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    Thursday, April 24, 2008       Free Headline Alerts

    Critics see State Dept. behind timing of Israeli spy arrest

    WASHINGTON — The prosecution of an 84-year-old former U.S. Army engineer accused of spying for Israel is linked to President George Bush's visit to the Jewish state in May, critics of the action said.

    Diplomatic sources and analysts said the circumstances of the arrest and prosecution of Ben-Ami Kadish, charged with relaying classified military and nuclear data to Israel from 1980 to 1985, were linked to Bush's visit to Israel for its 60th anniversary. They said the administration, particularly Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, would use the Kadish case to prepare for a major announcement of an Israeli withdrawal from the West Bank by 2009, Middle East Newsline reported.

    "Today's case against 84-year-old Kadish reflects more the impatience of the U.S. secretary of state with Israel's decision to continue building in Jerusalem and in settlement blocs and to retain security roadblocks," Lenny Ben-David, a former Israeli diplomat in Washington and today a consultant, said.

    Under this scenario, shared by some Western diplomats, the administration revived a case long known by U.S. officials to pressure Israel to facilitate a Palestinian state in 2009. They said Bush wants Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to begin destroying scores of so-called unauthorized Jewish communities in the West Bank, or those established after 2000.

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    "This is a pattern of American pressure that repeats itself," Ben-David said. "The tactic is geared to embarrass American supporters of Israel, particularly members of Congress, who oppose weapons sales to Israel's foes, dangerous concessions to the Palestinians, or the abrogation of previous commitments to Israel."

    In an effort to pressure Israel into a unilateral withdrawal from the West Bank, Ms. Rice was said to have pressed for the prosecution on espionage charges of two senior members of the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee. The diplomats said the secretary has also sought to reduce support for Israel in Congress, many of whose members have quietly advised the Olmert government to hold fast until Bush leaves office in January 2009.

    "It's a great way to pressure Israel into giving up the store to the Islamic world's favorite football, the Palestinians," Debbi Schussel, a leading conservative commentator said.

    The Justice Department, in an unprecedented prosecution 25 years after the alleged espionage, has refused to say when it knew of Kadish's alleged activities for Israel. The State Department, which linked Kadish to the case of former U.S. Navy analyst Jonathan Pollard, referred all such questions to Justice.

    "You can talk with the Justice Department about why it has taken as long as it has from the original incident to be able to develop and establish enough information to actually be able to move forward with an arrest and prosecution," State Department deputy spokesman Tom Casey said.

    But other diplomatic sources disagree with the assessment that the Kadish case was being used as a lever against Israel. They cited the mild and even reassuring reaction from the State Department as well as the calm response from Israel.

    At a hearing in U.S. District Court in New York on April 22, Kadish was released on $300,000 bail until his next hearing, scheduled for May 24. Kadish appeared relaxed and even bantered in Hebrew with at least one Israeli journalist.

    "If this was a truly serious case, he would have been denied bail and there would be hysteria on the Israeli side," a veteran diplomat in Washington said. "We are talking about a case that has been stage-managed with the full cooperation of the suspect and Israel."

    Under this scenario, Kadish was surrendered by Israel after months of negotiations concerning Israel's quiet demand for the release of Pollard, serving a life sentence since 1986. The diplomats said Olmert and his senior ministers have urged Bush and Ms. Rice to release Pollard in what could provide the Israeli government with sufficient political support to destroy the unauthorized Jewish communities in the West Bank and withdraw from most of the area over the next year.

    "The last thing the administration wants to do is threaten the Israeli-U.S. relationship on the strategic level," the diplomat said. "This would bolster the argument against any withdrawal."

    Instead, these diplomats and analysts said, Israel gave Kadish's name to the U.S. intelligence community in an effort to remove its objections to the release of Pollard. Since his arrest in 1985, the CIA has asserted that at least one other American Jew was spying for Israel.

    Over the next few weeks, the diplomats and analysts said, Israel would be expected to acknowledge that Kadish was its agent. They said this could end the Pollard chapter and ensure that Kadish receives a light sentence.

    "I think what primarily bothers the Americans is the feeling that Israel didn't tell them the whole truth two decades ago, in 1985, when the Pollard affair exploded," former Mossad director Danny Yatom said.


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