Agents of Influence
By Robert Dreyfuss
01/20/07 "The
Nation" -- --
Did Ariel Sharon, the Prime Minister of Israel, run a
covert program with operatives in high-level US
government positions to influence the Bush
Administration's decision to go to war in Iraq? The FBI
wants to know.
That's the story behind the latest Washington spy
scandal, involving Israel, the American Israel Public
Affairs Committee (AIPAC) and a mid-level civilian
Pentagon employee allegedly caught red-handed trying to
deliver US secrets to the Israelis.
It's not a routine spy case. According to sources
familiar with the investigation, the FBI is looking at a
group of neoconservatives who have occupied senior posts
at the White House, the Pentagon and in Vice President
Cheney's office. It's not that they are supporters of
Israel--no crime there--but that some of them might be
conspirators in a clandestine operation launched by
Sharon's Likud Party. They make up the very network of
ideologues--from civilians at the Defense Department to
fellow travelers at right-wing think tanks--who have
been accused of pushing George W. Bush into war. The
point of the probe, sources believe, is not to examine
the push to war but rather to ascertain whether Sharon
recruited or helped place in office people who
knowingly, and secretly, worked with him to affect the
direction of US policy in the Middle East. The most
likely targets of the inquiry are Douglas Feith, Under
Secretary of Defense for Policy, and Harold Rhode of the
Pentagon's Offic!
e of Net Assessment.
It's an explosive inquiry and one that raises the most
sensitive hackles, since it involves the possibility
that US officials (most, but not all, Jews) are working
on Sharon's behalf. They include Feith and a handful of
other officials, including those in the inner circle of
his policy office who formed the core of the Office of
Special Plans (OSP). The probe faces stiff political
resistance. Yet it may have legs.
The investigation burst into the news in late August
when CBS News reported that the FBI had caught a Feith
staffer, later identified as Larry Franklin, trying to
deliver what turned out to be a classified draft of a
presidential memo on Iran to AIPAC and an Israeli
Embassy diplomat. Subsequent attention focused largely
on whether Franklin was a spy for Israel, but in fact he
is only a minor figure in a far more sweeping probe that
began two years ago.
What triggered the original investigation isn't known,
but it is known that it began at a critical moment, as
Feith and Rhode began assembling a team, which included
Franklin, to form the OSP. It's been widely reported
that the OSP manufactured exaggerated intelligence
reports on the threat from Iraq, but less reported is
the fact that the OSP also carried out unauthorized
operations. Several OSP officials--including Rhode,
Franklin and Michael Maloof, one of the two original
staffers of the forerunner to OSP, joined by Michael
Ledeen of the American Enterprise Institute (AEI)--took
part in a rogue Pentagon initiative, beginning in 2001
with unsavory wheeler-dealers in Rome and Paris, to
discuss regime change beyond Iraq, in Iran and Syria.
The CIA found out about the Rome meeting, and the agency
may have asked the FBI to start watching Feith, Rhode,
Ledeen, Franklin et al. Former CIA and Defense
intelligence officials familiar with the case stress
that the FBI is looking at!
an operation run by the Israeli prime minister, not by
the Mossad, Israel's intelligence agency, and that the
investigation is based solely on concerns about foreign
influence. "It's about Sharon," says a former senior CIA
operations officer. "This has nothing to do with
anti-Semitism."
Some familiar with the case suggest that the FBI's
investigation is looking back as far as 1996, when Feith,
Richard Perle, Feith's boss at the Pentagon in the 1980s
and until recently chairman of the Pentagon's Defense
Policy Board, and David Wurmser, a co-founder of OSP who
is now Cheney's Middle East adviser, wrote a radical
memo, called "A Clean Break," to incoming Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calling for confrontation
with Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and the PLO.
Since the investigation came to light, Sharon's closest
allies have led an effort to derail it. Screaming the
loudest is Marc Zell, Feith's former law partner, who is
now an attorney in Israel tied to the Likud's right wing
and to the settler movement. "It's a cheap shot by
certain people inside the government to embarrass Doug
and the Pentagon leadership," Zell told the Philadelphia
Inquirer. "Certain elements inside the military and
intelligence communities are unhappy with the policy
decisions of people in the upper echelon and attempt,
sometimes in a very crude way, to embarrass them." News
of the investigation stunned AIPAC, the Jewish Institute
for National Security Affairs, AEI and others in Likud's
Washington circuit. And, of course, AIPAC's friends in
Congress are hopping mad. Ha'aretz, the Israeli daily,
said that news of the inquiry landed like the
"diplomatic equivalent of an unexploded cluster bomb."
Perle is demanding that the White House clamp down on
the investigators, according to the Boston Globe. "It's
pretty nasty, and unfortunately the Administration
doesn't seem to have it under control," the Globe quotes
Perle as saying. But according to the Financial Times,
the White House is quietly doing just that: The London
daily reports that the White House is pressuring the FBI
and the Justice Department not to issue indictments in
the case.
Other voices are also being heard. Democratic
Representative John Conyers wrote to the chairman of the
House Judiciary Committee demanding an investigation
into "substantial and credible evidence that Pentagon
officials...have engaged in unauthorized covert
activities." Conyers specifically cited Feith. And the
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence is now deep into
phase two of its own probe, which includes examining the
work of the OSP; its report is expected after the
November election.
The FBI has an ace in the hole that may allow it to
resist White House pressure. "By now," says a retired
intelligence official, "the FBI has gathered up so much
material in grand jury records and things like that that
they are in a position to push back against pressure
from the Administration to back away from this. When
they get pressure, they leak to somebody. And the
potential of disclosure is a real threat to the
Administration." In addition, the counterintelligence
probe could spin off investigations in several possibly
related scandals, including the Ahmad Chalabi case and
the Valerie Plame leak, not to mention the Franklin
matter.
"They have no case," says AEI's Michael Ledeen. We'll
see.
Copyright © 2007 The Nation
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