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The Jonathan Pollard Spy Case - Adele Edisen - 16-12-2012 Fri, December 14, 2012 11:36:40 AM FW: The Jonathan Pollard Spy Case: The CIA's 1987 Damage Assessment Declassified From: Tree Frog <treefrog@ix.netcom.com> The Jonathan Pollard Spy Case: The CIA's 1987 Damage Assessment Declassified New Details on What Secrets Israel Asked Pollard to Steal CIA Withholding Overturned on Appeal by National Security Archive National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 407 Posted - December 14, 2012 Edited by Jeffrey T. Richelson For more information contact: Jeffrey T. Richelson/Thomas Blanton 202/994-7000 or nsarchiv@gwu.edu http://www.nsarchive.org Washington, D.C., December 12, 2012 -- When Naval Investigative Service analyst Jonathan Pollard spied for Israel in 1984 and 1985, his Israeli handlers asked primarily for nuclear, military and technical information on the Arab states, Pakistan, and the Soviet Union -- not on the United States -- according to the newly-declassified CIA 1987 damage assessment of the Pollard case, published today by the National Security Archive at George Washington University (http://www.nsarchive.org). The damage assessment includes new details on the specific subjects and documents sought by Pollard's Israeli handlers (pages 36-43), such as Syrian drones and central communications, Egyptian missile programs, and Soviet air defenses. The Israelis specifically asked for a signals intelligence manual that they needed to listen in on Soviet advisers in Syria. The document describes how Pollard's handler, Joseph Yagur, told him to ignore a request, from Yagur's boss, for U.S. "dirt" on senior Israeli officials and told Pollard that gathering such information would terminate the operation (page 38). The damage assessment also features a detailed 21-page chronology of Pollard's personal life and professional career, including his work for the Israelis, highlighting more than a dozen examples of unusual behavior by Pollard that the CIA suggests should have, in retrospect, alerted his supervisors that he was a security risk. Prominent on the list were false statements by Pollard during a 1980 assignment with Task Force 168, the naval intelligence element responsible for HUMINT collection. Pollard is now serving a life sentence in prison for espionage. The CIA denied release of most of the Pollard damage assessment in 2006, claiming for example that pages 18 through 165 were classified in their entirety and not a line of those pages could be released. The Archive appealed the CIA's decision to the Interagency Security Classification Appeals Panel, established by President Clinton in 1995 and continued by Presidents Bush and Obama. The ISCAP showed its value yet again as a check on systemic overclassification by ordering release of scores of pages from the Pollard damage assessment that were previously withheld by CIA, and published today for the first time. Check out today's posting at the National Security Archive website - http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB407/ Find us on Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/NSArchive Unredacted, the Archive blog - http://nsarchive.wordpress.com/ ________________________________________________________ THE NATIONAL SECURITY ARCHIVE is an independent non-governmental research institute and library located at The George Washington University in Washington, D.C. The Archive collects and publishes declassified documents acquired through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). A tax-exempt public charity, the Archive receives no U.S. government funding; its budget is supported by publication royalties and donations from foundations and individuals. _________________________________________________________ PRIVACY NOTICE The National Security Archive does not and will never share the names or e-mail addresses of its subscribers with any other organization. Once a year, we will write you and ask for your financial support. We may also ask you for your ideas for Freedom of Information requests, documentation projects, or other issues that the Archive should take on. We would welcome your input, and any information you care to share with us about your special interests. But we do not sell or rent any information about subscribers to any other party. Adele The Jonathan Pollard Spy Case - Phil Dragoo - 16-12-2012 The October 1983 NSDD provided a much more durable basis for the development of U.S.-Israeli strategic cooperation than its precursor of 1981. When Premier Shamir visited Washington in November, the two sides agreed to the establishment of a new, formal Joint Political-Military Group (JPMG) that would convene every six months. President Reagan announced that the JPMG would, "give priority to our mutual interests posed by increased Soviet involvement in the Middle East. Among the specific areas to be considered are combined planning, joint exercises, and requirements for prepositioning of U.S. equipment in Israel."3'
The JPMG held its first meeting in January 1984, and over the next four years its achievements in shepherding increased strategic cooperation appeared impressive. Naval vessels from the U.S. Sixth Fleet started making regular port calls to Haifa; the United States leased 25 Kfir C-l fighters from Israel to simulate Soviet MiG planes in combat training; fleets from the two countries held joint anti-submarine warfare (ASW) maneuvers and passing exercises in the Eastern Mediterranean; Sixth Fleet aviators conducted bombing practice against targets in Israel's Negev Desert; several squadrons of USAF F-16s were deployed in Israel for joint exercises with the Israeli Air Force. In May 1986, Israel became the third country, after Britain and West Germany, to sign on to the SDI research and development program; the FY 1987 DoD budget bill reportedly authorized about $70 million for prepositioning American war material in Israel; and in July 1986, Israel agreed to the installation of Voice of America transmitters which would beam American programming into the southern parts of the Soviet Union." The U.S.-Israeli Relationship in the Reagan Era The Jonathan Pollard Spy Case - Jan Klimkowski - 16-12-2012 Quote:The document describes how Pollard's handler, Joseph Yagur, told him to ignore a request, from Yagur's boss, for U.S. "dirt" on senior Israeli officials and told The actual section can be seen on page 38 here. It reads: Quote:Yaqur and Eitan provided initial, detailed taskings on If this account is correct, Pollard's handlers at different levels disagreed about whether Pollard should obtain "material reporting 'dirt' on Israeli political figures". In a world where Information is Power, and lives are entirely disposable, this is curious to say the least. On page 39 we read, in oh so familiar phraseology: Quote:In addition to conveying operational instructions Later on page 39: Quote:26. According to Pollard, security and cover matters Page 43: Quote:Pollard claimed to investigators that he again A glimpse into the Israeli Mockingbird on page 45, and an Israeli double-cross? Quote:37. On 18 November 1985, FBI and NIS agents Page 48 - Mockingbird efforts backfire? Note the nature of the intelligence Pollard chose to leak. Quote:42. While his cooperation in debriefings was most Sourcewatch tells us that: Quote:Wolf Blitzer served as lobbyist for the powerful American Israeli Public Affairs Committee AIPAC. The Jonathan Pollard Spy Case - Magda Hassan - 27-12-2012 Newly revealed CIA document shows Jonathan Pollard was asked to get intel on Israel The convicted Israeli-American spy's statements under questioning after his imprisonment in the U.S. have been published by the National Security Archive in Washington. By Amir Oren | Dec.14, 2012 | 10:31 PM | 20 [TABLE] [TR] [/TR] [/TABLE] In the early 1980s, one of Jonathan Pollard's Israeli handlers asked him to provide "dirt" on Israeli politicians, according to a newly released CIA document. Pollard has been imprisoned in the U.S. for the past 27 years after receiving a life sentence in 1987 for spying on behalf of Israel. He had worked as a civilian analyst for U.S. naval intelligence. The request came from one of his Israeli contacts, Rafi Eitan, the head of Lekem (the Defense Ministry's Bureau of Scientific Relations). Pollard's detailed confession, verified by polygraph tests, was published Friday by the National Security Archive in Washington. His confession was included in a damage assessment document that was compiled by the Pentagon following his sentencing. Until now, only a highly censored version of the document had been published, but the Archive succeeded in its battle to lift censorship on many of the sections. The report reveals Pollard told his interrogators that Eitan had asked him to provide information that would help identify Israelis who had provided information to the United States. The investigators concluded that Pollard's collaboration with them was sincere and complete. In their opinion, Pollard agreed to the requests of his Israeli handlers, but went even further and provided additional material on his own initiative. He passed thousands of documents to Israel, including ones attributed the highest levels of classification - higher even than "top secret." Eitan asked Pollard for psychological analyses written by CIA experts on Israeli figures, and other dirt on senior Israeli officials, as well as information that could help locate Israeli moles - Israelis Eitan believed had leaked information to the Americans. Pollard says Yossi Yagur, his operator on behalf of Lekem, stood behind Eitan during a meeting in Paris and shook his head emphatically in response to the requests. Afterward, while Eitan was not present, Yagur told Pollard the operation would stop if he acceded to Eitan's requests. Yagur was a state employee, while Eitan was close to Ariel Sharon. The paragraph that determines whether Pollard did in fact transfer "dirt" was censored, so the question remains unanswered. The authors of the damage assessment report determined that Pollard had endangered sources and methods of the U.S. intelligence community, as well as intelligence cooperation and state interests. The report findings included the following: * A top priority for his handlers was intelligence on nuclear weapons in Arab states and Pakistan. Following that were the following tasks, in descending order of priority: the special weapons capability, such as chemical and biological weapons, of those states; Soviet warplanes; the Soviet air defense system (ground-to-air missiles ); Soviet air-to-air missiles and ground-to-air missiles; and the military organization, forces, deployment and readiness of Arab states. * Since he was a youth, Pollard suffered from problems of emotional and mental stability. He often suffered from hallucinations (he boasted, as a student, that he was a Mossad agent ) and was not accepted to a CIA program because of his use of soft drugs. * Eitan advised him to resign from naval intelligence, so he would not have to take a polygraph test. * Yagur told Pollard that the highest-ranking officials in the Israeli government knew and appreciated his material. * Pollard told his interrogators that, if he had not been captured, he would have tried to be accepted to the State Department's research unit, where no polygraph test was required for entry. * Pollard rationalized his motivation by saying he was trying to help Israel win its next war. U.S. intelligence commented that the Israel Defense Forces would have easily achieved victory without Pollard's help. http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/newly-revealed-cia-document-shows-jonathan-pollard-was-asked-to-get-intel-on-israel.premium-1.484924 |