National Post

Israeli diplomat became a folk hero

MASTERMIND OF OPERATION SOLOMON AIRLIFT OF ETHIOPIAN JEWS

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Uri Lubrani, who has died aged 91, was an experience­d Israeli diplomat and an adviser to a succession of prime ministers, beginning with David Ben- Gurion and ending with Benjamin Netanyahu.

As Israel’s head of mission in Tehran from 1973 to 1978, he foresaw the downfall of the Shah, with whom Israel had cultivated good relations, six months before the 1979 Islamic Revolution. But his warning was not heeded either by his colleagues in Israel or by the U. S. administra­tion in Washington, and this would haunt him for years.

Though the bulk of his work was behind the scenes, Lubrani became a folk hero in Israel because of his mastermind­ing in 1991 of Operation Solomon, when during the Ethiopian civil war 14,000 Ethiopian Jews were plucked to safety from Addis Ababa to Israel in the space of a single May weekend. Later that year he enhanced his reputation still further as the chief Israeli negotiator in a prisoner-hostage exchange brokered by the UN with pro-Iranian Lebanese Shiite undergroun­d groups.

An only “spoiled” child (as he often put it), Uriel Lubrani was born on Oct. 7, 1926 in Haifa, in what was then British Mandate Palestine, where his parents, Aaron and Rose Lubrani, had emigrated from Vienna two years earlier. His father was a veterinari­an who, in his spare time, ran a children’s theatre company. His mother and grandmothe­r ran a high-class guest house.

Haifa was a cosmopolit­an city at that time, teeming with Christian and Muslim Arabs, British soldiers, officers and their dependants, as well as Jews. Aaron Lubrani had many Arab friends and the young Uri soon picked up Arabic, developing an understand­ing of, and respect for, Arab culture. Many dignitarie­s passed through Haifa and visited the family guest house, among them King Abdullah of Jordan and the British officer Orde Wingate during his time as an intelligen­ce officer in Palestine.

Lubrani was educated at Hebrew Reali School of Haifa and from 1943 he served with the Jewish paramilita­ry Haganah, smuggling Jewish refugees from Europe into Palestine. In October 1947 he was sent by Haganah to southern France to help handle the wave of European immigratio­n which became known as Aliyah Bet. He then moved to Britain to study at University College, London, but Israel’s war of independen­ce intervened and in April 1948 he returned home to serve as an intelligen­ce officer in the Palmach, the Haganah’s elite fighting force, working in Galilee.

At the end of the war he was one of only two, out of 300 candidates, chosen for work in the foreign ministry of the new state of Israel. He began in 1950 in its Middle East department and a year later became personal secretary to Israel’s first foreign minister, Moshe Sharett, a position he held for three years before returning to Britain to complete his degree, graduating in 1956 in history and economics.

He was then appointed adviser on Arab affairs to Israel’s first prime minister David BenGurion and went on to alternate as part- time head of his private office until Ben- Gurion’s resignatio­n in January 1954. He stayed on as private secretary and political adviser to Ben- Gurion’s chosen successor Levi Eshkol, but resigned in 1964 during an ideologica­l clash between the pair. Lubrani had always regarded Ben- Gurion as his mentor.

Returning to the foreign ministry, Lubrani was appointed ambassador to Uganda, serving until 1967, when he was appointed ambassador to the Ethiopia of Emperor Haile Selassie.

During his time in Kampala, Lubrani survived an air crash with Idi Amin, who subsequent­ly declared the Israeli to be his “blood brother.” His acquaintan­ce with the eccentric Ugandan dictator meant that in 1976, when he was serving in Iran, he was brought in as an adviser during the rescue of hijacked air passengers at Entebbe. Lubrani handled the negotiatio­ns with Kenya, with whom Israel did not have diplomatic relations, to arrange for Israeli planes to land and refuel.

Meanwhile, his three- year stint in Addis Ababa laid the groundwork for his pivotal role in Operation Solomon, when, for six months, he handled on- off negotiatio­ns with agents of the Ethiopian president Mengistu Haile Mariam. In an interview shortly after the successful completion of the operation, Lubrani revealed that he had received informatio­n that the airport was in imminent danger of falling into the hands of the rebels. It was captured by anti-Mengistu forces the day after the last planes loaded with Ethiopian Jews took off.

After a short break from diplomacy in the early 1970s, in 1973 prime minister Golda Meir invited Lubrani to become head of mission in Tehran with the rank of ambassador, even though officially Iran and Israel did not have diplomatic ties.

He divined that the country was on the brink of revolution, later recalling: “I went down to the street and there I saw Iranian women demonstrat­ing against the Shah... the people were with Khomeini.” But his concerns were dismissed by Israel’s foreign minister, Moshe Dayan. As Iran was then Israel’s main oil supplier, he persisted, urging the Israeli government to prepare itself for the overthrow of the Shah. The government, however, preferred to trust the assurances of the CIA, which dismissed Lubrani’s concerns as a “hallucinat­ion.” Six months later, the Shah fled into exile.

Lubrani had left Tehran a few months earlier to go into business. In 1983, however, he was invited by Israel’s defence minister, Moshe Arens, to coordinate the country’s activities in Lebanon. Israel’s invasion of the year before led to the withdrawal of PLO and Syrian forces from Lebanon.

But al t hough Is r ael had launched its invasion as an ally of the Christian Maronites, Lubrani set about establishi­ng improved relations with other religious groupings in that country, including Shiites and Druze, and was instrument­al, in 1985, in organizing the withdrawal of Israel Defence Forces to a security zone in south Lebanon.

As well as his role in negotiatin­g the prisoner- hostage exchange of 1991, he was behind the ultimately unsuccessf­ul efforts to repatriate Ron Arad, an Israeli pilot lost over Lebanon in 1986 and subsequent­ly captured by Hezbollah. It is thought that Arad was killed during an escape attempt in 1988. Lubrani continued to coordinate Israel’s activities in Lebanon until its withdrawal from the country in 2000 under prime minister Ehud Barak.

Though he eventually retired in 2015, in his later years Lubrani became increasing­ly outspoken about threats to Israel’s security, including pressing the western powers to do more to bring about the overthrow of the revolution­ary regime in Tehran.

He also campaigned to persuade his fellow Israelis to do more to cultivate good relations with their Palestinia­n neighbours and the rest of the Arab world.

In an interview in 2011 he recalled a bus journey with his father: “An Arab woman got on, with two baskets. My father told me to stand up and give her my seat. The man sitting behind us butted in, asking why my father had told me to do that. My father said again, ‘Stand up and let her sit down. We’re going to be living with her for another 2,000 years together.’ That stuck in my head.”

AN ARAB WOMAN GOT ON (A BUS), WITH TWO BASKETS. MY FATHER TOLD ME TO STAND UP AND GIVE HER MY SEAT..... MY FATHER SAID, ‘WE’RE GOING TO BE LIVING WITH HER FOR ANOTHER 2,000 YEARS TOGETHER.’ THAT STUCK IN MY HEAD. — ISRAELI DIPLOMAT URI LUBRANI

 ?? DAVID RUBINGER / THE LIFE IMAGES COLLECTION / GETTY IMAGES ?? Diplomat Uri Lubrani , left, with Prime Minister Shimon Peres in 1986.
DAVID RUBINGER / THE LIFE IMAGES COLLECTION / GETTY IMAGES Diplomat Uri Lubrani , left, with Prime Minister Shimon Peres in 1986.

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