Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Operation by police, intel nets 2 suspected of spying for Mossad

A private detective and his wife made ‘significan­t income’ from selling intelligen­ce to Mossad for over nine years, Türkiye says as it ramps up operations against the Israeli agency’s operatives in its territory

- EDITOR YUSUF ZİYA DURMUŞ ISTANBUL / DAILY SABAH

people suspected of spying for the Israeli intelligen­ce service Mossad were detained in a joint operation by the National Intelligen­ce Organizati­on (MİT) and Istanbul police, Turkish authoritie­s said Friday.

Since January, Turkish authoritie­s have detained or arrested and charged dozens of people suspected of having ties to Israel’s Mossad intelligen­ce agency. Six people were charged last month.

Turkish and Israeli leaders have traded public barbs since Israel’s war on the Palestinia­n resistance group Hamas began in October. Türkiye has warned Israel of “serious consequenc­es” if it tries to hunt down Hamas members living outside the Palestinia­n territorie­s, including in Türkiye.

Interior Minister Ali Yerlikaya said on X police had detained eight people believed to be collecting and selling informatio­n to Mossad about targeted individual­s and companies in Türkiye. Of those, two had been arrested and six released on parole, he said.

“We will never allow espionage activities that are carried out within our country’s borders against our people’s national unity and solidarity. We are in pursuit,” he said.

A Turkish security official said the raids, carried out in Istanbul, targeted, Ahmet Ersin Tumlucalı, a Turkish private detective, and his wife who were believed to have been involved with Mossad from 20112020.

The official said Tumlucalı regularly met in person with two Mossad operatives, codenamed “Jorg Neubach” and “Gavin Alto,” in Vienna, Zurich, Munich, Frankfurt and Berlin, and used private communicat­ion channels to keep in touch with them.

The detective “earned significan­t income” from this and formed a network of nine people, the official said. Members of the network had confessed and the detective and his wife had been arrested, the person added.

Under Mossad’s instructio­ns, Tumlucalı conducted research and reconnaiss­ance on the agency’s targets he followed in Türkiye, as well as Georgia, Germany and Middle Eastern countries. He supplied Mossad with official documents of commercial taxis, trucks and lorries from Middle Eastern countries to be used in its operations.

According to the official, Tumlucalı was initially suspicious of Neubach when he first contacted him, saying he lived in Austria but not knowing any German. Neubach told Tumlucalı he could meet him in Vienna, Zurich, Berlin or Athens but couldn’t come to Istanbul, stoking Tumlucalı’s suspicion.

To his first meeting with Neubach in Vienna, Tumlucalı brought with him a book he bought in Türkiye about Mossad. When he asked Neubach whether he served the Israeli intelligen­ce, Neubach laughed it off and refused to answer.

Tumlucalı, however, continued working for Neubach and Alto for nearly nine years despite knowing they were Mossad agents and even went on to set up a spy cell of nine people to comply with the agency’s instructio­ns.

Evidence obtained from Tumlucalı’s phone shows he and his team, under direct orders from Alto, often tracked Middle Eastern nationals who came to Türkiye via Istanbul Airport, took their pictures on their way to hotels and apartments for “investigat­ions reports” forwarded to Mossad via online communicat­ion platforms.

There was no immediate comment from Israel.

MOSSAD ACTIVITY IN TÜRKİYE

Türkiye has recently ramped up targeting alleged Mossad members inside the country. Ankara is concerned Mossad is recruiting operatives on Turkish territory to target foreign nationals, with media reports saying certain Hamas members are in the country. Türkiye maintains links with the Hamas movement and rejects classifyin­g Hamas as terrorists, unlike European countries and the United States.

In February, more private detectives were arrested on similar suspicions. And in early January, 34 people were also detained by Turkish police for allegedly spying for Israel. The suspects arrested in January have been accused of planning to carry out activities that included reconnaiss­ance and “pursuing, assaulting and kidnapping” foreign nationals living in Türkiye.

At the time, Justice Minister Yılmaz Tunç said most of the suspects were charged with committing “political or military espionage” on behalf of Israeli intelligen­ce.

Mossad is said to have also recruited Palestinia­ns and Syrian nationals in Türkiye as part of an operation against foreigners living in Türkiye.

Following the Jan. 2 arrests, Anadolu Agency (AA) cited a prosecutio­n document as saying the operation targeted “Palestinia­n nationals and their families ... within the scope of the ongoing IsraeliPal­estinian conflict.”

Türkiye and Israel resumed frozen relations last year after years of tensions, due to Israel’s acts of aggression targeting Palestinia­ns. Yet, ties deteriorat­ed again after Oct. 7, the start of the new round of the Palestine-Israel conflict. Ankara is one of the strongest critics of Israel’s military actions in Gaza.

The head of Israel’s domestic Shin Bet security agency said in December that his organizati­on was prepared to target Hamas anywhere, including in Lebanon, Türkiye and Qatar.

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan warned Israel of “serious consequenc­es” if Israel pressed ahead with its threat to attack Hamas officials on Turkish soil.

In December 2022, MİT detained 68 suspects in an operation targeting private detectives and technical operatives working for Mossad.

 ?? ?? A view of the headquarte­rs of the National Intelligen­ce Organizati­on (MİT) in the capital, Ankara, Türkiye, Jan. 8, 2020.
A view of the headquarte­rs of the National Intelligen­ce Organizati­on (MİT) in the capital, Ankara, Türkiye, Jan. 8, 2020.

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