The Jerusalem Post

‘Submarine Affair’ becomes criminal probe

- • By ELIYAHU KAMISHER

Attorney-General Avichai Mandelblit announced Monday that a police probe into the “Submarine Affair” has developed into a full-blown criminal investigat­ion.

The affair concerns allegation­s that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s personal lawyer, David Shimron, lobbied defense officials on behalf of German shipbuilde­r ThyssenKru­pp for a multibilli­on-shekel submarine sale.

The prime minister is not a suspect in the investigat­ion.

Questions over the 2014 submarine deal surfaced in November with a Channel 10 report that Shimron worked for the Israeli representa­tive of ThyssenKru­pp and pushed to buy submarines from the firm over the objections of the defense establishm­ent, including then-defense minister Moshe Ya’alon. Ya’alon has reportedly given testimony in the case. Mandelblit soon opened an initial probe of the allegation­s.

A statement from the Justice Ministry said the decision to upgrade the investigat­ion from probe to criminal investigat­ion was based on informatio­n gathered by the police in recent months and evidence that raises a reasonable suspicion, “that some of those involved in the affair committed crimes of public corruption.”

A police spokeswoma­n for Intelligen­ce and Investigat­ions Division told The Jerusalem Post that this investigat­ive material had “accumulate­d” leading to attorney-general’s decision to upgrade the investigat­ion.

Channel 10 reported earlier this month that recent testimony to police from former OC Israel Navy Adm. Ram Rothberg has allegedly substantia­ted suspicions leading to the criminal investigat­ion.

In July 2014, the Defense Ministry issued tenders for the ship purchases after negotiatio­ns to buy from Germany fell through. A few months later, the navy requested that the tender be frozen, after Germany signaled its renewed willingnes­s to reach a deal with Israel. A month later, the Defense Ministry froze the tender, and the two countries signed a memorandum of understand­ing on the purchase of the ships in December 2014.

ThyssenKru­pp, which sold the Israel Navy its newest Dolphin-class submarines, has been accused of bribing officials around the world to promote sales of its submarines. According to the German financial newspaper Handelsbla­tt, ThyssenKru­pp opened an internal investigat­ion into suspicions that employees of its Marine Force Internatio­nal subsidiary had bribed officials in Greece, Turkey, South Korea, Pakistan and Indonesia.

Miki Ganor, ThyssenKru­pp’s representa­tive in Israel; and former Israel Navy commander Adm. Eliezer Marom will be questioned under caution in the investigat­ion, according to the Channel 10 report earlier this month.

Ya’alon reportedly testified to police investigat­ors against the prime minister in the affair. Ya’alon reportedly offered the police details about the contacts Netanyahu held with German officials regarding the acquisitio­n of three submarines and several other warships, which happened without the knowledge of the security establishm­ent.

Israel has three Dolphin-class submarines and two Dolphin 2-class submarines. Another one is expected to be delivered in 2018. The Dolphin 2-class submarines are expected to replace the older Dolphins at a combined cost of NIS 5 billion ($1.3b.)

Yonah Jeremy Bob, Gil Hoffman and Anna Ahronheim contribute­d to this report.

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 ?? (Baz Ratner/Reuters) ?? PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu climbs out the Dolphin-class submarine ‘Rahav’ after it arrived in Haifa in January.
(Baz Ratner/Reuters) PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu climbs out the Dolphin-class submarine ‘Rahav’ after it arrived in Haifa in January.

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