Intelligence book: Israel is riddled with U.S. spies
TEL AVIV — The Israeli intelligence community has let it be known that
the United States conducts intense espionage efforts in the Jewish state.
A book by a government-financed institution asserted that the United
States has been engaged in human and electronic surveillance of Israel. The
book, titled "Masterpiece: An Inside Look at Sixty Years of Israeli
Intelligence," said U.S. espionage agencies operate from the U.S. embassy in
Tel Aviv and target Israelis as well as strategic facilities.
This was the first time an official Israeli publication acknowledged
U.S. spy efforts. The U.S. intelligence community has classified Israel as a
leading spy threat in the United States.
"The United States has been after Israel's non-conventional capabilities
and what goes on at the decision-making echelons," the book, published by
the Israel Intelligence Heritage and Commemoration Center," said.
The book, which contains prefaces by the heads of Israel's intelligence
community, asserted that the United States has focused on the secret nuclear
program of the Jewish state. In a chapter by retired Israel Security Agency
officer Barak Ben-Zur, the book said U.S. intelligence also uses electronic
surveillance and other methods to spy on Israeli government meetings.
The book said the U.S. embassy in Tel Aviv has a special team to spy on
Israel. Ben-Zur said the U.S. team engaged in "methodical intelligence
gathering."
In the 1980s and 1990s, Israel was said to have arrested or expelled
several people suspected of spying for the United States. The cases were not
publicized.