Posted on 05/21/2009 7:22:57 PM PDT by forkinsocket
In early September 1997, Danny Yatom, the head of Mossad, arranged a special screening for Binyamin Netanyahu, who was then prime minister. The film, shot on the streets of Tel Aviv, presented the plan for the assassination of Khalid Mishal, the head of Hamass political bureau in Amman. Twenty-one Israelis had died in Hamas suicide attacks in the previous two months, and Netanyahu was eager for revenge. The peace process might be undermined, but that would be just as well: Netanyahu shared Hamass hostility to Oslo, and had compared trading land for peace to appeasement with Hitler. Mishal, Paul McGeough writes in Kill Khalid, his gripping account of the plot, was selected from a list of targets by Netanyahu not only because he was suspected of orchestrating the suicide bomb campaign, but because he made an articulate case for Hamass position, in a suit rather than clerical robes: he was too credible as an emerging leader of Hamas, persuasive even. He had to be taken out.
It was an extremely sensitive operation. Israel had signed a peace treaty with King Hussein in 1994, and the murder of a Palestinian leader in Amman would be sure to fuel speculation that Mossad had got the green light, and perhaps some helpful tips, from Jordans General Intelligence Department (GID). This was no way to treat a friend at least not one you respected and the Israelis knew it. Unlike the flamboyant assassinations of the PFLP spokesman Ghassan Kanafani (killed in 1972 in a car bomb in Beirut) and Arafats top aide Khalil al-Wazir (gunned down in 1988 in his home in Tunis by Israeli commandos), Mishals murder had to be discreet and, if possible, invisible.
(Excerpt) Read more at lrb.co.uk ...
In early September 1997, Danny Yatom, the head of Mossad, arranged a special screening for Binyamin Netanyahu, who was then prime minister. The film, shot on the streets of Tel Aviv, presented the plan for the assassination of Khalid Mishal, the head of Hamas's political bureau in Amman. Twenty-one Israelis had died in Hamas suicide attacks in the previous two months... Mishal, Paul McGeough writes in Kill Khalid, his gripping account of the plot, was selected from a list of targets by Netanyahu not only because he was suspected of orchestrating the suicide bomb campaign, but because he made an articulate case for Hamas's position, in a suit rather than clerical robes... It was an extremely sensitive operation. Israel had signed a peace treaty with King Hussein in 1994, and the murder of a Palestinian leader in Amman would be sure to fuel speculation that Mossad had got the green light, and perhaps some helpful tips, from Jordanâs General Intelligence Department (GID)... Unlike the flamboyant assassinations of the PFLP spokesman Ghassan Kanafani (killed in 1972 in a car bomb in Beirut) and Arafat's top aide Khalil al-Wazir (gunned down in 1988 in his home in Tunis by Israeli commandos), Mishal's murder had to be discreet and, if possible, invisible.When you're at war with someone, you've got no complaint coming when they strike back. I piss on the memory of Khalid Mishal.
An extraordinarily biased account that is nevertheless informative.
- Killing the leader of a polity at war with you is a “murder” while killing Israeli civilian children is an “attack”.
- Exploring the Temple ruins under the Al-Asqa mosque is an outrage, while building said mosque on the ruins of the temple in Jerusalem is...
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