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Israel’s global death squads

Valar Dohaeris

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Israel’s Mossad spy agency has long had a reputation for brutality. Its agents have a history of travelling the world using stolen and fake passports of supposedly allied states, and kidnapping, torturing and murdering Israel’s enemies.

In 1972, for example, the Mossad murdered the Palestinian Marxist and novelist Ghassan Kanafani. A famed intellectual and author in the Arab world, Kanafani was also an activist with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP). An Israeli car bomb in Beirut blew him up along with his 17-year-old niece.

While most of its victims are Palestinians and other Arabs, in 1986 the Mossad drugged, kidnapped and interned the Israeli dissident and whistle-blower Mordechai Vanunu. A former nuclear technician, Vanunu exposed to the world Israel’s cache of nuclear weapons. He gave the evidence to the Sunday Times in London, which eventually printed the story. Unfortunately, he also passed the story to the Mirror, whose then owner, Robert Maxwell, had close ties to Israeli intelligence; the Israeli embassy in London was tipped-off about the story about to be published. Vanunu was enticed by a female Mossad agent “honey trap” to Rome, where he was kidnapped and whisked off to Israel. There, a kangaroo court sent him to jail for 18 years, 11 of them in solitary confinement. The oppressive Israeli regime still refuses to let him leave the country.

Kanafani and Vanunu are just two examples of what Mossad gets up to. There are many more. Last year, Israel’s global death squads went about their routine business as usual, the cold-blooded murder of Palestinian resistance fighters and unarmed activists alike.

In December, Mossad agents assassinated aviation engineer Muhammad Zouari in Tunisia. Zouari had headed the drone programme of the Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas, Palestine’s Islamic Resistance Movement.

Israel’s racist “defence” minister Avigdor Lieberman all but confirmed Mossad’s role in the murder, replying to a question about the killing during a US speaking engagement by saying that, “We will continue to do in the best possible way what we know how to do — that is to protect our interests.” Earlier this month, Tunisia’s President Beji Caid Essebsi confirmed that the government suspects Israel of being behind the murder.

Zouari was shot to death outside his home in Sfax on 15 December. Essebsi has faced popular protests in Tunisia against the murder, with talk that the government is not doing enough to investigate it or bring all the killers to justice. The murder reportedly involved guns fitted with silencers and the theft of incriminating CCTV footage (a lesson learned, perhaps, after the Mossad killers of Hamas commander Muhammad Al-Mabhouh were caught on camera in Dubai in 2010).

A recent article in Tel Aviv newspaper Haaretz boasted about how the murder was the latest in a line of such extra-judicial assassinations by Israel in recent years. The paper made the rather discreditable claim that Israel’s policy was “that strikes against terrorists are meant to thwart future attacks, not settle scores.”

In fact, such a claim is totally undermined by the killing of Omar Nayef Zayed, a former activist with the Marxist PFLP. He had not stepped foot in occupied Palestine for more than 25 years, but that did not prevent him from being found dead in the grounds of the Palestinian Authority’s embassy in Bulgaria in February last year.

His family stated at the time that Mossad had been responsible and his brother told the Ma’an news agency that they “threw him out of the embassy’s balcony, killing him.” Zayed had sought refuge in the building after Israel had suddenly sought to have him extradited from Bulgaria, after years of living there peacefully; he had been a visible part of the Palestinian diaspora community in the country for more than two decades. The back story is that Zayed escaped from an Israeli prison in 1990 after he had been accused in a military court in 1986 of the killing of an Israeli settler.

The PFLP accused the Mossad of murdering Zayed but also blamed “the Bulgarian government and security forces who pursued Comrade Nayef Zayed for arrest and imprisonment for over three months.” There was also talk of Palestinian Authority collusion. Zayed’s brother Hamza told PFLP publication Al-Hadaf that the PA ambassador in Sofia had told Zayed that they would kill him by poisoning his food and that a plane would be waiting to return him to Israel.

Israeli media at the time made unsubstantiated insinuations that Zayed had committed suicide. It was reported in Haaretz, for example, that perhaps he “fell from a high floor.” However, accordingto the American journalist Richard Silverstein, the murder was actually ordered as part of a personal vendetta by the new Mossad director, Yossi Cohen. Cohen was a European theatre chief for Mossad at the time of Zayed’s escape and was livid that he had “got away from Israeli justice under his watch.” Cohen assumed his new position in January 2016, only a month before Zayed was found dead. The Bulgarian authorities have now ordered a new investigation into his death.

Israel likes to project its image as that of a peace-loving democracy when, in reality, it is anything but. The murderous activities of the Mossad are testament to that fact.

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20170128-israels-global-death-squads/
 
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Not like we can say much.

Our intelligence agency is probably just as controversial.
You are wrong. Despite of the fact that our intelligence has not carried out extra judicial execution outside of the boundary, Mossad and its under activities are not called controversial by international media while there is a daily hue and cry about ISI.
 
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Former Dubai police chief Dahi Khalfan Tamim had claimed that (Former Israeli spy chief Meir Dagan) was forced to leave the agency after Mossad’s role in the assassination was uncovered by Dubai Police. Israeli media, too, speculated that Dagan had been forced to resign for that reason.

Under his leadership, the Mossad reportedly carried out covert attacks against Iranian nuclear scientists and unleashed cyber-attacks, including the Stuxnet virus that delayed the Iranian nuclear program.
http://gulfnews.com/news/mena/palestine/israeli-mastermind-of-dubai-assassination-dies-1.1692137
 
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2016_12_30-Israeli-forces-shoot-Palestinian-woman-at-Qalandia-checkpoint-17.jpg


Israel’s Mossad spy agency has long had a reputation for brutality. Its agents have a history of travelling the world using stolen and fake passports of supposedly allied states, and kidnapping, torturing and murdering Israel’s enemies.

In 1972, for example, the Mossad murdered the Palestinian Marxist and novelist Ghassan Kanafani. A famed intellectual and author in the Arab world, Kanafani was also an activist with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP). An Israeli car bomb in Beirut blew him up along with his 17-year-old niece.

While most of its victims are Palestinians and other Arabs, in 1986 the Mossad drugged, kidnapped and interned the Israeli dissident and whistle-blower Mordechai Vanunu. A former nuclear technician, Vanunu exposed to the world Israel’s cache of nuclear weapons. He gave the evidence to the Sunday Times in London, which eventually printed the story. Unfortunately, he also passed the story to the Mirror, whose then owner, Robert Maxwell, had close ties to Israeli intelligence; the Israeli embassy in London was tipped-off about the story about to be published. Vanunu was enticed by a female Mossad agent “honey trap” to Rome, where he was kidnapped and whisked off to Israel. There, a kangaroo court sent him to jail for 18 years, 11 of them in solitary confinement. The oppressive Israeli regime still refuses to let him leave the country.

Kanafani and Vanunu are just two examples of what Mossad gets up to. There are many more. Last year, Israel’s global death squads went about their routine business as usual, the cold-blooded murder of Palestinian resistance fighters and unarmed activists alike.

In December, Mossad agents assassinated aviation engineer Muhammad Zouari in Tunisia. Zouari had headed the drone programme of the Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas, Palestine’s Islamic Resistance Movement.

Israel’s racist “defence” minister Avigdor Lieberman all but confirmed Mossad’s role in the murder, replying to a question about the killing during a US speaking engagement by saying that, “We will continue to do in the best possible way what we know how to do — that is to protect our interests.” Earlier this month, Tunisia’s President Beji Caid Essebsi confirmed that the government suspects Israel of being behind the murder.

Zouari was shot to death outside his home in Sfax on 15 December. Essebsi has faced popular protests in Tunisia against the murder, with talk that the government is not doing enough to investigate it or bring all the killers to justice. The murder reportedly involved guns fitted with silencers and the theft of incriminating CCTV footage (a lesson learned, perhaps, after the Mossad killers of Hamas commander Muhammad Al-Mabhouh were caught on camera in Dubai in 2010).

A recent article in Tel Aviv newspaper Haaretz boasted about how the murder was the latest in a line of such extra-judicial assassinations by Israel in recent years. The paper made the rather discreditable claim that Israel’s policy was “that strikes against terrorists are meant to thwart future attacks, not settle scores.”

In fact, such a claim is totally undermined by the killing of Omar Nayef Zayed, a former activist with the Marxist PFLP. He had not stepped foot in occupied Palestine for more than 25 years, but that did not prevent him from being found dead in the grounds of the Palestinian Authority’s embassy in Bulgaria in February last year.

His family stated at the time that Mossad had been responsible and his brother told the Ma’an news agency that they “threw him out of the embassy’s balcony, killing him.” Zayed had sought refuge in the building after Israel had suddenly sought to have him extradited from Bulgaria, after years of living there peacefully; he had been a visible part of the Palestinian diaspora community in the country for more than two decades. The back story is that Zayed escaped from an Israeli prison in 1990 after he had been accused in a military court in 1986 of the killing of an Israeli settler.

The PFLP accused the Mossad of murdering Zayed but also blamed “the Bulgarian government and security forces who pursued Comrade Nayef Zayed for arrest and imprisonment for over three months.” There was also talk of Palestinian Authority collusion. Zayed’s brother Hamza told PFLP publication Al-Hadaf that the PA ambassador in Sofia had told Zayed that they would kill him by poisoning his food and that a plane would be waiting to return him to Israel.

Israeli media at the time made unsubstantiated insinuations that Zayed had committed suicide. It was reported in Haaretz, for example, that perhaps he “fell from a high floor.” However, accordingto the American journalist Richard Silverstein, the murder was actually ordered as part of a personal vendetta by the new Mossad director, Yossi Cohen. Cohen was a European theatre chief for Mossad at the time of Zayed’s escape and was livid that he had “got away from Israeli justice under his watch.” Cohen assumed his new position in January 2016, only a month before Zayed was found dead. The Bulgarian authorities have now ordered a new investigation into his death.

Israel likes to project its image as that of a peace-loving democracy when, in reality, it is anything but. The murderous activities of the Mossad are testament to that fact.

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20170128-israels-global-death-squads/
They did an assassination in Dubai also a couple of years back. UAE law enforcing agencies traced the killers dont know if they arrested anyone, but then it was hush hush. Do you have any idea what happened after that.
 
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You are wrong. Despite of the fact that our intelligence has not carried out extra judicial execution outside of the boundary, Mossad and its under activities are not called controversial by international media while there is a daily hue and cry about ISI.
I see a trend here, most people sitting outside Pakistan have a very myopic, hate filled negative view of Pakistan.

Even before looking at the flag, their rantings give them away.

They did an assassination in Dubai also a couple of years back. UAE law enforcing agencies traced the killers dont know if they arrested anyone, but then it was hush hush. Do you have any idea what happened after that.
What hush hush?
https://web.archive.org/web/20100220042257/http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1150754.html

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/8582518.stm
 
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I see a trend here, most people sitting outside Pakistan have a very myopic, hate filled negative view of Pakistan.

Even before looking at the flag, their rantings give them away.
I have scene the trend more profoundly on facebook. Most of the people who left Pakistan and settle abroad, than create facebook account ad social media pages and start ranting about how everything is wrong with Pakistan, its Islamic identity and its cultural values.
The very first bloggers (using the word because they are actually bloggers, blog name Let Us Build Pakistan and Roshni) who started systematic anti-state and anti-military propaganda machinery also consists of such peoples.
 
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They don't go around killing people at random.

Just because you don't hear about it as much doesn't mean it never happens. This is a common tactic for all agencies, Israel just does it more often and is more open about it.
 
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Well, Mossad 'hits' are anything but random. The targets of their strikes are never political and their methods are precise with little collateral damage. AFAIK Mossad doesn't sponsor bombing in civilian areas or targets foreign nationals in third-party countries. If they do that they're smart enough to not leave evidence of their involvement.

Most of the real issues in Israel worth examining for legality (settlements, jerusalem, military strikes, two state solution) are not the work of Mossad but IDF / law enforcement.
 
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They don't go around killing people at random.
Nor do Israelis do such deeds out of context. Kanafani was a member of the PFLP. At the time the PFLP was infamous for hijacking and bombing airliners. Kanafani was a leader and ideologist of the group. A month before the assassination PFLP allies from the Japanese Red Army attacked Lod airport, killing 28, and it seems Kanafani was their recruiter. So it is quite improper to label his targeting killing "murder"; he was an active terrorist commander responsible for the deaths of many, even if he never lifted a gun. Consequently he was a legitimate military target and had no "protected status", either as a civilian or a uniformed combatant.

In fact, such a claim is totally undermined by the killing of Omar Nayef Zayed, a former activist with the Marxist PFLP. He had not stepped foot in occupied Palestine for more than 25 years, but that did not prevent him from being found dead in the grounds of the Palestinian Authority’s embassy in Bulgaria in February last year./
"a former activist"!!! Try escaped convicted murderer.

The sister of an Israeli student who was murdered by Palestinian terrorists in Jerusalem’s Old City 30 years ago said the mysterious death of one of his killers marked the “closing of a circle” and “a happy day for me.”

Fugitive Palestinian terrorist Omar Nayef Zayed, 51, was found dying in the yard of the Palestinian Embassy in Sofia on Friday morning. Bulgarian radio reported that he had fallen from the fourth floor of the embassy. He died later in the hospital. Some Palestinian groups claimed Israel killed him, an accusation that Jerusalem denied.

In 1986 Zayed was convicted in the murder of yeshiva student Eliyahu Amedi — whom he stabbed to death in Jerusalem’s Old City — along with two other Palestinian assailants. He was sentenced to life in prison. Four years after beginning his sentence, Zayed began a hunger strike and was moved to a Bethlehem hospital facility, from which he escaped. He fled to Bulgaria in 1994 and married a local woman with whom he had three children. Israel had recently been seeking his extradition.

In an Israeli Channel 2 interview, Amedi’s sister, Yafah Pinhasi, said the death of Zayed marked the “closing of a circle,” and that she was pleased “there is one less murderer walking around free.” She said dryly that “it wasn’t the hand of God that threw him down” from a high floor of the embassy building, but did not speculate on who might have killed him.


Yafah Pinhasi, sister of Eliyahu Amedi. Amedi’s mother is behind her. (Channel 2 screenshot)

In an interview with the Hebrew Walla news-site, Pinhasi said, “It is a happy day for me, that the murderer of my brother has been eliminated.” She said she wouldn’t have wanted Zayed to go to jail, “where it’s like a health farm” for inmates. “I’m pleased that he was assassinated, and that his wife is a widow, with three children. Now it’s not only us who suffer, but her too… It’s sad that he was able to walk around freely all these years...”​
 
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The truth about the Mossad

The recent, outlandish assassination in Dubai may prove the most damaging yet in the Mossad's history of high-profile, bungled operations. How did it squander its reputation for ruthless brilliance?




The Mossad
, like other intelligence services, tends to attract attention only when something goes wrong, or when it boasts a spectacular success and wants to send a warning signal to its enemies. Last month's assassination of a senior Hamas official in Dubai, now at the centre of a white-hot diplomatic row between Israel and Britain, is a curious mixture of both.

With its cloned foreign passports, multiple disguises, state-of-the-art communications and the murder of alleged arms smuggler Mahmoud al-Mabhouh – one of the few elements of the plot that was not captured on the emirate's CCTV cameras – it is a riveting tale of professional chutzpah, violence and cold calculation. And with the Palestinian Islamist movement now vowing to take revenge, it seems grimly certain that it will bring more bloodshed in its wake.

The images from Dubai follow the biblical injunction (and the Mossad's old motto):"By way of deception thou shalt make war." The agency's job, its website explains more prosaically, is to "collect information, analyse intelligence and perform special covert operations beyond [Israel's] borders."

Founded in 1948 along with the new Jewish state, the Mossad largely stayed in the shadows in its early years. Yitzhak Shamir, a former Stern Gang terrorist and future prime minister, ran operations targeting German scientists who were helping Nasser's Egypt build rockets – foreshadowing later Israeli campaigns to disrupt Iraqi and (continuing) Iranian attempts to acquire nuclear and other weapons.

The Mossad's most celebrated exploits included the abduction of the fugitive Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann, who was later tried and hanged in Israel. Others were organising the defection of an Iraqi pilot who flew his MiG-21 to Israel, and support for Iraqi Kurdish rebels against Baghdad. Military secrets acquired by Elie Cohen, the infamous spy who penetrated the Syrian leadership, helped Israel conquer the Golan Heights in the 1967 Middle East war.

It was after that that the service's role expanded to fight the Palestinians, who had been galvanised under Yasser Arafat into resisting Israel in the newly occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. The 1970s saw the so-called "war of the spooks" with Mossad officers, operating under diplomatic cover abroad, recruiting and running informants in Fatah and other Palestinian groups. Baruch Cohen, an Arabic speaker on loan to the Mossad from the Shin Bet internal security service, was shot in a Madrid cafe by his own agent. Bassam Abu Sharif, of the Marxist Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, was badly disfigured by a Mossad parcel bomb sent to him in Beirut.

Steven Spielberg's 2006 film Munich helped mythologise the Mossad's hunt for the Black September terrorists who massacred 11 Israeli athletes at the 1972 Olympics. Eleven of them were eliminated in killings across Europe, culminating in the small Norwegian town of Lillehammer, where a Moroccan waiter was mistaken for Ali Hassan Salameh, the Munich plot's mastermind. Salameh was eventually killed by a car bomb in Beirut in 1979 – the sort of incident that made Lebanese and Palestinians sit up and notice last year's botched training episode in Tel Aviv.

Some details of the assassination of Mabhouh last month echo elements of the campaign against Black September – which ended with the catastrophic arrest of five Mossad agents. Sylvia Raphael, a South African-born Christian with a Jewish father, was sentenced to five years in a Norwegian prison (of which she served slightly over a year); she may have been among the young Europeans in Israel who were discreetly asked, in nondescript offices in Tel Aviv, if they wished to volunteer for sensitive work involving Israel's security. Other agents who had been exposed had to be recalled, safe houses abandoned, phone numbers changed and operational methods modified.

Over the years, the Mossad's image has been badly tarnished at home as well as abroad. It was blamed in part for failing to get wind of Egyptian-Syrian plans for the devastating attack that launched the 1973 Yom Kippur war. Critics wondered whether the spies had got their priorities right by focusing on hunting down Palestinian gunmen in the back alleys of European cities, when they should have been stealing secrets in Cairo and Damascus. The Mossad also played a significant, though still little-known, role in the covert supply of arms to Ayatollah Khomeini's Iran to help fight Saddam Hussein's Iraq, as part of the Iran-Contra scandal during Ronald Reagan's presidency.

It has, in addition, suffered occasional blows from its own disgruntled employees. In 1990, a Canadian-born former officer called Victor Ostrovsky blew the whistle on its internal organisation, training and methods, revealing codenames including "Kidon" (bayonet), the unit in charge of assassinations. An official smear campaign failed to stop Ostrovsky's book, so the agency kept quiet when another ostensibly inside account came out in 2007. It described the use of shortwave radios for sending encoded transmissions, operations in Iran for collecting soil samples, and joint operations with the CIA against Hezbollah.

But the worst own goal came in 1997, during Binyamin Netanyahu's first term as prime minister. Mossad agents tried but failed to assassinate Khaled Mash'al – the same Hamas leader who is now warning of retaliation for Mabhouh's murder – by injecting poison into his ear in Amman, Jordan. Using forged Canadian passports, they fled to the Israeli embassy, triggering outrage and a huge diplomatic crisis with Jordan. Danny Yatom, the then Mossad chief, was forced to quit. Ephraim Halevy, a quietly spoken former Londoner, was brought back from retirement to clear up the mess.

The Dubai assassination, however, may yet turn out to be far more damaging – not least because the political and diplomatic context has changed in the last decade. Israel's reputation has suffered an unprecedented battering, reaching a new low during last year's Operation Cast Lead in the Gaza Strip. "In the current climate, the traces left behind in Dubai are likely to lead to very serious harm to Israel's international standing," the former diplomat Alon Liel commented yesterday.

Even though Israel is maintaining its traditional policy of "ambiguity" about clandestine operations, refusing to confirm or deny any involvement in Dubai, nobody in the world seems to seriously question it. That includes almost all Israeli commentators, who are bound by the rules of military censorship in a small and talkative country where secrets are often quite widely known.

It would be surprising if a key part of this extraordinary story did not turn out to be the role played by Palestinians. It is still Mossad practice to recruit double agents, just as it was with the PLO back in the 1970s. News of the arrest in Damascus of another senior Hamas operative – though denied by Mash'al – seems to point in this direction. Two other Palestinians extradited from Jordan to Dubai are members of the Hamas armed wing, the Izzedine al-Qassam brigades, suggesting treachery may indeed have been involved. Previous assassinations have involved a Palestinian agent identifying the target.

Yossi Melman, the expert on intelligence for Israel's Haaretz newspaper, worries that, as before the 1973 war, the Israeli government may be getting it wrong by focusing on the wrong enemy – the Palestinians – instead of prioritising Iran and Hizbullah.

"The Mossad is not Murder Inc, like the Mafia; its goal is not to take vengeance on its enemies," he wrote this week. "'Special operations' like the assassination in Dubai – if this indeed was a Mossad operation – have always accounted for a relatively small proportion of its overall activity. Nevertheless, these are the operations that give the organisation its halo, its shining image. This is ultimately liable to blind its own ranks, cause them to become intoxicated by their own success, and thus divert their attention from their primary mission."

From an official Israeli point of view, the Mossad has an important job to do. Its reputation for ruthlessness and cunning remains a powerful asset, prompting what sometimes sounds like grudging admiration as well as loathing in the Arab world – where a predisposition for conspiracy theories boosts the effect of the disinformation and psychological warfare at which the Israelis are said to excel.

The government's official narrative, of course, is that Hamas is a terrorist organisation that pioneered horrific suicide bombings, fired thousands of rockets at Israeli civilian targets and – despite occasional signs of pragmatism or readiness for a temporary truce or prisoner swap – remains dedicated to the destruction of the Jewish state. It refuses to admit that its ever-expanding West Bank settlements remains a significant barrier to peace.

In western countries, including Britain, there was widespread anger at the 1,400 Palestinian casualties of the Gaza war. Barack Obama has declared the occupation "intolerable". Netanyahu heads the most rightwing coalition in Israel's history; his famous quip that the Middle East is a "tough neighbourhood" no longer seems to justify playing dirty.

Yet Israelis, and not just those on the right, worry that their very existence as an independent state is being de-legitimised. And, judging by the jobs section of the Mossad website, there are still plenty of opportunities for Israel's wannabe spies: challenging positions are available for researchers, analysts, security officers, codebreakers and other technical work. Speakers of Arabic and Persian are invited to apply to be intelligence officers.The work involves travel abroad and a "young and unconventional" environment.

It is a novelty of this episode that ordinary Israeli citizens are angry that their identities appear to have been stolen by their own government's secret servants – one reason why the Mossad chief Meir Dagan may find his days are numbered. But it is hard not to detect an undercurrent of popular admiration for the killers of Mabhouh. The day after the sensational CCTV images and passport photos were shown, the Israeli tennis champion Shahar Pe'er reached the quarter-finals of a major international competition in the emirate. "Another successful operation in Dubai," the Ynet website headlined its story.

Or Kashti, Haaretz's education correspondent, did not have his passport cloned, but he does bear a striking resemblance to the hit-squad member named as Kevin Daveron. "My mum rang and asked gently if I'd been abroad recently," he wrote. "Friends asked me why I hadn't brought back any cigarettes from the duty free shop in Dubai. I thought I sensed admiring glances in the street. 'Well done,' said an elderly woman who came up to me in the supermarket and clapped me the shoulder. 'You showed those Arabs.'"

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/feb/19/ian-black-mossad-dubai
 
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