Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Uncle Sam and Israeli Espionage

“It’s interesting, but not surprising to note that in all the word written about the assassination of John F. Kennedy, Israel’s intelligence agency, the Mossad, has never been mentioned, despite the obvious fact Mossad complicity is as plausible as any of other theories,” – US Congressman, Paul Findley, quoted in March 1992 issue of The Washington Report on Middle East Affairs.
“Mossad – a wildcard, ruthless and cunning. Has capacity to target US forces and make it look like a Palestinian/Arab act,” – US School of Advanced Military Studies (SAMS) paper quoted in The Washington Times, September 10, 2001. Same day, Donald Rumsfeld announced that US$2.3 trillion had gone missing at the Pentagon, whose Comptroller was Rabbi Dov Zakheim, a dual nationality Israeli-American and a committed Zionist.
“By Way of Deception, thou shalt do War,” – Mossad Motto
American Jewish couple, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, were both executed on June 19, 1953 – after having being found guilty of espionage and passing of nuclear information on US bombs to USSR.
However, the most notable American-Jew spies, is Jonathan Pollard, who is currently serving life sentence in an Amercan prison after being convicted on charges of spying for Zionist Israel and stealing over one million classified documents, in 1986. All Zionist regimes since then have tried to get him released and made him Israeli citizen in 1998. He is considered an Israeli hero.
There is long history of Israeli espionage in the US – whose taxpayers’ have donated more than US$3,000 billion so far to the Zionist regime. During Bill Clinton’s presidency, Monica Lewinsky affair and the recent one is Ben-Ami Kadish, who was arrested for delivering classified information on nuclear weapon to Israeli consulate in New York.
Andrew I. Killgore in his October 4 article, Israeli Spying on the United States, wrote:
“Steve Rosen, former foreign policy director of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), and Keith Weissman, AIPAC’s former Iran specialist, were indicted three years ago, on Aug. 4, 2005.
There is a long pattern of Israeli espionage against the United States. Except for Pollard, however, prosecutions have been rare. Nearly all similar cases have been settled generously for Israel by “diplomatic” or “political” means. But in the Rosen and Weissman case the security and intelligence components of the U.S. government seem, so far, to be determined for a showdown.

No comments:

Post a Comment