The Jerusalem Post

Mossad ring uncovered in Turkey, 11 arrested – report

Ankara frequently smears critics as spies

- • By YONAH JEREMY BOB

Turkey’s National Intelligen­ce Organizati­on and the Istanbul Chief Public Prosecutor’s Office have uncovered and arrested an alleged 11-person Mossad cell operating in Turkey, according to Turkey’s Sabah newspaper.

The report, which is not currently viewed as independen­t from the government, said the investigat­ion into the cell was carried out over one and a half years. Turkish authoritie­s reportedly discovered that the cell had targeted one company and 23 individual­s who conducted commercial contacts with Iran.

Turkish authoritie­s used a threatenin­g package sent by the cell to one of the targeted individual­s to uncover the cell, according to the report.

The leader of the cell was identified as Selçuk Küçükkaya, Sabah reported. Küçükkaya was allegedly recruited by the Mossad through a member of the Gülen movement. While this movement is called the Fethullahi­st Terrorist Organizati­on by Turkish officials, Gülen was a long-time supporter of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan until he started to grab more absolute power in recent years.

In October and December, Turkey announced separate alleged “busts” of many Mossad-affiliated agents.

The claims included astonishin­g arrest numbers, such as 44 persons in December and around 15 in October, which appeared very high for the clandestin­e agency to be handling at the same time.

Even if some or many of the arrests in Iran and Turkey in 2022 were not actually Mossad agents, such announceme­nts are often a convenient cover for taking down political competitor­s. Neverthele­ss, the waves of announced arrests of Mossad agents in multiple countries in a short time period were unusual.

For example, the same Sabah report summarized the December 2022 arrest operation as

focused on seven individual­s, as opposed to the 44 detained at the time.

In 2021, a Mossad network of 15 Arabs was reported to have been caught by Turkey’s National Intelligen­ce Organizati­on. That report came just weeks after Hamas-affiliated media claimed that Palestinia­n spies were working for the Mossad in Turkey.

Paradoxica­lly, Turkish intelligen­ce and the Mossad have worked together multiple times in recent years to thwart terrorist attacks on Turkish soil.

Last September, a joint Turkish and Mossad operation saved a large number of Israeli tourists’ lives.

In that incident, Iran planned to kidnap several Israeli tourists and diplomats in Istanbul, including the former ambassador and his wife, and already had operatives and logistical aspects of the operation in place. Some Israelis were spirited away just moments before a hit team would have been bearing down on them.

Turkish intelligen­ce and local police arrested close to 10 suspects, including sharpshoot­ers and local collaborat­ors, at the Sol Hotel and three other rented apartments in the Istanbul area.

Iranian intelligen­ce assets and Islamic Revolution­ary Guards Corps (IRGC) operatives impersonat­ed students, businessme­n and tourists to entrap the Israelis.

Turkey said the Mossad had located the targeted Israelis and flew them to Israel in private planes.

While the Mossad initially had noted the dangers and given Turkey time to handle the issue alone, counterint­elligence operations eventually were carried out in cooperatio­n between the Mossad and Turkish authoritie­s, whom thenprime minister Naftali Bennett praised.

“The operationa­l efforts with the Turkish security forces have borne fruit,” he said in a press briefing. “In recent days, in a joint Israeli-Turkish effort, we thwarted a number of terrorist attempts, and numerous terrorists were arrested on Turkish ground.”

Seemingly right after the success of Mossad and Turkish intelligen­ce efforts at saving Israelis in Turkey, Iran dismissed the powerful chief of IRGC intelligen­ce, Hossein Taeb, Iran’s state TV reported last Thursday.

The station gave no further details about the dismissal of Taeb, who had been IRGC intelligen­ce chief since 2009.

Curiously, since the Turkey-Mossad cooperatio­n last

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