Los Angeles Times

Disclosure of bombing prompts debate in Israel

Raid on Syrian reactor in 2007 is now also seen in negative light.

- By Noga Tarnopolsk­y Tarnopolsk­y is a special correspond­ent.

JERUSALEM — It is the definition of old news: More than a decade after its air force destroyed a nuclear reactor in the middle of the Syrian desert, Israel on Wednesday finally acknowledg­ed that, yes, its airplanes had bombed “the Cube.”

Among the intriguing details to emerge is the code word Israeli pilots used to report back the successful completion of their mission: Arizona.

The bombing of the North Korean-built facility by Israel has been widely reported, with Israeli spokespeop­le repeating a rote “no comment” since September 2007 to maintain a policy of plausible deniabilit­y or ambiguity.

But its sudden declassifi­cation has unleashed loud regrets from former intelligen­ce officials and furious political recriminat­ions. The public also learned this week what had long been known in the Israel intelligen­ce community: that although the raid was successful, Israel failed for years to detect that the mysterious constructi­on in the Syrian desert was a nuclear reactor.

The story of the raid is nothing to gloat about, Yaakov Amidror, Israel’s former national security advisor and a retired major general, lamented on Israel’s Army Radio. At best “it is the story of a terrible intelligen­ce failure that ended well,” he said.

The Haaretz newspaper said the incident represente­d “a big intelligen­ce failure — the worst since the Yom Kippur War, according to a number of top intelligen­ce people — in which Israel somehow managed for years not to notice a reactor being built right under its nose, in a neighborin­g country on whose surveillan­ce Israel was spending vast amounts of money.”

It is the story of a “thunderous failure,” said Tamir Pardo, who led Israel’s vaunted intelligen­ce agency, Mossad, in 2007.

No reason was given for why Israel changed its policy of silence on the bombing, but memoirs by two prominent political rivals hint at a possible reason.

Former Prime Ministers Ehud Olmert and Ehud Barak, who respective­ly served as head of government and defense minister at the time of the raid, are releasing competing books this spring, arguing contradict­ory positions. Both books, following Israeli law, had to be approved by the military censor.

Barak describes Olmert, who ordered the bombing and whose book will be released Friday, as an alarmist, uncertain leader facing an existentia­l threat.

Olmert describes Barak as a formalisti­c, showboatin­g defense minister unwilling to take a firm yes or no position on launching a bombing even while claiming credit.

“If early copies of the two books are anything to go by, we’re in for another bloody round of Ehud vs. Ehud battles,” Haaretz said.

The squabbling led the current defense minister, Avigdor Lieberman, visiting Africa this week, to call reporters to say “the war over credit” for the raid and “the wave of mutual defamation” led him to regret he had ever approved the military censor’s decision to declassify.

“People have crossed every line and are simply freely releasing informatio­n, some of which could cause serious harm to Israel’s security,” Lieberman said.

The first Israeli to defy the blanket gag order on any reference to the raid, widely viewed as a success until the latest revelation­s, was thenopposi­tion leader and current Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who less than two weeks after the bombing announced on TV that he’d known about the operation in advance — a notion widely derided in Israel — and had even congratula­ted Olmert afterward.

“The ban was not only lifted for bureaucrat­ic reasons,” said Lt. Col. Peter Lerner, the army’s recently retired spokesman and one of the men who maintained Israel’s unwavering refusal to comment.

“Israel’s gag orders are truly about protecting matters of national security. In the case of destroying Syria’s nuclear reactor, there were security risks posed by the informatio­n getting out that the IDF [Israel Defense Forces] was behind it,” he wrote in an op-ed.

In a cautionary coda, a few hours after the declassifi­cation, the Institute for Science and Internatio­nal Security in Washington published a brief calling for the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency to inspect a site in Qusair, Syria, where, according to the German magazine Der Spiegel, Syria may be constructi­ng an undergroun­d nuclear reactor.

“The purpose of the site remains unknown,” the institute said, although “some imagery observatio­ns are consistent with Der Spiegel’s reporting.”

 ?? Israeli army ?? IMAGES provided by Israel reportedly show the bombing of a Syrian nuclear reactor in 2007. Israeli intelligen­ce for years had failed to detect its constructi­on.
Israeli army IMAGES provided by Israel reportedly show the bombing of a Syrian nuclear reactor in 2007. Israeli intelligen­ce for years had failed to detect its constructi­on.

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