Five Israelis were seen filming as
jet liners ploughed into the Twin Towers on September
11, 2001 ...
THERE was ruin and terror in
Manhattan, but, over the Hudson River in New Jersey, a
handful of men were dancing. As the World Trade Centre
burned and crumpled, the five men celebrated and filmed
the worst atrocity ever committed on American soil as it
played out before their eyes.
Who do you think they were? Palestinians? Saudis?
Iraqis, even? Al-Qaeda, surely? Wrong on all counts.
They were Israelis – and at least two of them were
Israeli intelligence agents, working for Mossad, the
equivalent of MI6 or the CIA.
Their discovery and arrest that morning is a matter
of indisputable fact. To those who have investigated
just what the Israelis were up to that day, the case
raises one dreadful possibility: that Israeli
intelligence had been shadowing the al-Qaeda hijackers
as they moved from the Middle East through Europe and
into America where they trained as pilots and prepared
to suicide-bomb the symbolic heart of the United States.
And the motive? To bind America in blood and mutual
suffering to the Israeli cause.
After the attacks on New York and Washington, the
former Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, was
asked what the terrorist strikes would mean for
US-Israeli relations. He said: “It’s very good.” Then he
corrected himself, adding: “Well, it’s not good, but it
will generate immediate sympathy [for Israel from
Americans].”
If Israel’s closest ally felt the collective pain of
mass civilian deaths at the hands of terrorists, then
Israel would have an unbreakable bond with the world’s
only hyperpower and an effective free hand in dealing
with the Palestinian terrorists who had been murdering
its innocent civilians as the second intifada dragged on
throughout 2001.
It’s not surprising that the New Jersey housewife who
first spotted the five Israelis and their white van
wants to preserve her anonymity. She’s insisted that she
only be identified as Maria. A neighbour in her
apartment building had called her just after the first
strike on the Twin Towers. Maria grabbed a pair of
binoculars and, like millions across the world, she
watched the horror of the day unfold.
As she gazed at the burning towers, she noticed a
group of men kneeling on the roof of a white van in her
parking lot. Here’s her recollection: “They seemed to be
taking a movie. They were like happy, you know ... they
didn’t look shocked to me. I thought it was strange.”
Maria jotted down the van’s registration and called
the police. The FBI was alerted and soon there was a
statewide all points bulletin put out for the
apprehension of the van and its occupants. The cops
traced the number, establishing that it belonged to a
company called Urban Moving.
Police Chief John Schmidig said: “We got an alert to
be on the lookout for a white Chevrolet van with New
Jersey registration and writing on the side. Three
individuals were seen celebrating in Liberty State Park
after the impact. They said three people were jumping up
and down.”
By 4pm on the afternoon of September 11, the van was
spotted near New Jersey’s Giants stadium. A squad car
pulled it over and inside were five men in their 20s.
They were hustled out of the car with guns levelled at
their heads and handcuffed.
In the car was $4700 in cash, a couple of foreign
passports and a pair of box cutters – the concealed
Stanley Knife-type blades used by the 19 hijackers who’d
flown jetliners into the World Trade Centre and Pentagon
just hours before. There were also fresh pictures of the
men standing with the smouldering wreckage of the Twin
Towers in the background. One image showed a hand
flicking a lighter in front of the devastated buildings,
like a fan at a pop concert. The driver of the van then
told the arresting officers: “We are Israeli. We are not
your problem. Your problems are our problems. The
Palestinians are the problem.”
His name was Sivan Kurzberg. The other four
passengers were Kurzberg’s brother Paul, Yaron Shmuel,
Oded Ellner and Omer Marmari. The men were dragged off
to prison and transferred out of the custody of the
FBI’s Criminal Division and into the hands of their
Foreign Counterintelligence Section – the bureau’s
anti-espionage squad.
A warrant was issued for a search of the Urban Moving
premises in Weehawken in New Jersey. Boxes of papers and
computers were removed. The FBI questioned the firm’s
Israeli owner, Dominik Otto Suter, but when agents
returned to re-interview him a few days later, he was
gone. An employee of Urban Moving said his co-workers
had laughed about the Manhattan attacks the day they
happened. “I was in tears,” the man said. “These guys
were joking and that bothered me. These guys were like,
‘Now America knows what we go through.’”
Vince Cannistraro, former chief of operations for
counter-terrorism with the CIA, says the red flag went
up among investigators when it was discovered that some
of the Israelis’ names were found in a search of the
national intelligence database. Cannistraro says many in
the US intelligence community believed that some of the
Israelis were working for Mossad and there was
speculation over whether Urban Moving had been “set up
or exploited for the purpose of launching an
intelligence operation against radical Islamists”.
This makes it clear that there was no suggestion
whatsoever from within American intelligence that the
Israelis were colluding with the 9/11 hijackers – simply
that the possibility remains that they knew the attacks
were going to happen, but effectively did nothing to
help stop them.
After the owner vanished, the offices of Urban Moving
looked as if they’d been closed down in a big hurry.
Mobile phones were littered about, the office phones
were still connected and the property of at least a
dozen clients were stacked up in the warehouse. The
owner had cleared out his family home in New Jersey and
returned to Israel.
Two weeks after their arrest, the Israelis were still
in detention, held on immigration charges. Then a judge
ruled that they should be deported. But the CIA
scuppered the deal and the five remained in custody for
another two months. Some went into solitary confinement,
all underwent two polygraph tests and at least one
underwent up to seven lie detector sessions before they
were eventually deported at the end of November 2001.
Paul Kurzberg refused to take a lie detector test for 10
weeks, but then failed it. His lawyer said he was
reluctant to take the test as he had once worked for
Israeli intelligence in another country.
Nevertheless, their lawyer, Ram Horvitz, dismissed
the allegations as “stupid and ridiculous”. Yet US
government sources still maintained that the Israelis
were collecting information on the fundraising
activities of groups like Hamas and Islamic Jihad. Mark
Regev, of the Israeli embassy in Washington, would have
none of that and he said the allegations were “simply
false”. The men themselves claimed they’d read about the
World Trade Centre attacks on the internet, couldn’t see
it from their office and went to the parking lot for a
better view. Their lawyers and the embassy say their
ghoulish and sinister celebrations as the Twin Towers
blazed and thousands died were due to youthful
foolishness.
The respected New York Jewish newspaper, The Forward,
reported in March 2002, however, that it had received a
briefing on the case of the five Israelis from a US
official who was regularly updated by law enforcement
agencies. This is what he told The Forward: “The
assessment was that Urban Moving Systems was a front for
the Mossad and operatives employed by it.” He added that
“the conclusion of the FBI was that they were spying on
local Arabs”, but the men were released because they
“did not know anything about 9/11”.
Back in Israel, several of the men discussed what
happened on an Israeli talk show. One of them made this
remarkable comment: “The fact of the matter is we are
coming from a country that experiences terror daily. Our
purpose was to document the event.” But how can you
document an event unless you know it is going to happen?
We are now deep in conspiracy theory territory. But
there is more than a little circumstantial evidence to
show that Mossad – whose motto is “By way of deception,
thou shalt do war” – was spying on Arab extremists in
the USA and may have known that September 11 was in the
offing, yet decided to withhold vital information from
their American counterparts which could have prevented
the terror attacks.
Following September 11, 2001, more than 60 Israelis
were taken into custody under the Patriot Act and
immigration laws. One highly placed investigator told
Carl Cameron of Fox News that there were “tie-ins”
between the Israelis and September 11; the hint was
clearly that they’d gathered intelligence on the planned
attacks but kept it to themselves.
The Fox News source refused to give details, saying:
“Evidence linking these Israelis to 9/11 is classified.
I cannot tell you about evidence that has been gathered.
It’s classified information.” Fox News is not noted for
its condemnation of Israel; it’s a ruggedly patriotic
news channel owned by Rupert Murdoch and was President
Bush’s main cheerleader in the war on terror and the
invasion of Iraq.
Another group of around 140 Israelis were detained
prior to September 11, 2001, in the USA as part of a
widespread investigation into a suspected espionage ring
run by Israel inside the USA. Government documents refer
to the spy ring as an “organised intelligence-gathering
operation” designed to “penetrate government
facilities”. Most of those arrested had served in the
Israeli armed forces – but military service is
compulsory in Israel. Nevertheless, a number had an
intelligence background.
The first glimmerings of an Israeli spying exercise
in the USA came to light in spring 2001, when the FBI
sent a warning to other federal agencies alerting them
to be wary of visitors calling themselves “Israeli art
students” and attempting to bypass security at federal
buildings in order to sell paintings. A Drug Enforcement
Administration (DEA) report suggested the Israeli calls
“may well be an organised intelligence-gathering
activity”. Law enforcement documents say that the
Israelis “targeted and penetrated military bases” as
well as the DEA, FBI and dozens of government
facilities, including secret offices and the unlisted
private homes of law enforcement and intelligence
personnel.
A number of Israelis questioned by the authorities
said they were students from Bezalel Academy of Art and
Design, but Pnina Calpen, a spokeswoman for the Israeli
school, did not recognise the names of any Israelis
mentioned as studying there in the past 10 years. A
federal report into the so-called art students said many
had served in intelligence and electronic signal
intercept units during their military service.
According to a 61-page report, drafted after an
investigation by the DEA and the US immigration service,
the Israelis were organised into cells of four to six
people. The significance of what the Israelis were doing
didn’t emerge until after September 11, 2001, when a
report by a French intelligence agency noted “according
to the FBI, Arab terrorists and suspected terror cells
lived in Phoenix, Arizona, as well as in Miami and
Hollywood, Florida, from December 2000 to April 2001 in
direct proximity to the Israeli spy cells”.
The report contended that Mossad agents were spying
on Mohammed Atta and Marwan al-Shehi, two of leaders of
the 9/11 hijack teams. The pair had settled in
Hollywood, Florida, along with three other hijackers,
after leaving Hamburg – where another Mossad team was
operating close by.
Hollywood in Florida is a town of just 25,000 souls.
The French intelligence report says the leader of the
Mossad cell in Florida rented apartments “right near the
apartment of Atta and al-Shehi”. More than a third of
the Israeli “art students” claimed residence in Florida.
Two other Israelis connected to the art ring showed up
in Fort Lauderdale. At one time, eight of the hijackers
lived just north of the town.
Put together, the facts do appear to indicate that
Israel knew that 9/11, or at least a large-scale terror
attack, was about to take place on American soil, but
did nothing to warn the USA. But that’s not quite true.
In August 2001, the Israelis handed over a list of
terrorist suspects – on it were the names of four of the
September 11 hijackers. Significantly, however, the
warning said the terrorists were planning an attack
“outside the United States”.
The Israeli embassy in Washington has dismissed
claims about the spying ring as “simply untrue”. The
same denials have been issued repeatedly by the five
Israelis seen high-fiving each other as the World Trade
Centre burned in front of them.
Their lawyer, Ram Horwitz, insisted his clients were
not intelligence officers. Irit Stoffer, the Israeli
foreign minister, said the allegations were “completely
untrue”. She said the men were arrested because of “visa
violations”, adding: “The FBI investigated those cases
because of 9/11.”
Jim Margolin, an FBI spokesman in New York, implied
that the public would never know the truth, saying: “If
we found evidence of unauthorised intelligence
operations that would be classified material.” Yet,
Israel has long been known, according to US
administration sources, for “conducting the most
aggressive espionage operations against the US of any US
ally”. Seventeen years ago, Jonathan Pollard, a civilian
working for the American Navy, was jailed for life for
passing secrets to Israel. At first, Israel claimed
Pollard was part of a rogue operation, but the
government later took responsibility for his work.
It has always been a long-accepted agreement among
allies – such as Britain and America or America and
Israel – that neither country will jail a “friendly spy”
nor shame the allied country for espionage. Chip Berlet,
a senior analyst at Boston’s Political Research
Associates and an expert in intelligence, says: “It’s a
backdoor agreement between allies that says that if one
of your spies gets caught and didn’t do too much harm,
he goes home. It goes on all the time. The official
reason is always visa violation.”
What we are left with, then, is fact sullied by
innuendo. Certainly, it seems, Israel was spying within
the borders of the United States and it is equally
certain that the targets were Islamic extremists
probably linked to September 11. But did Israel know in
advance that the Twin Towers would be hit and the world
plunged into a war without end; a war which would give
Israel the power to strike its enemies almost without
limit? That’s a conspiracy theory too far, perhaps. But
the unpleasant feeling that, in this age of spin and
secrets, we do not know the full and unadulterated truth
won’t go away. Maybe we can guess, but it’s for the
history books to discover and decide.
See
the international reaction to this story
02 November 2003