Thursday,
October 27, 2005
Israel spies clerical error in admission
Date: October 27
2005
Jerusalem: Israel has blamed a clerical error for a Government statement that appeared to admit that its
Mossad intelligence agency operated in New
Zealand last year.
The arrest in Auckland of two Israelis who confessed to trying to fraudulently obtain a New Zealand passport soured diplomatic ties. Israel apologised over the incident but made no comment on
Wellington’s charges that the men were spies.
Announcing talks yesterday between the Foreign Minister,
Silvan Shalom, and the New Zealand ambassador, Jan Henderson, an Israeli
Government statement noted that the meeting would be the first of its kind
“since the incident with the
Mossad”.
Asked if this constituted an official admission, a
Foreign Ministry spokesman, Mark Regev, said “incident with the Mossad” should have been in inverted commas to reflect that, as far as Israel was concerned, espionage was a New Zealand allegation.
“We have never said more than we have said in the case,” Mr
Regev said. “This issue has been solved in a satisfactory way with the New Zealand
Government.”
Uriel Kelman and Eli
Cara were arrested in March 2004 and pleaded guilty to assuming the identity of an Auckland man and trying to order a passport in his name. They were jailed for three months and deported.
Reuters
Website note: Israel also routinely denies conducting espionage operations against the United States.
.