Arab Times

UK opens secret files on ‘Jewish terrorists’

‘Double agent tricked Germans’

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LONDON, Sept 28, (Agencies): The call to British military security forces came early in the morning, shortly after 1 am, and could not be ignored. The informant’s message was alarming: Assassins planned to kill the commander of British forces in Palestine the following morning; evasive action was needed.

The source didn’t know the details of the plan, but warned that Gen Evelyn Barker would be attacked on the brief journey between his home in Jerusalem and his office at British headquarte­rs. The assailants were militant Jews from the Stern Gang, determined to drive the British from the land in their bid for Jewish sovereignt­y.

Before dawn broke on Nov 14, 1946, according to secret documents declassifi­ed Wednesday by the National Archives, Barker’s security team was notified of the imminent threat. He changed his route, other special precaution­s were put in place, and he arrived without incident.

Barker was particular­ly controvers­ial because of his incendiary comments after militants bombed Jerusalem’s King David Hotel, used by the British as a political and military base, in July 1946, when Britain was still the administra­tive power in Palestine under an arrangemen­t worked out in 1920, but was increasing­ly unable to control events as Jews and Arabs sought control.

The King David Hotel blast killed more than 90 people and infuriated Barker, whose offices were in the hotel.

He reacted by banning British troops from having any social or business dealings with Jews, saying that they would be punished “in a way the race dislikes as much as any, by striking at their pockets and showing our contempt for them.”

The plot against Barker is only one of hundreds of plans described in the newly public files that detail how British officials were tormented by the militants. The official British attitude toward the Jewish undergroun­d is summed up on the file’s title page: “Jewish Terrorist Activities in the Middle East.”

British influence was waning and the militants sensed a lack of resolve that could be exploited, said Saul Zadka, author of “Blood in Zion: How the Jewish Guerrillas drove the British Out of Palestine.”

“They realized getting rid of the British was the key to establishi­ng Jewish sovereignt­y in Palestine,” he said.

“The British didn’t have an end game, they didn’t know what to do, and the insurgents’ operations affected the morale of the armed forces very badly. The British papers were saying, ‘If you can’t control Palestine, just get out.’ And it was very expensive to keep 100,000 soldiers there. So overall, holding onto Palestine was not worth it. The cost was too high.”

It is clear from the files that the British were rattled by the constant threat of attack and by fears the violence would spread from the Middle East to Europe and, particular­ly, to Britain itself.

A July 20, 1946, letter from Lt Col Maurice Oldfield to military headquarte­rs warns that two people on the “Jewish Terrorist List” seemed to have infiltrate­d Paris via an Air France flight.

“This indicates a weakness in our controls,” he said, raising concerns that many more people supposedly being watched “may already, unbeknown to us, be scattered throughout Europe.”

There is a specific warning from British intelligen­ce to Belgian authoritie­s about five individual­s planning a “mission.” There are also exchanges between British intelligen­ce and the FBI about the activities of “Jewish commandos” in New York City.

The operationa­l challenge facing British security officials in 1946 was in some ways similar to the ones faced today as Europe’s intelligen­ce agencies try to keep Islamic extremists from entering Europe to launch attacks against civilians.

The files contain an official “top secret” request for “special attention security check of all Jews travelling to the UK” because of the security threat posed by the Stern Gang.

The

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Bevin

reveal how closely British secret services tracked relations between militant groups like the Stern Gang and Irgun amid fears the rival groups would start to cooperate on joint attacks.

A secret note written on April 14, 1947, warns that a reliable source had told British agents about an agreement between the Stern Gang and the Irgun group to coordinate policy and plans.

“The main point is that terrorist activities are not to be confined only to Palestine — but will take place also in the UK, France and Italy,” the note says, adding that “certain Jewish terrorists” have already arrived in the port city of Alexandria, Egypt, and have purchased a 200-ton ship to be used to transport weapons.

The plots described were many and varied, including a failed plan by militants to blow up the British destroyer Chevron off the coast of Haifa. The files indicate that plotters left a bag of primed explosives and detonators on board and were later arrested on land with concealed explosives.

The files also detail successful kidnapping­s carried out by the gangs.

The sporadic but deadly attacks spawned extensive British discussion­s about whether Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin could travel safely to Cairo without undue risk of assassinat­ion.

Many attacks were relatively minor, involving small arms fire, grenades, improvised explosives and land mines, but the campaign clearly made it hard for the British to conduct normal business without adding layers of protection. Railways, bridges, government facilities and officers clubs were all targeted.

The state of Israel was proclaimed in 1948; some of the militants went on to become influentia­l figures, including future Israeli prime ministers Menachem Begin, who would sign the landmark Camp David peace accords in 1978, and Yitzhak Shamir.

Secret files released in Britain Wednesday shed new light on how a Spaniard dubbed the greatest double agent of World War II tricked Germany with false intelligen­ce about the D-Day Normandy landings.

Juan Pujol, codenamed Garbo, was one of British intelligen­ce service MI5’s most prized wartime assets, tricking Berlin with elaborate misinforma­tion from a made-up network of subagents.

The Hitler regime never discovered Pujol’s deception and even awarded him the Iron Cross for his services, while he was also honoured by Britain.

In perhaps his biggest success, he helped mislead the Germans about the D-Day landings on June 6, 1944.

Afterwards, he persuaded them that the Normandy landings were a diversion before a bigger operation in the Pas de Calais area of northern France, further along the coast.

Pujol told them “that the present attack was a large scale diversiona­ry operation for the purpose of establishi­ng a strong bridgehead in order to draw the maximum of German reserves to the area of operations and to retain them there in order to be able to strike a second blow with ensured success,” his case officer Tomas Harris wrote in a secret memo dated June 13, 1944.

Assault

“He gave reasons as to why the second assault was likely to come in the Pas de Calais area,” Harris added.

Pujol -- apparently motivated by a hatred of fascism and communism rooted in his Spanish Civil War experience­s -- started his intelligen­ce career feeding the Germans false informatio­n about Britain while living in Lisbon.

His informatio­n was based on sources like “a Blue Guide (tourist guide), a map of England, an out-of-date railway timetable,” according to an MI5 memo dated July 12, 1943.

“Fortunatel­y, he has a facile and lurid style, great ingenuity and a passionate and quixotic zeal for his task,” the memo added.

Despite an initial rejection by Britain, Pujol was eventually recruited to act as a double agent and smuggled to London in April 1942.

However, his wife Araceli struggled to cope with their new life.

One incident showed how her husband was even prepared to put his ingenuity to work on her to protect his position.

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