Ex-Mossad Chief: “Turkey Drives the Americans Crazy — and Us, Too”
A former director of the Mossad, retired General Danny Yatom, reacts to David Ignatius’s column in The Washington Post
(reporting that Turkey gave Iran the names of 10 Mossad-run Iranian
spies) by saying the Turks committed a “despicable” and unprecedented
violation of international intelligence etiquette — and that will leave
Turkish intelligence with no friends at all.
Danny Yatom — speaking from Israel, in a telephone conference call
arranged by The Israel Project — said: “Assuming what’s in the Ignatius
column is accurate, then this was a despicable act by the Turks — by the
head of the MIT, the intelligence organization which is equivalent to
the CIA plus the FBI. The guy who heads MIT, Hakan Fidan, has very
strong power in Turkey. “Assuming the column is true, this is something unheard of. I don’t
remember, during the many, many years I served in the Israeli
intelligence apparatuses and as a close advisor to three prime ministers
and in the Israel Defense Forces… I don’t recall this phenomenon when
information was used by so-called friendly intelligence services [in
this way].“The Turks probably had this information [the name of Iranian
contacts] from the Mossad. Because the modus operandi is — usually in
such cases — when there are meetings between handlers and their agents —
let’s say Israel doing it on Turkish soil — then usually the Israelis
inform the Turkish MIT in order to avoid any misunderstandings. This is
to avoid any Turkish claim that Israel is breaching the laws of Turkey.“If this is true, then the fact that those 10 spies were burned by
purposely informing the Iranians is not only a despicable act — this is
an act that brings the Turkish intelligence organization to a position
where I assume no one will trust it. Not only did they get the
information from Israel … They breached all the rules of cooperation
between intelligence organizations.“If this is true, what was done by the head of the Turkish
intelligence organization — no doubt with the knowledge of his prime
minister [Recep] Erdogan — is something that I don’t recall from the
many years of my experience.“This is highly disturbing. We also receive information from friendly
intelligence organizations. And no one here or in the U.S. or elsewhere
would dare to use this information — received from, let’s say Israel —
in order to harm Israel.“Only one — the head of Turkey’s intelligence and the prime minister
of Turkey. … Knowing the Turks and knowing the reporter, David Ignatius,
I tend to believe him [and not any Turkish denials].“About two years ago, it was published — when Hakan Fidan was
nominated to head the MIT — that Ehud Barak’s view was that Fidan was
very close to the Iranians and had transferred sensitive information to
Iran.“We never ever thought he would do something unprecedented by
exposing Israeli agents to the Iranians — probably knowing them [the
names] because he got the information from Israel.[[[[[[“The relations between the two intelligence organizations [the Mossad
and Turkey's MIT], during my time as director of the Mossad [in 1996 to
1998] were excellent — and were excellent before and after that.]]]]] But
what happened caused us to distrust the Turks, and this is the main
reason why the relations are losing their intimacy and are
deteriorating.”Yatom said the Turks were, in a way, shooting themselves in the foot.
”They badly need cooperation with friendly intelligence apparatuses.
The Turks are highly worried about what’s going on in Syria. They are
against the Iranian military nuclear program. Of course they need to
cooperate with friendly [services] to fight terror in their own country —
Turkey.“Who now will trust them and cooperate with them? Who now will share sensitive information with them?“We will see a deterioration in intelligence relations between
Turkey’s MIT and all the parallel organizations in friendly countries to
Turkey. We will find the Turkish intelligence isolated from receiving
any sensitive information, probably for the foreseeable future.”Yatom also said: “We share a lot of information with the CIA,
[Britain's] MI6, [the German} BND and other friendly intelligence
apparatuses -- and we used to do it, until recently, with the Turks. Our
nations shared the same goals and aims: to fight terror, and to prevent
Iran from becoming a military nuclear state.
"If this is true, then what the intelligence apparatus of Turkey did
was ... to threaten the lives of those Iranians. And I don't what is
their fate. Maybe they were executed or will be executed.
"This is not only transferring the names to a democratic regime, but
it is transferering the names to a regime with no mercy. No doubt in my
mind. If this is true, they either have been executed or they will be
executed."
When asked whether the Syrian civil war has brought Turkey
and Israel closer together -- out of shared worries and interests,
considering that Syria is sandwiched between them -- Yatom said:
"Unfortunately it has not happened."Yatom added, "Erdogan is even annoying the United States by
purchasing ground-to-air missiles from a company in China which is
blamed [by the U.S.] for breaking an embargo by assisting Iran with its
missile and nuclear projects. I don’t think this is the first time
Erdogan makes the Americans crazy… And the same with us, so what can we
do?”For mutual benefits, Yatom suggested, efforts to get past the Israeli-Turkish problems are worth pursuing.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Erdogan exposed Mossad agents in Iran, Really!
Ignatius is trying to make his readers believe that while Barack
Obama is calling Erdogan his best friend, Erdogan is helping USrael’s
number one enemy, Iran. Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu just
confirmed my theory.“This is just a smear campaign. This is not true. It is dirty propaganda,” CNN quoted Davutoglu saying on October 17, 2013.David Ignatius has claimed that Turkey’s top spy, Dr. Hakan Fidan,
head of Turkish intelligence MIT played a major part in the exposer of
Mossad espionage network in Iran. On June 7, 2010, Israeli daily Haaretz
reported that the newly appointed head of MIT, Hakan Fidan, has ties
with IHH, the group which organized the Gaza flotilla. Hakan Fidan, as
Turkish envoy at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in 2009, had defended Iran’s right to carry on its civilian nuclear program.On Thursday, Turkish officials claimed that the Washington Post allegation was part of a broader effort to discredit Turkey’s top spymaster, Hakan Fidan.Under the smokescreen, Turkey-Israel has secret alliance to use every
mean to counter Iran’s growing influence in the region. Only last week,
Erdogan told his top government officials to avoid discussing
Turkey-Israel secret alliance in public.“Mr Erdogan’s Cairo visit took place in the midst of Israel’s
eight-day war on Gaza. Notwithstanding his habitual posturing over
Israel’s war crimes, the focal point of his speech at the Cairo
University was Syria. The fact remains that for the past 20 years,
Turkey, Israel and NATO have maintained a high level of military and
political cooperation against Iraq, Iran, Syria and the resistance
groups in Palestine and Lebanon. Furthermore, since April 2011, Mr
Erdogan’s government has been thoroughly complicit in NATO’s war crimes
in Syria,” said Cem Ertur, in A Zionist in disguise: Prime Minister Erdogan’s phony anti-Israel rhetoric, November 30, 2012.
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