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Last Updated: Jun 28, 2009 - 8:00:37 AM |
The roundup of around 40 alleged Israeli agents in Lebanon in recent
weeks has in all probability been a serious blow for Israeli
intelligence at a time when its longtime adversary, Hezbollah, is
bracing for another onslaught by the Jewish state.
Both sides are nervous -- Israel because valuable eyes and ears inside
Lebanon have been lost, Hezbollah because the existence of these cells,
some of them set up 25 years ago, was an immense security failure on
its part and will mean it will have to do a lot of housecleaning and
reorganizing.
All this means is that two of the Middle East's most ferocious
adversaries, whose intelligence war over the years has been one of the
most heated in the region, have both been badly damaged and want to hit
back.
The turmoil in Iran and the emergence of a hard-line, right-wing
government in Israel under hawkish Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu
fuel this unease and sense of vulnerability on both sides. And in the
volatile Middle East, those are usually portents of trouble.
With one cell after another being rolled up, the Israelis will no doubt
have told whatever other intelligence assets they may have in Lebanon
to lie low. And it seems clear, given the rank of some of the Lebanese
arrested in the crackdown, that the Israelis had penetrated Lebanese
society and its military widely and deeply.
The alleged agents included a former general in Lebanon's premier
security service, two army colonels and a former mayor. Lebanese
authorities say most of those arrested, including those just listed,
have all confessed that they had been spying in Lebanon for years.
Some said they were recruited by Israel's various intelligence services
-- Mossad, which operates outside Israel; the Shin Bet internal
security service, which operated in Lebanon and the Palestinian
territories; and Aman, military intelligence -- as far back as 1982
when Israel invaded Lebanon.
In Lebanon, given Hezbollah's nationwide military structure and the
danger it poses for the Jewish state, the Israelis will have to rebuild
the networks smashed by Lebanese intelligence and Hezbollah's security
branch to regain the intelligence flow that is vital to military
operations.
This means that to an extent that can only be guessed at, the Israelis
are more vulnerable regarding Hezbollah than they have been for many
years.
When Hezbollah abducted Israeli soldiers on the border on July 12,
2006, Israel responded with wave after wave of airstrikes in what
became a 34-day war. The Israelis were able to destroy bunkers
containing most of Hezbollah's long-range rockets capable of striking
deep into Israel, almost to Tel Aviv, in under an hour.
Their intelligence was that good, and some of that must have come from
agents they had on the ground. Those assets may no longer be available,
and the Israeli air force may not be able to strike with such
devastating accuracy next time around.
Hezbollah, too, is jumpy, and with some reason. From what information
is available about the alleged spies' activities, they were focused
primarily on tracking Hezbollah leaders and key operatives, identifying
command centers and safe houses.
Several senior Hezbollah officials who were assassinated were probably
targeted by intelligence provided by the Israeli agents. At least one
of these agents had secured a commercial contract with Hezbollah's
administrative branch to maintain its vehicles and had planted tracking
devices in them that went undetected for years.
It does not take a great stretch of the imagination to surmise how many
secret facilities and key Hezbollah operatives were uncovered in what
must stand as one of the most successful espionage operations mounted
in many years.
It seems that the assassination of several senior Hezbollah figures
likely resulted from the activities of the Israeli spy rings. Among
those killed was the Shiite movement's fabled and shadowy operational
chief, Imad Mughniyeh, the most wanted fugitive in the world until
Osama bin Laden struck on Sept. 11, 2001.
Mughniyeh, indicted in the United States for the June 1985 hijack of a
TWA jetliner in which a U.S. Navy diver was murdered, was assassinated
in one of the most secure districts of Damascus, the Syrian capital,
after a meeting with Syrian intelligence chiefs.
A bomb placed in the headrest of his SUV was detonated by remote
control when he got into the vehicle. It was one of the most
spectacular assassinations in the Middle East for years. It hit
Hezbollah hard, and it has carried out no operation of any significance
against Israel since then.
Source:Ocnus.net 2009
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