Washington Report
on Middle East Affairs, May 2004, pages 13, 94
Special Report
Israel’s
Failed Assassination Attempt on U.S. Ambassador Documented
By Andrew
I. Killgore
Had Mossad, Israel’s secret
intelligence organization, succeeded, it would have been the perfect
crime—the crime of the century. The plan was breathtaking in concept: to
assassinate the American ambassador to Lebanon, in Lebanon, with American
weapons, intended for Israeli’s defense only. Everything about it would
point to Lebanon as the culprit.
But fate intervened, and things went
wrong. The tires on Ambassador John Gunther Dean’s limousine automatically
reinflated when they were shot out in 1979 (see November 2002Washington
Report, p. 15). The light tank shell simply bounced off the car’s armor.
And, horror of horrors, Lebanese intelligence had retrieved the empty shell
casing on which was written, “Made in the United States of America.”
Mossad’s specialty was dirty tricks,
even if (or perhaps because) it was not very good as an intelligence
organization. Its modus operandi had always been the same: pull off a
dirty trick but make it appear somebody else had done it. An early example
was the Lavon Affair, named for Pinhas Lavon, Israel’s minister of defense
back in 1953. This Mossad operation persuaded some Jewish men in Egypt to
burn U.S. Information Service libraries on the assumption that Egyptian
President Jamal Abdul Nasser would be blamed. But one of the incendiary
devices went off prematurely, and the young spies were caught. Some of them
were executed. This provoked a scandal in Israel, and in the ensuing
investigation it eventually turned out that Lavon’s signature authorizing
the operation had been forged at the behest of Prime Minister David
Ben-Gurion. A dirty trick within a dirty trick!
Then came the June 8, 1967 attack on
the USS Liberty, killing 34 Americans and wounding 171. Perpetrated
by the Israeli air force and navy, this was not a Mossad operation, but it
was suffused by the same spirit of stealth and trickery. During the
Arab-Israeli war of 1967, unmarked Israeli jets raked the all-but-unarmed
spy ship Liberty, steaming slowly off Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula, with
napalm and machine gunfire.
The Liberty was flying a
large American flag, and the ship’s designation, in English, was clearly
visible on a cloudless day. But Israel said it thought it was attacking an
Egyptian transport ship. Israel pleaded “a tragic accident” and still pleads
that miserable lie today.
Now, thanks to Ambassador John
Gunther Dean, the full taste of Mossad’s evil will be available at former
President Jimmy Carter’s Presidential Library in Atlanta, Georgia. A part of
the National Archives, the Carter Center will contain 42 files on Dean’s
service as ambassador to Lebanon. The overwhelming majority of the material
is unclassified and thus readily available to researchers, scholars and
journalists.
The Dean papers—which include
documents, messages, reports and telegrams—constitute hard evidence on the
stultifying influence of the Israeli lobby as Dean tried to get answers from
the Department of State on the Israeli assassination failure. Nobody was
willing to talk with him because the subject was just too “sensitive.”
The papers include documentation of
efforts by the Palestinians to help the U.S. with the American hostages in
Iran. They demonstrate that, unlike today, the United States administration
considered the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) “valid interlocutors”
in the search for a negotiated settlement of the Palestine-Israel conflict.
In fact, PLO leader Yasser Arafat and an assistant made a special visit to
Iran, where they succeeded in gaining the immediate freedom of several of
the American diplomatic hostages. Arafat performed a real favor for the
United States for which he never received any thanks—perhaps because, once
again, it would have been too “sensitive.”
By June 2004 all other papers in
Dean’s possession will be housed in the National Archives. Among the
information they will contain will be the role of certain congressmen with
respect to nuclear proliferation. Some of the American legislators struck
Dean as motivated more by fear of Pakistan obtaining “the Islamic bomb” than
they were by defending U.S. policy of preventing the proliferation of arms.
Andrew I. Killgore, a retired
foreign service officer and former U.S. ambassador to Qatar, is publisher of
the Washington Report.
http://www.wrmea.com/archives/May_2004/0405013.html
Washington Report on
Middle East Affairs, November 2002,
page 15
Special Report
American
Ambassador Recalls Israeli Assassination Attempt—With U.S. Weapons
By
Andrew I. Killgore
Just before John Gunther Dean was to
appear before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for his confirmation
hearing as American ambassador to Lebanon in 1978 he received an urgent
telephone call from the office of the secretary of state. “John,” the caller
said, “we have just noticed that your mother’s [maiden] name is Ashkenaczi. Does
this make a serious problem for you?”
“Absolutely not,” the near legendary
Dean replied, “my father was Jewish, too. I represent a secular America, so
that’s all there is to it.”
In a Sept. 6 talk in Washington, DC
before an audience made up mainly of retired American diplomats, Ambassador
Dean, as related to the Washington Report by one of those in attendance,
described his three turbulent years (1978-1981) in Beirut. There he did his
courageous best to implement stated American policy goals in Lebanon:
maintaining its territorial integrity, unity and sovereignty. For his pains,
Israel tried but failed to assassinate him and his family.
In a period of brutal civil war amid
more than a dozen political/religious factions Dean, who already had held
ambassadorships in Cambodia and Denmark, traveled from one end of the country to
the other, calling personally on the leaders of every group. Israel, meanwhile,
maintained a rump state in southern Lebanon under Lebanese mercenary Maj. Saad
Haddad while encouraging unrealistic dreams of a small Christian “Maronistan”
state. As U.S. ambassador, John Gunther Dean, renowned for his physical and
moral courage, opposed Israeli machinations, arguing that close ties to Israel
would harm Christian interests in the long run.
Ambassador Dean, who does not speak
Arabic, conducted his relations with Lebanese officials in French, then the
second language of educated Lebanese. He believed, moreover, that he could not
properly operate in the country without maintaining close relations with France
and the French Embassy. In a perhaps uniquely rare role for any U.S. ambassador,
while serving in Lebanon Dean had co-signing authority with President Elias
Sarkis on Lebanon’s hundreds of millions of dollars deposited in Swiss banks.
John Gunther Dean sought and obtained
authorization to deal with the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) if it was
deemed to be in America’s “national security interests.” When an “interlocutor”
in Washington wondered if the Palestinians could help release American
diplomatic hostages being held in Tehran, Dean sought—and received—Palestinian
help. PLO leader Yasser Arafat and his aide Abu Jihad themselves went to Tehran
in 1979 and secured the release of 13 Americans. Never, Dean noted, did the two
receive any thanks from Washington for their efforts.
Anyone who gets between the
U.S. president and the prime minister of Israel “finds himself in trouble.”
Ambassador Dean’s diligence in knowing
everybody paid off in an astonishing incident when the ambassador of Saudi
Arabia to Lebanon was shot. As the intermediary in transferring the ambassador
to the American University of Beirut (AUB) Hospital for treatment, John Dean
reached the secretary to King Fahd of Saudi Arabia, as well as Yasser Arafat,
who was able to stop the firing on the hospital occasioned by the Saudi
ambassador’s presence there.
In a prescient reference to his role in
Lebanon, Dean reportedly remarked that anyone who gets between the president of
the United States and the prime minister of Israel “finds himself in trouble.”
An amusing anecdote: Riding in his
armored limousine in Beirut with ardently pro-Israel Congressman Steve Solarz, a
bullet hit the car. “What’s that?” Solarz asked. “Just a bullet,” Dean replied,
“but don’t worry. We are armored.” Solarz insisted on returning to the American
Embassy, where he cabled home, “Arafat shot at me!”
To stress his support for the
sovereignty of Lebanon Dean always cabled protests to Tel Aviv and the State
Department in Washington whenever Israeli planes intruded—as they frequently
did—into Lebanese airspace. These reminders irritated U.S. Ambassador to Israel
Sam Lewis, with whom Dean preserved cordial relations but who suffered to a
notable degree from what the U.S. Foreign Service calls “localitis” (not
Ambassador Dean’s term). Other irritants flowed from Dean’s urging Lebanese
Christian leader Bashir Gemayel to stop seeing Israeli Mossad officers.
Dean’s staunchly courageous defense of
Lebanese (and American) interests came to a head in the early evening of Aug.
27, 1980, when, according to all the evidence, Mossad tried but failed to
assassinate Dean, his wife (whose French family had old business connections in
Lebanon) and their daughter. The long-rumored attempted murder of Dean by Mossad,
infamously more noted for its prowess at assassinations than for its abilities
as an intelligence agency, was publicly confirmed for the first time in Dean’s
Washington talk.
En route from his residence in Lebanon’s
hills to the Beirut residence of the AUB president, Dean’s limousine and convoy
took 21 rifle bullets. The automobile bearing the ambassador and Mrs. Dean was
also struck by two light anti-tank weapons. The shot-out tires on the Deans’
bulletproof car automatically reinflated. The second car, however, carrying
their daughter and her fiancé, did not have bulletproof tires and was
momentarily stranded. The security guards in the convoy’s third car pushed the
daughter and her fiancé into the Deans’ vehicle, and they sped away. Incredibly,
none of the ambassador’s party or security guards were seriously wounded. Some
shots struck where Dean was sitting, but bulletproof plastic windows saved his
life.
Picked up by Lebanese security, the
anti-tank canisters had made-in-America markings. After unanswered telegrams to
the State Department and all but silent responses to his telephone inquiries,
Dean eventually learned that the anti-tank weapons were sold and shipped to
Israel in 1974. Dean apparently mused to himself on the irony of an American
ambassador being subjected to an Israeli assassination attempt with American
weapons supplied to Israel for defense.
The Facts Speak
The ambassador did not explicitly accuse
Israel of trying to assassinate him, but let the facts as he related them speak
for themselves. But Washington’s acute unease in responding to his inquiries
testifies to the deadening influence of the Israel lobby on American diplomacy.
On the assassination of Arafat’s
personal assistant, Abu Hassan, in early 1979, Ambassador Dean was told by the
Lebanese intelligence service that three Mossad officers, bearing Belgian and
Australian passports, had come to Beirut masquerading as tourists for the
purpose of killing Abu Hassan, whose greatest “drawback,” in Dean‘s opinion, was
that he was close to the Americans.
While Ambassador Dean did not commend
himself to Israel, he very much gained the respect and affection of Lebanon
which, on his departure form Beirut, awarded him its highest decoration. And out
of the turmoil of Lebanon he also kept the confidence of the United States,
which subsequently honored him with two additional ambassadorships, in Thailand
and India.
Andrew I. Killgore, a retired foreign
service officer and former U.S. ambassador to Qatar, is publisher of the
Washington Report.
http://www.wrmea.com/archives/november02/0211015.html
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