Israeli
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman
Yaffa Ben-Ari said it was
"nonsense"that the students
were spying on the United
States.
|
Tuesday, March 5, 2002
US
Deports Israelis amid warnings of
Espionage Activities Ted Bridis Associated Press
writer WASHINGTON (AP) - Authorities have
arrested and deported dozens of young
Israelis since early last year who
represented themselves as art students in
efforts to gain access to sensitive
federal office buildings and the homes of
government employees, U.S. officials
said. A draft report from the Drug
Enforcement Administration - which first
characterized the activities as suspicious
- said the youths' actions "may well be an
organized intelligence-gathering
activity." Immigration officials deported them for
visa violations; no criminal espionage
charges were filed. The
arrests, made in an unspecified number of
major U.S. cities from California to
Florida, came amid public warnings from
U.S. intelligence agencies about
suspicious behavior by people posing as
Israeli art students and "attempting to
bypass facility security and enter federal
buildings." The Israelis were arrested and deported
on charges of working in the United States
without authorization or overstaying
visits on tourist visas, said Russ
Bergeron, a spokesman for the
Immigration and Naturalization Service in
Washington. He described dozens of arrests
since early 2001 but gave no exact
figures. The DEA report said a majority of the
students questioned by U.S. investigators
acknowledged having served in military
intelligence, electronic signals
interception or explosive ordnance units
in the Israeli military. The DEA said one
person questioned was the son of a
two-star Israeli general, one had served
as the bodyguard to the head of the
Israeli Army and another served in a
Patriot missile unit. Israeli Foreign Ministry spokeswoman
Yaffa Ben-Ari said it was
"nonsense"that the students were spying on
the United States. Another Foreign Ministry spokeswoman,
Irit Stopper, confirmed that a few
Israelis posing as art students were
expelled from the United States for
working without permits. However they were
not accused of espionage, she said. She
did not say how many Israelis were
expelled and did not give any additional
details. The DEA report was first obtained by a
French Web site that specializes in
intelligence news, Intelligenceonline.com,
and confirmed Tuesday as authentic by DEA
spokeswoman Rogene Waite in
Washington. The Web site said 120 Israelis
had been arrested. "That these people are now traveling in
the U.S. selling art seems not to fit
their background," the report said. An FBI official, speaking on condition
of anonymity, noted there were no
espionage charges filed against any of the
individuals and that they had been
deported. Asked whether any spying
activity occurred, the official repeated
that no charges had been filed. A Justice Department official, also
asking not to be publicly identified,said
investigators have been aware of some
"alleged linkage" between the students and
alleged espionage activities in the United
States since early 2001, and said
authorities have made arrests in Dallas,
Chicago, San Diego and in south Florida.
INS spokesman Rodney Germain in
Miami said five or six people were
arrested in that area at least six months
ago on immigration counts. Although security experts at the DEA
first characterized the youths' behavior
as suspicious, and INS authorities later
arrested them, the FBI typically
investigates espionage cases in the United
States. The DEA report said that among U.S.
sites apparently targeted was Tinker Air
Force Base in Oklahoma City, home to the
military's AWACS surveillance planes and
the place where many of the nation's B-1
bombers are repaired. Investigators also
said that one female art student went to
the home of a worker for the Environmental
Protection Agency in Denver to sell
paintings and returned later to photograph
the house, according to the report. No one within the Justice Department
has expressed concerns about the Israeli
students possibly committing espionage,
Justice spokesman Bryan Sierra
said. The deputy U.S. attorney general,
Larry Thompson, declined to discuss
the arrests when asked about them during a
news conference Tuesday. The U.S. Office of the National
Counterintelligence Executive, a federal
agency, circulated a public warning in
March 2001 urging employees to report
contact with people describing themselves
as Israeli art students. "These individuals have been described
as aggressive," the warning said. "They
attempt to engage employees in
conversation rather than giving a sales
pitch." Cooperation with Israel, a longtime key
ally, is increasingly important in the
U.S. war on terrorism. -
Outlink: Were
Israelis warned not to go to the WTC on
9-11?
| Mike
Lilly has checked over the WTC death
lists so far available, and Israelis
are statistically under-represented
| A
hostile response | Tim
Baran suggests that the Israelis got in
to work too late?
-
Le Monde article in French: An
Israeli spy network has been
dismanteled in the United
States
-
Lawyer:
Detained Israelis Returned Home |
Aldo
de Pascale retails scuttlebut on
Israeli agents and the Golden Gate
| Israel's
fury at Fox TV's hints about Sept.11,
2001: first bubbles surface in outraged
JTA dispatch | Israel
dismisses report it didn't share WTC
attack data | Israeli
agents and the Golden Gate |
Flashback: The
Five Israeli "tourists" detained on
September 11 in New Jersey as suspected
conspirators | Carl
Cameron (Fox TV) Investigates role of
Israeli spies before Sept. 11: stunning
four-part serial | US
asked Israeli Detainees if They Were
Spies | What
did the Mossad know in advance about
September 11 (and not pass on to USA
allies?) | War on Terror: As
Israelis languish in U.S. jails, Jewish
activists wondering why | Israeli
"students" identified trying to get
into secure US buildings | Another
under-reported WTC mystery: Two
Israelis found with video footage of
Sears Tower
- Two
Mossad agents arrested in the Mexico
Congress Chamber with guns, explosives:
no word since then | El
Diario reported: Two arrested, one a
foreigner: Bomb in San Lázaro:
Were carrying attaché case with
explosives and grenades
|