Mossad
The Institute for Intelligence and Special Tasks
[ha-Mossad le-Modiin ule-Tafkidim Meyuhadim] 

Mossad [Hebrew for �institute�] has responsibility for
human intelligence collection, covert action, and
counterterrorism. Its focus is on Arab nations and
organizations throughout the world. Mossad also is
responsible for the clandestine movement of Jewish
refugees out of Syria, Iran, and Ethiopia. Mossad
agents are active in the former communist countries,
in the West, and at the UN. 

Mossad is headquartered in Tel Aviv. The staff of
Mossad was estimated during the late 1980s to number
between 1,500 to 2,000 personnel, with more recent
estimates placing the staff at an estimated 1,200
personnel. The identity of the director of Mossad was
traditionally a state secret, or at least not widely
publicized, but in March 1996 the Government announced
the appointment of Major General Danny Yatom as the
replacement for Shabtai Shavit, who resigned in early
1996. 

Formerly known as the Central Institute for
Coordination and the Central Institute for
Intelligence and Security, Mossad was formed on 01
April 1951. Mossad was established by then Prime
Minister David Ben Gurion, who gave as Mossad's
primary directive: "For our state which since its
creation has been under siege by its enemies.
Intelligence constitutes the first line of
defence...we must learn well how to recognise what is
going on around us." 

Mossad has a total of eight departments, though some
details of the internal organization of the agency
remain obscure. 

Collections Department is the largest, with
responsibility for espionage operations, with offices
abroad under both diplomatic and unofficial cover. The
department consists of a number of desks which are
responsible for specific geographical regions,
directing case officers based at "stations" around the
world, and the agents they control. Beginning in 2000,
the Mossad undertook an advertising campaign to
promote recruitment of collection officers. See a June
2001 recruiting poster here. 
Political Action and Liaison Department conducts
political activities and liaison with friendly foreign
intelligence services and with nations with which
Israel does not have normal diplomatic relations. In
larger stations, such as Paris, Mossad customarily had
under embassy cover two regional controllers: one to
serve the Collections Department and the other the
Political Action and Liaison Department. 
Special Operations Division, also known as Metsada,
conducts highly sensitive assassination, sabotage,
paramilitary, and psychological warfare projects. 
LAP (Lohamah Psichlogit) Department is responsible for
psychological warfare, propaganda and deception
operations. 
Research Department is responsible for intelligence
production, including daily situation reports, weekly
summaries and detailed monthly reports. The Department
is organized into 15 geographically specialized
sections or "desks", including the USA, Canada and
Western Europe, Latin America, Former Soviet Union,
China, Africa, the Maghreb (Morocco, Algeria,
Tunisia), Libya, Iraq, Jordan, Syria, Saudi Arabia,
the United Arab Emirates and Iran. A "nuclear" desk is
focused on special weapons related issues. 
Technology Department is responsible for development
of advanced technologies for support of Mossad
operations. In April 2001, the Mossad published a
"help wanted" ad in the Israeli press seeking
electronics engineers and computer scientists for the
Mossad technology unit.

Israel's most celebrated spy, Eli Cohen, was recruited
by Mossad during the 1960s to infiltrate the top
echelons of the Syrian government. Cohen radioed
information to Israel for two years before he was
discovered and publicly hanged in Damascus Square.
Another Mossad agent, Wolfgang Lotz, established
himself in Cairo, became acquainted with high-ranking
Egyptian military and police officers, and obtained
information on missile sites and on German scientists
working on the Egyptian rocket program. In 1962 and
1963, in a successful effort to intimidate the
Germans, several key scientists in that program were
targets of assassination attempts. Mossad also
succeeded in seizing eight missile boats under
construction for Israel in France, but which had been
embargoed by French president Charles de Gaulle in
December 1968. 

In 1960, Mossad carried out one of its most celebrated
operations, the kidnapping of Nazi war criminal Adolph
Eichmann from Argentina. Another kidnapping, in 1986,
brought to Israel for prosecution the nuclear
technician, Mordechai Vanunu, who had revealed details
of the Israeli nuclear weapons program to a London
newspaper. During the 1970s, Mossad assassinated
several Arabs connected with the Black September
terrorist group. Mossad inflicted a severe blow on the
PLO in April 1988, when an assassination team invaded
a well-guarded residence in Tunis to murder Arafat's
deputy, Abu Jihad, considered to be the principal PLO
planner of military and terrorist operations against
Israel. Gerald Bull, a Canadian scientist who
developed the famed "Super Gun" for Iraq was killed by
the Mossad at his Brussels apartment in March 1990,
effectively halting the development of the Supergun
project. 

Egyptian security services reported the discovery of a
total of seven Israeli espionage networks during 1996,
which is a significant increase compared to the 20
similar networks discovered in the previous 15 years. 

And Mossad's record has also been blemished by a few
embarrassing failures. In Lillehammer Norway on 07
January 1974 Mossad agents mistakenly killed Ahmad
Boushiki, an Algerian waiter carrying a Moroccan
passport, whom they mistook for PLO security head Ali
Ahmad Salameh, believed to have masterminded the 1972
massacre of Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics
[Salameh was killed in a 1979 car-bomb explosion in
Lebanon]. Following the attack, the Mossad agents were
arrested and tried before a Norwegian court. Five
Israeli agents were convicted and served short jail
sentences, though Israel denied responsibility for the
murder. In February 1996 the Israeli government agreed
to compensate the family of Ahmad Boushiki. 

On 15 November 1995, Prime Minister Yitzak Rabin was
assassinated by Yigal Amir, an Israeli citizen.
Following the controversy over the failure of
intelligence to protect Rabin, and the embarrassment
over the mistaken assassination of a Swedish national,
the Director Geneneral of Mossad, then known only as
'S', was forced into retirement. On 24 March 1996
Prime Minister Shimon Peres appointed Major General
Danny Yatom as the new Director General of Mossad, the
first Director of Mossad to ever be publically
identified. 

On 24 September 1997 Mossad operatives attempted to
assassinate Khalid Meshaal, a top political leader of
the Palestinian group Hamas. The assassins entered
Jordan on fake Canadian, and injected Meshaal with a
poison. Jordan was able to wring a numbar of
concessions out of Israel in the aftermath of the
fiasco, including the release of the founder of Hamas,
Shaykh Ahmad Yasin, from an Israeli jail. 

Sources and Resources
Mossad advertising for field officers with 'spunk', by
Arieh O'Sullivan, Jerusalem Post, June 22, 2001 
"James Bond, No Big Deal": Technological Aspects of
Mosad Operations by Dan Yakhin, Globes (Tel Aviv),
April 19, 2001 
"Israel's Secret Wars: A History of Israel's
Intelligence Services" by Ian Black and Benny Morris 
"Inside Israel's Secret Organisations" Jane's
Intelligence Review October 1996 
Ha-Ben shel Rosh HaMossad (short story) by Etgar Karet



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