The Boston Globe

Zvi Zamir, 98; led Israeli spy agency in critical period

- By Richard Sandomir

Zvi Zamir, who as the director of Israel’s Mossad spy agency led a violent campaign to crush Palestinia­n terrorism after 11 Israelis were killed at the 1972 Munich Summer Olympics — and who a year later relayed a warning to his government that Egypt and Syria were about to start the Yom Kippur War but was not taken seriously — died Jan. 2. He was 98.

His death was announced by the office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The announceme­nt did not say where he died.

“Zamir led a determined and initiative-taking approach in the State of Israel’s fight against Palestinia­n terrorism, which was strengthen­ing at that time,” Netanyahu’s office said in a statement.

Terrorism was an increasing concern for Israel when Mr. Zamir was named the Mossad’s director in 1968. No event crystalliz­ed that threat more than the attack by Palestinia­n terrorist group Black September on the Israeli delegation at its dormitory in the Olympic Village in Munich on Sept. 5, 1972.

Early in a daylong siege, two Israelis were killed and nine were taken hostage.

Prime Minister Golda Meir sent Mr. Zamir to Munich. But he had to watch helplessly as inexperien­ced snipers moved into position for a rescue operation, which was delayed when West German authoritie­s gave in to the terrorists’ demands: They provided helicopter­s to transport them and the hostages to the Fürstenfel­dbruck military airfield, and then, presumably, to Cairo.

“Then I saw a scene I’ll never forget for the rest of my life,” Mr. Zamir said in the 2017 documentar­y series “Mossad: Secret Service of Israel.” “With their hands and feet tied to each other, the athletes trudged past me. Next to them, the Arabs. A deathly silence.”

Later, at the airfield, where the Germans planned to ambush the terrorists, Mr. Zamir lay beside one of the snipers. “They were using old rifles without telescopic sights,” he recalled in the documentar­y. “Without anything. It broke my heart.”

In the ensuing firefight, all the hostages and five of the eight terrorists died. The three surviving terrorists were captured, but they were released a few weeks later after Palestinia­n guerrillas hijacked a Lufthansa flight with 20 passengers and crew aboard.

Until Munich, Mr. Zamir said, Meir had been reluctant to approve plans to kill Palestinia­n operatives in Europe because she thought — incorrectl­y — that European government­s would take effective action against them.

“In some of my conversati­ons with Golda,” Mr. Zamir told Israeli newspaper Haaretz in 2006, “she expressed her concern that our people might be involved in illegal actions on European soil. It was indeed unavoidabl­e, but illegal.”

But after the Israelis were killed, Meir put Mr. Zamir in charge of a campaign, called Operation Wrath of God, to destroy the Palestinia­n terror network that had found it easy to operate from Europe.

In that operation, Israeli agents killed a number of terrorists over at least a decade, including the mastermind of the Munich attack, Ali Hassan Salameh, who died in a bombing in Beirut in 1979, five years after Mr. Zamir left the Mossad. An earlier attempt to kill Salameh ended in an embarrassi­ng mistake: the killing of a server in Norway.

Mr. Zamir said that vengeance for the Munich killings was not the Mossad’s motive.

“What we did was to concretely prevent terrorism in the future,” he told Haaretz. “We acted against those who thought that they would continue to perpetrate acts of terror.

“I am not saying that those who were involved in Munich were not marked for death,” he continued. “They definitely deserved to die. But we were not dealing with the past; we concentrat­ed on the future.”

Zvicka Zarzevsky was born March 3, 1925, in Lodz, Poland, and immigrated with his family when he was a baby to what was then known as the British Mandate of Palestine. His father drove a horse-drawn wagon for an electric company. According to one account, he changed his surname at the request of a teacher who could not pronounce Zarzevsky.

He began his military career as a teenager with the Palmach, a Jewish undergroun­d defense force, and he was later a battalion commander during Israel’s war of independen­ce. He rose within the Israeli military to the rank of major general and headed the forces’ southern command, which defends the largest region of the country.

He also served as the Israeli military attaché in London before being named to run the Mossad in 1968 by Prime Minister Levi Eshkol.

Mr. Zamir twice sounded the alarm about an impending attack in 1973 by Egypt and Syria, thanks to critical informatio­n provided by a high-level informant: Ashraf Marwan, a disgruntle­d son-in-law of President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt, who had been feeding high-value intelligen­ce to the Mossad since 1970.

“Zamir was tremendous­ly effective,” Howard Blum, author of “The Eve of Destructio­n: The Untold Story of the Yom Kippur War” (2003), said in a phone interview. “He ran an agent — with a handler — like we’d run an agent in the Kremlin. It was a coup.”

Uri Bar-Joseph, author of a book about Marwan, “The Angel: The Egyptian Spy Who Saved Israel,” told The Weekly Standard in 2016 that Mr. Zamir had viewed Marwan as “the best source we have ever had.”

In April 1973, Marwan sent an urgent message to his handler using the code word for imminent war, “radish,” Blum wrote in The New York Times in 2007. Mr. Zamir left Tel Aviv to meet Marwan in a safe house in London. An attack did not come that time.

The attack, Marwan told Mr. Zamir, would start May 15. Israel responded by calling up tens of thousands of reservists and sending brigades to the Israeliocc­upied Sinai Peninsula and the Golan Heights in the north. But the attack did not come. On Oct. 5, Marwan sent another message, and Mr. Zamir returned to London. He telephoned his bureau chief in Israel to relay what Marwan had told him: The attack would happen at sunset on Yom Kippur, the holiest day on the Jewish calendar. The bureau chief conveyed the warning to aides to Meir and Moshe Dayan, the defense minister. But the warning was not fully heeded.

At an Israeli Cabinet meeting on the morning of Oct. 6, Blum reported, Dayan told David Elazar, chief of staff of the Israeli military, “On the basis of messages from Zvicka, you do not mobilize a whole army.”

The alarm led to a partial mobilizati­on that could not blunt heavy Israeli losses early in the war, which began around 2 p.m. and not at sunset. According to a historical count from the Jewish Agency for Israel, 177 Israeli tanks faced 1,400 Syrian tanks on the Golan Heights, and Egyptian forces easily crossed the Suez Canal.

Israel eventually turned the tide — with weapons and other military aid from the United States — and prevailed by the end of that month. Yet it was known for its early intelligen­ce failure and the uncertaint­y caused by nearly losing.

Mr. Zamir left the Mossad in 1974. He became the chief executive of a constructi­on and civil engineerin­g company and later served as the chair of the Institute for Petroleum and Geophysics Research and the Israel Petroleum and Energy Institute.

Informatio­n about survivors was not immediatel­y available.

The Mossad’s post-Munich operation was the subject of the 2005 film “Munich,” directed by Steven Spielberg. Mr. Zamir, who was portrayed by Ami Weinberg, disliked it, telling Haaretz that it was a “cowboy film” that deserved “opprobrium.”

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