Menashe and
other
           witnesses placed Bush in Paris. [For details about the problems
with Bush’s alibi
           and the gaps in the Hamilton-Hyde report, see Robert Parry’s Trick
or Treason.]

           Over the years, other witnesses added support to Ben-Menashe’s
claims that he
           participated in clandestine Israeli intelligence operations. In
the Israeli daily, Davar,
           reporter Pazit Ravina wrote, "in talks with people who worked with
Ben-Menashe, the
           claim that he had access to highly sensitive intelligence
information was confirmed
           again and again."

           American journalist Craig Unger described similar information in
The Village Voice.
           Unger quoted a senior intelligence official, Moshe Habroni, who
stated that
           "Ben-Menashe served directly under me. … He had access to very, ver
y sensitive
           material." [Village Voice, July 7, 1992]

           Some of Ben-Menashe's key claims gained important factual
corroboration, too. After
           dying mysteriously at sea, Maxwell was unmasked as an Israeli
operative. In another
           instance, one of Ronald Reagan's national security aides, Howard
Teicher,
           submitted an affidavit in a federal criminal case describing a
CIA-backed covert
           operation to funnel military supplies through Chile to Iraq, just
as Ben-Menashe had
           claimed.

           Other new evidence supported the October Surprise charges. [For
details, see Robert
           Parry's books, The October Surprise X-Files and Lost History.]

           But the Washington news media did not reconsider its dismissive
judgment of
           Ben-Menashe. That attitude has continued despite the additional
corroboration of
           Ben-Menashe's bona fides published this year in Gideon's Spies.

           Nevertheless, the book fills in an important new chapter of the
Ben-Menashe saga:
           how alarmed Israeli intelligence officials understood the danger
posed by
           Ben-Menashe's wide-ranging knowledge and how they mounted a
disinformation
           campaign to discredit him.

           Thomas's principal contribution to the Ben-Menashe puzzle comes
from the author's
           interviews with Rafi Eitan, the Israeli master spy who engineered
the capture of Nazi
           fugitive Adolph Eichmann in Argentine in 1960 and served as
Mossad's deputy
           director of operations for 25 years.

           In the interviews, Eitan, who is now in his mid-60s, acknowledged
that Ben-Menashe
           was one of his protegés. According to Gideon's Spies, Eitan and
Ben-Menashe
           worked together in the 1980s setting up a clandestine U.S.-Israeli
arms network to
           procure weapons for sale to Iran.

           Eitan also disclosed that he and Ben-Menashe collaborated on a
project using
           so-called PROMIS software to collect sensitive intelligence about
Israel's enemies in
           the Middle East.

           Ben-Menashe has claimed he worked with Eitan on the top secret
Joint Committee
           for Iran-Israel Relations, a combined effort by the Mossad and the
External Relations
           Department to rebuild their influence in Iran after the overthrow
of the Shah in 1979.

           Ben-Menashe would have appeared a reasonable choice for the
operation since he
           had been born in Iran, spoke fluent Farsi and was a contemporary
of young Iranians
           rising to prominence under the Khomeini regime. But Thomas’s
interviews with Eitan
           now corroborate those assertions.

           So, in the early 1990s, while most U.S. and Israeli journalists
were accepting the
           word of government sources and battering Ben-Menashe's
credibility, the Israeli
           government knew from Eitan that Ben-Menashe's accounts were
largely accurate,
           Thomas reported.

           Asked for details about Eitan's confirmation of Ben-Menashe's
intelligence role,
           Thomas told me that he had sent Eitan a copy of Ben-Menashe's 1992
memoirs,
           Profits of War. The book described Ben-Menashe's accounts of his
intelligence
           exploits and his claim about the Republican-Israeli secret
Iran-hostage collaboration
           in 1980.

           Thomas said Eitan reported back that he had no criticism of the
book. According to
           Thomas, Eitan stated that Ben-Menashe "is telling the truth. …
That's why they
           squashed it." As for Ben-Menashe’s espionage skills, Eitan
asserted that "as an
           intelligence operative, [he was] tops,” Thomas said.

           In the 1980s, some of Eitan's most controversial work was as head
of LAKAM, a
           military intelligence unit created to collect scientific and
technological intelligence.

           In one of Eitan's daring operations, the spymaster authorized
recruitment of Jonathan
           Pollard, an American Jew who was a civilian intelligence analyst
at the U.S. Navy's
           Anti-Terrorism Alert Center. Pollard was assigned to spy within
the U.S. Defense
           Department and to steal sensitive U.S. documents.

           "Over 1,000 highly classified documents, 360 cubic feet of paper,
were transmitted to
           Israel," Thomas wrote. "There Rafi Eitan devoured them before
passing over the
           material to the Mossad. The data enabled [its director general]
Nahum Admoni to
           brief [Prime Minister] Shimon Peres … on how to respond to
Washington's Middle
           East policies in a manner previously impossible."

           But the operation backfired in 1985 when Pollard was arrested
while fleeing to the
           Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C. The operation was traced to
LAKAM, and Eitan
           was blamed for endangering U.S.-Israeli relations.

           Apparently, Eitan was willing to disclose to Thomas other
LAKAM-connected
           intelligence successes to offset the damage that the Pollard case
has done to
           Eitan’s reputation.

           In particular, Eitan touted an ingenious scheme for extracting
secrets from the
           computerized files of other nations, an intelligence coup that
Eitan saw as a crowning
           achievement to his career as Israel’s most famous spy.

           According to Gideon’s Spies, Eitan confirmed Ben-Menashe's account
that Israel
           reaped an intelligence bonanza by exploiting a sophisticated
American software
           program called PROMIS. At the time, PROMIS was a state-of-art
program capable of
           complex data management; it was designed to track the progress of
federal criminal
           cases.

           Eitan said he learned about PROMIS from Earl Brian, an American
businessman
           who had been secretary of health and welfare under California Gov.
Ronald Reagan
           in the early 1970s. Eitan knew of Brian because of the American's
business trips to
           Iran in the 1970s.

           According to Thomas's book, Eitan invited Brian to Tel Aviv, where
they met "several
           times." Brian broached the subject of PROMIS software, which was
already being
           employed by U.S. intelligence agencies.

           Fascinated by the intelligence possibilities, Eitan brainstormed a
plan to adapt
           PROMIS to Israeli intelligence needs. Eitan wanted to make PROMIS
a cyber-age
           "Trojan Horse" that would glean secrets about Palestinian
militants and political
           leaders from government files in Jordan and other nations.

           Eitan soon got a copy of PROMIS from the United States, according
to Gideon's
           Spies. Ben-Menashe claimed that he was instructed to arrange for
the installation of
           a "trapdoor" or a "built-in chip" to permit the secret downloading
of data.

           Eitan's next task was to find a front company to sell PROMIS to
Jordan. Since an
           Israeli company would not be trusted, "Earl Brian's company, Hadron
, made the
           deal," Thomas wrote.

           With PROMIS software installed in Jordan's military intelligence
headquarters,
           Thomas reported, Eitan's strategy paid off in the downloading of
sensitive information
           about Israel's adversaries.

           "PROMIS could track a terrorist's every step," Thomas wrote. He
called Eitan's project
           an intelligence "breakthrough" that enhanced his stature as "a
powerful figure in the
           Israeli intelligence community." [In testimony, Brian denied a
role in the PROMIS
           operation.]

           Flush with success, Eitan decided to cast a wider net. Thomas
reported that Eitan
           developed an ambitious plan to market PROMIS worldwide to Israel's
allies and
           enemies alike. For that operation, Eitan needed a front company
with greater
           international reach. So, he turned to press magnate Robert Maxwell
and his access
           to world leaders.

           "The power of his newspapers meant that presidents and prime
ministers were
           ready to receive him," an Israeli intelligence official told
Thomas. Maxwell also had
           close ties to top Israeli leaders and a formal relationship with
the Mossad, according
           to Gideon’s Spies.

           Soon, Maxwell was marketing the doctored software through Degem
Computers, an
           Israeli company that Maxwell had purchased, Thomas reported. He
added that
           Eitan's operation sold more than $500 million worth of PROMIS by
1989 to
           intelligence services in Australia, Great Britain, Canada,
Guatemala, Poland, South
           Africa, South Korea and even the Soviet Union's KGB.

           Though Thomas says he has corroborated parts of Eitan's
assertions, some claims
           still rest heavily on Eitan's word.
           In studying the complicated PROMIS issue for several years,
however, I have been
           able to confirm some additional elements of Eitan's account.

           For example, the use of secret trapdoors to tap into a computer's
files was a
           well-established practice by the early 1980s, according to papers
prepared by U.S.
           military experts.

           In an article in the Air University Review of January-February
1979, Lt. Col. Roger
           Schell described the techniques used by special U.S. Air Force
teams to penetrate
           “secure” computer systems. Schell noted that the teams could
install undetectable
           trapdoors to “bypass the normal security checks.”

           Navy Lt. Philip Myers made a similar observation in a 1980 masters
thesis in
           computer science written at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School in
Monterey, Calif.
           "The attacker can construct the trapdoor in such a manner as to
make it virtually
           undetectable to even suspecting investigators," wrote Myers.

           Myers also noted that trapdoors and "Trojan horses" can be
"implemented in either
           hardware or software." The reference to the PROMIS trapdoor as a
"built-in chip"
           suggests that the secret access could have been implanted in
computer hardware
           that could then have been sold with the PROMIS software as a
package deal.

           I also discovered evidence of Brian's travels to Iran in the
1970s. I found proof, too,
           that Brian's Hadron was linked to U.S. intelligence and did
top-secret work in Jordan.

           Some information was in old newspapers. "Dr. Earl Brian reportedly
is out to get a
           little of that Middle Eastern oil money," the Sacramento Bee
reported on Jan. 12,
           1975. "Brian, the secretary of the Health and Welfare agency under
Ronald Reagan,
           is helping to write a proposal on health care for Iran."

           I located other evidence at the National Archives in newly opened
files from an
           investigation by Independent Counsel Jacob Stein who examined the
personal
           finances of White House counselor Edwin Meese III. Brian was
interviewed because
           in 1981, he had given Meese a $15,000 interest-free loan that
Meese had used to buy
           stock in Brian's new Biotech Capital Corp.

           Brian told one of Stein's investigators that he did "some
corporate consulting" in Iran
           in the 1970s.

           Brian also was president of the Los Angeles-based Xonics, Inc. in
1975-77. An FBI
           agent's memo to Stein described Xonics as a high-tech company with
"several
           contracts with the Department of Defense and the CIA." Xonics
specialized in
           telecommunications, radar techniques and X-ray imaging.

           In 1978, Brian invested heavily in Hadron, a company based in
Vienna, Va., that did
           high-tech communications and computer work for the Pentagon and
U.S.
           intelligence. Two years later, Brian gained control of the company
and began
           acquiring small firms with their own national-security contracts.

           One of those purchases in December 1981 was Telcom, a
communications
           engineering company that handled sensitive work for Jordan's armed
forces and
           King Hussein. Telcom had a contract with the Royal Jordanian Air
Force to set up a
           digital voice and microwave communications system, according to
Hadron's Form
           10-K filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission in 1983.

           Hadron's Form 10-K for 1984 described Telcom's upgrade of the
communications
           system of the Jordanian Royal Palace in Amman. Telcom also
operated the
           microwave network of the Special Communications Commission of the
Jordanian
           Armed Forces.

           In 1985, Hadron reported that Telcom personnel operated "a number
of
           communications facilities" for "a proprietary U.S. Government
agency," a phrase
           meaning an intelligence cut-out.

           In other words, Eitan's account of Brian's activities would fit
with the documentary
           evidence about Brian's businesses in the Middle East and in the
United States. By
           the early 1980s, under Brian's guidance, Hadron had grown into a
company with $30
           million annual revenues, exclusively from national-security
contracts.

           [In 1996, Brian was convicted of fraud in an unrelated securities
case and was
           sentenced to 4 * years in federal prison.]

           Thomas told me that Eitan admitted that he was in direct contact
with the developers
           of the original PROMIS software, a small Washington, D.C.-based
company called
           Inslaw. Thomas said Eitan acknowledged that he was the mysterious
Israeli who
           visited Inslaw's office in February 1983, using the name "Ben Orr."

           Several years after the visit, Inslaw president William Hamilton
learned from an
           Israeli journalist that Eitan sometimes called himself, "Dr.
Joseph Ben Orr." After
           checking Eitan's photo, Hamilton and other members of his staff
recognized Eitan as
           their visitor.

           Wittingly or not, Ronald Reagan's Justice Department appeared to
have facilitated
           that visit and Israel's procurement of PROMIS. In an ongoing
federal claims case filed
           by Inslaw against the U.S. government for unauthorized use of
PROMIS, a Justice
           Department official testified that he arranged for an Israeli offic
ial, called Ben Orr, to
           visit Inslaw and to receive a copy of PROMIS in May 1983.

           Ben Orr "was a professor in Israel and expressed interest in case
tracking," said C.
           Madison Brewer, the department's project manager for the PROMIS
contract. "I made
           arrangements for him to go to Inslaw for a demonstration. … At a
later date, he made
           a request for PROMIS," which Brewer said the Justice Department
provided.

           I asked Thomas why he thought Eitan was going public now with
these disclosures.
           Thomas replied that Eitan simply considered his intelligence coups
of the 1980s
           among his greatest professional triumphs and wanted credit.

           "Rafi Eitan wants to leave a legacy that he was Israel's greatest
spymaster since
           Gideon," said Thomas, referring to the Old Testament hero whose
spying saved the
           Israelites from destruction. "He [Eitan] thinks what he created
with PROMIS was the
           perfect climax to his career."

           In asserting his claim to Gideon-like status, Eitan also burnished
the reputation of his
           understudy, Ari Ben-Menashe. It now appears that Ben-Menashe, who
lives in
           Canada, did possess real information despite the negative
judgments by Congress
           and much of the Washington press corps.

                  Jack Colhoun, Ph.D., is an investigative reporter and a
Cold War historian.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

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