Los Angeles Times

Ex-officials in Israel call Trump leak troubling

Former spy chief fears ‘a loss of faith between intelligen­ce services.’ The crisis threatens to overshadow the president’s visit.

- By Joshua Mitnick Mitnick is a special correspond­ent.

TEL AVIV — Former Israeli intelligen­ce officials expressed grave concern over reports President Trump divulged secrets to the Russians provided by Israel, breaking with the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, which in the wake of the revelation sought to portray the bilateral ties as business as usual.

Amid questions over the leak, Israeli newspaper Haaretz on Wednesday reported that Trump spoke with Netanyahu by phone. It further stoked speculatio­n about Israel’s involvemen­t in the controvers­y.

“What Trump did is liable to cause heavy damage to Israel’s security, as well as the source, and U.S. security,” Danny Yatom, a former chief of the Mossad, Israel’s internatio­nal spy agency, said in an interview with a Tel Aviv radio station. “Especially if this informatio­n reaches our good friends the Iranians.”

Yatom said that if such shared intelligen­ce informatio­n isn’t guarded, the relations will be undermined.

“There will be a loss of faith between the intelligen­ce services,” he said.

Speaking to Israel Radio, Ofer Shelah, an opposition lawmaker who is a member of the parliament’s foreign affairs and defense committee, said intelligen­ce and security officials must exercise extra caution when dealing with Russia because of its direct involvemen­t in the Middle East and alliances with Israeli foes.

“From our point of view, there’s room for worry, regardless of this specific report,” he said.

In contrast, less than a week before Trump is scheduled to arrive in Israel for an official visit, Israeli government officials were either tight-lipped or hailing the relationsh­ip between the U.S. and Israel.

The uproar in the U.S. over Trump’s divulging of classified intelligen­ce to Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov about Islamic State threatened to overshadow Trump’s visit.

Trump is scheduled to arrive in Israel on Monday from Saudi Arabia and is slated to give a speech at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. He will also visit Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas in the West Bank and make private visits to holy sites in Jerusalem’s Old City before leaving for Italy the next day.

The visit has stirred expectatio­ns that Trump would unveil some sort of initiative to restart IsraeliPal­estinian peace talks while making a gesture recognizin­g Israeli sovereignt­y in Jerusalem — part of which is claimed by the Palestinia­ns as a capital of their future state.

Israeli government officials on Wednesday issued statements that bilateral intelligen­ce cooperatio­n would remain unaffected, while omitting any reference to the controvers­y.

“The security relationsh­ip between Israel & our greatest ally the United States, is deep, significan­t & unpreceden­ted in volume,” Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman tweeted Wednesday morning. “This is how it has been and how it will continue to be.”

Israeli government spokespeop­le and intelligen­ce experts recalled instances when Israeli politician­s had unwittingl­y divulged secrets in the course of public remarks, and said leaks of sensitive informatio­n are part of the risks of intelligen­ce sharing.

Netanyahu’s office confirmed that the two leaders had spoken for about 20 minutes on Tuesday, but would only say that the discussion dealt solely with the upcoming visit.

“Clearly, the last thing Netanyahu needs now, on the eve of a visit in which Trump is likely to saddle him with a new and ambitious initiative for peace with the Palestinia­ns, is an intelligen­ce crisis with the Americans,” wrote Amos Harel, a military columnist for Haaretz. “Even if Israel was harmed by Trump’s behavior, it won’t rush to make this public.”

Before Israel became a part of the controvers­y, Netanyahu was struggling with the fallout over U.S. comments regarding Trump’s campaign promise to move the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

After Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told NBC’s “Meet the Press” on Sunday that the U.S. was still conferring with Israelis on whether moving the embassy would help the peace process or be “a distractio­n,” the prime minister’s office released multiple statements insisting that Netanyahu encouraged the president to move ahead.

Trump’s visit comes a week before a deadline for him to exercise a semiannual waiver to postpone action on a congressio­nal decision two decades ago calling for the relocation of the embassy to Jerusalem. Israeli right-wing politician­s have been hoping he won’t postpone the decision, and have attacked Netanyahu for not making a strong enough case.

After the flap over the secretary of State’s remarks, Israel’s Channel 2 television news reported that during preparatio­ns for Trump’s visit to the Western Wall in the Old City, a U.S. diplomat referred to the location — one of Judaism’s holiest sites — as part of the West Bank and not belonging to Israel.

The Old City was captured by Israel from Jordan in the 1967 Six-Day War. Although Israel annexed it along with all of Jordanian East Jerusalem, the Palestinia­ns and most of the internatio­nal community consider it part of the occupied West Bank.

“The expectatio­ns from Trump were for him to act as if he were an Israeli citizen,” said Ayelet Nahmias-Verbin, a lawmaker from the opposition Zionist Union party. “People on the right will let Trump get away with anything as long as he acts as if the only interest that he has is Israel. And as we all know, the situation in the region is more complex than that.”

‘What Trump did is liable to cause heavy damage to Israel’s security, as well as the source, and U.S. security. Especially if this informatio­n reaches ... the Iranians.’ — Danny Yatom, former chief of the Mossad spy agency

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