After Dubai, Israelis question Mossad methods

That was in 1997, when the Mossad director resigned after  his men botched the poisoning of Khaled Meshaal in Jordan. Now  premier a second time, Netanyahu faces a similar crisis over the  the death of another Hamas figure, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in Dubai.   Israel’s official silence on the Jan. 20 killing has been  outpaced, in the popular imagination, by UAE police footage of  the suspected assassins and revelations some of them had copied  the European passports of actual immigrants to the Jewish state.

The idea that the Mossad, having long cultivated a  reputation for lethally outwitting Israel’s foes abroad, this  time tripped up by underestimating Arab counter-espionage  capabilities prompted commentators to demand a public reckoning.

Special scrutiny was devoted to Mossad director Meir Dagan,  an ex-general now in his eighth year of service and praised by  Israeli leaders for spearheading a “shadow war” against Hamas,  Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas, and Iran’s nuclear programme.   Amir Oren of the liberal Haaretz daily went as far as to  call for Dagan to be fired, describing him as “belligerent,  heavy-handed” and predicting a flap with Britain, Ireland,  France and Germany — the countries whose passports were forged.

“Even if whoever carried out the assassination does reach  some kind of arrangement with the infuriated Western nations, it  still has an obligation to its own citizens,” Oren wrote.

Several of the foreign-born Israelis who said their  identities had been stolen for the Mabhouh assassination voiced  fear they could now by vulnerable to prosecution for murder.

However, one Israeli intelligence source told Reuters that  Dagan was in a stronger position than his ill-fated predecessor  13 years ago.

His record against Iran has won him great credit and, in the  absence of the “smoking gun” that the captive Israeli agents in  Jordan were, to act against the Mossad chief would look like an  Israeli admission, the source said.

Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman did not deny  Mossad involvement in Mabhouh’s death but tried to deflect  attention, implying in a radio interview that “some other  intelligence service or another country” may have had a role.

Israel’s allies recognise “that our security activity is  conducted according to very clear, cautious and responsible  rules of the game”, Lieberman asserted.

Other pundits disagreed about the diplomatic price that  could be exacted from Israel, which is already fending off  foreign criticism of the hundreds of Palestinian civilian deaths  during its offensive in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip last year.

But there was little arguing the fact that Hamas had turned  the tables on Mabhouh’s assassins by insisting UAE police launch  a murder investigation after they initially ruled that his  death, in a Dubai hotel room, had been of natural causes.

“What began as a heart attack turned out to be an  assassination, which led to a probe, which turned into the  current passport affair,” wrote Yoav Limor in Israel Hayom, a  pro-government newspaper.

“It is doubtful whether this is the end of the affair.”

Israelis generally rally around Mossad’s two-fisted image —  honed back in the 1970s, when the agency hunted down and killed  Palestinians blamed for a deadly raid on Israel’s Olympic  delegation at the Munich Games.

But the Mabhouh hit underscored the difficulties spies must  contend with in the digital era, with ubiquitous high-resolution  CCTV coverage and easily accessed passport databases.

“What happens in the modern world, the cameras everywhere —  it changes things not just for those whose trade is terror but  also those trying to fight terror,” former Mossad officer Ram  Igra told Israel’s Army Radio.

Mabhouh had masterminded the abduction and killing of two  Israeli troops in 1989 and, more recently, the smuggling of  Iranian-funded arms to Gaza. The attempted discretion of his  killing indicated his assassins were not on a vendetta but,  rather, aimed to quietly eliminate what they saw as a threat.

Yet the possibility that Mossad had so quickly come undone  led Yossi Melman, author of two books on the intelligence  agency, to suggest such assassinations would not be repeated.

Melman said a wider question would be also raised: “Does  Israel’s assassinations policy pay off?”

The 1997 attempted assassination in Amman, by two Mossad  officers posing as Canadian tourists, unwittingly boosted  Meshaal’s status in Hamas. Netanyahu was also forced to free the  Islamist faction’s jailed spiritual leader, Ahmed Yassin.