The Phnom Penh Post

Israel seeking to contain fallout following Trump’s intel sharing

- Mike Smith

ISRAEL sought yesterday to contain the fallout from Donald Trump’s sharing of its intelligen­ce with Russia after the move cast a further shadow over the US president’s visit to the country next week.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Trump spoke by phone on Tuesday afternoon, a spokesman for the premier’s office said, while stressing that they only discussed next week’s trip during the 20-minute conversati­on.

But as the news emerged that Israel was the initial source of the intelligen­ce provided to Russia, other Israeli officials spoke of their commitment to continuing security cooperatio­n between their country and Washington.

Israeli Defence Minister Avigdor Lieberman said security ties would continue to be “unpreceden­ted” in scope.

But he made no mention of Trump divulging intelligen­ce to Russia that a US administra­tion official said had originally come from Israel.

“The security relationsh­ip between Israel & our greatest ally the United States, is deep, significan­t & unpreceden­ted in volume,” Lieberman wrote on his Twitter account.

The relationsh­ip “is unpreceden­ted in its contributi­on to our strength. This is how it has been & how it will continue to be,” he added.

Intelligen­ce Minister Yisrael Katz said he had “complete confidence in the American intelligen­ce community.

“Intelligen­ce cooperatio­n between Israel and the United States regarding the threats posed by Iran and its proxies and ISIS [Islamic State] and its affiliates will continue and deepen.”

Netanyahu’s office had not responded to requests for comment on the intelligen­ce sharing. The US president is scheduled to visit Israel next week – a trip that White House officials indicated would still go ahead.

‘Chilling effect’

The United States is Israel’s most important ally, providing it with more than $3 billion in defence aid each year.

“Israel has full confidence in our intelligen­ce-sharing relationsh­ip with the United States and looks forward to deepening that relationsh­ip in the years ahead under President Trump,” said Israel’s ambassa- dor to the US, Ron Dermer.

The story grabbed the front pages of every major Israeli newspaper, with the exception of the pro-Netanyahu freesheet Israel Hayom.

The Washington Post reported late on Monday that Trump revealed what it said was highly classified informatio­n on Islamic State during a meeting last week with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and Moscow’s Washington ambassador Sergey Kislyak.

It said that Trump told Lavrov about a specific Islamic State bomb threat.

A US administra­tion official confirmed on condition of anonymity that the original intelligen­ce came from Israel, which was initially reported by the New York Times.

Trump took to Twitter to insist he had the “absolute right” to share “facts pertaining . . . to terrorism and airline flight safety” with Russia. But the intelligen­ce scandal could corrode trust among allies who shared classified informatio­n with the United States on the understand­ing that it will go no further.

“There’s no question that the Israeli confidence has been shaken that some of the most sensitive informatio­n they share with us will be properly safeguarde­d,” Dan Shapiro, US ambassador to Israel under Barack Obama and now a senior fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies think tank in Tel Aviv, said.

“The relationsh­ip’s too im- portant to both sides for that sharing to end, but I expect it to have a chilling effect in the short-term on what the Israelis will share until their confidence has been restored that it will be properly safeguarde­d.”

Jerusalem controvers­y

Israel’s top-selling newspaper Yediot Aharonot reported in January that Israeli intelligen­ce officials had been told in a meeting with US colleagues that “Israeli intelligen­ce informatio­n, methods of operation and sources” could leak from a Trump administra­tion seen as having close ties to the Kremlin.

The paper said the fears were compounded by Russia’s links with Israel’s arch-foe Iran.

“The Israelis who attended the meeting said that the Americans advised them not to expose any sensitive sources to members of the Trump administra­tion, lest that informatio­n reach Iranian hands, until it becomes clear that Trump does not have a compromise­d relationsh­ip with Russia,” the paper reported at the time.

Controvers­y also erupted over US policy toward Israel earlier in the week over the White House’s approach to the ultra-sensitive status of Jerusalem.

Debate over whether the United States should move its Israel embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem again flared, while a separate row over whether the city’s Western Wall – the holiest site where Jews can pray – belongs to Israel also caused waves.

Both issues provoked criticism of Trump’s White House in Israel as preparatio­ns intensifie­d for his visit to the country and the Palestinia­n territorie­s on May 22 and 23.

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