http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/07/13/opinion/edblum.php

 


Who killed Ashraf Marwan? 
By Howard Blum

Friday, July 13, 2007 
LONDON: 

The billionaire's body tumbled over the railing of his apartment's fourth-floor 
balcony and landed hard on the London sidewalk. And like so much in the 
complicated life of Ashraf Marwan - a 62-year-old Egyptian who had been the 
most effective spy in the history of the Middle East - the mysterious 
circumstances of his death two weeks ago provoked further speculation.

As Scotland Yard investigates the suspicious fall, and as newspapers and 
bloggers throughout the world wonder whether any of several intelligence 
services played a role in his death, a debate continues over whether Marwan was 
a well-connected and resourceful Israeli spy or a brilliantly manipulative 
Egyptian double agent.

Marwan's death has also brought a new and chilling significance to a 
long-running legal battle in Israel involving the unauthorized leaking of his 
name to journalists. And in the aftermath of the discovery of his broken body 
on a sidewalk in the St. James neighborhood on June 27, I cannot help but 
wonder if I had a small part in the events that led to Ashraf Marwan's death.

Marwan's story - a tale overflowing with the suspense and ruthless duplicity of 
a spy novel - began to take shape in the spring of 1969.

He had come to London, ostensibly to consult a Harley Street doctor about a 
stomach ailment. He chose to be examined by a doctor whose offices had been 
used previously for a covert meeting between King Hussein of Jordan and the 
general director of the Israeli prime minister's office.

Along with his X-rays, Marwan handed the doctor a file crammed with official 
Egyptian state documents. He wanted them delivered to the Israeli Embassy in 
London.

The Mossad, the Israeli intelligence service, determined the documents to be 
genuine. Still, a rapidly formed working group of Mossad wise men debated the 
risk in dealing with a walk-in, a volunteer who shows up bearing gifts.

If he's not a double - an agent spreading disinformation - then he's 
uncontrollable. It was decided, however, that this walk-in's credentials were 
worth the gamble.

Marwan, the excited vetters discovered, was married to a daughter of Egypt's 
president, Gamal Abdel Nasser. He was also Nasser's liaison to the intelligence 
services. Not even 30, he was an intimate of the leaders who determined Egypt's 
future.

Three days after meeting with the doctor, Marwan was contacted by the Mossad as 
he walked through Harrods, the London department store.

His operational life as a spy began.

>From the start, Marwan delivered. He yielded so many top secret Egyptian 
>documents it was as if, as one Mossad agent put it, "we had someone sleeping 
>in Nasser's bed." Based on this trove of secrets, Israel developed what became 
>an article of faith for the nation's political and military leaders: "the 
>Concept." With biblical certainty, the Concept held that until 1) Egypt 
>possessed missiles and long-range bombers and 2) the Arab states united in a 
>genuine coalition, a new war with Israel would not take place.

Running the agent, who was given code names including "Angel," "Babylon" and 
most frequently "the In-Law," grew into a small industry. For face-to-face 
meetings with his handler and often the head of the Mossad, a safe house was 
purchased in London not far from the Dorchester Hotel. It was wired to record 
every conversation, every aside. A special team of clerks turned the tapes into 
transcripts for the prime minister, the army chief of staff and a handful of 
other top Israeli officials. Marwan received £50,000 at each meeting, but this 
was only a minor expense compared to the estimated $20 million spent over the 
first four years of Marwan's operational life.

Israel's leaders felt this was money well spent: They knew what their enemies 
were thinking.

Then in April 1973, the In-Law sent a flash message to his case agent using the 
word "radish." This was the code for an imminent war. Zvi Zamir, the head of 
the Mossad, rushed from Tel Aviv to the London safe house. The In-Law revealed 
that on May 15, Egypt and Syria would launch a surprise attack.

Israel called up tens of thousands of reservists and deployed additional 
brigades and support equipment in the Sinai and the north.

The alert dragged on for three months and cost $35 million.

But it was a false alarm. The In-Law had been wrong.

Six months later, on Oct. 5, 1973, the In-Law sent another flash message with 
the code word "radish." Zamir was awoken at 2:30 a.m. with the news. The next 
morning, he took the first El Al flight to London.

Syria was massing tanks and missiles in the north. Egypt was conducting 
military maneuvers near the Suez Canal. Russia had begun evacuating families 
from the region. Yet that afternoon General Eli Zeira, the head of Israeli 
military intelligence, announced at a staff meeting that a coordinated attack 
by Egypt and Syria was "low probability - even lower than low."

Just before midnight, London time, the In-Law appeared at the safe house. He 
spoke to Zamir for less than an hour and then left.

Zamir phoned an aide at 3:40 a.m. on the morning of Yom Kippur, the holiest day 
on the Jewish religious calendar. The Egyptians and Syrians, he said, will 
attack simultaneously on both fronts at sunset.

At an Israeli cabinet meeting that morning, the In-Law's warning was not 
considered persuasive. The last time he had promised war would break out, 
nothing happened except the expenditure of $35 million.

Moshe Dayan, the minister of defense, lectured the army chief of staff, "On the 
basis of messages from Zvika you do not mobilize a whole army."

Nevertheless, it was decided that at 4 p.m. - two hours before the In-Law said 
the attack would be launched - armored brigades would move into position along 
the Suez Canal. Until then, there would be only three tanks in position to hold 
off any invasion.

At 2 p.m., the Arab armies went to war. Egypt crossed the Suez Canal in the 
south and Syrian tanks charged from the north. Their armies overwhelmed the 
surprised and unprepared enemy. After three days of fighting, General Dayan 
worried openly about the "destruction of the third Temple," the state of 
Israel. Prime Minister Golda Meir was given a bottle of suicide pills; she 
preferred to die rather than witness the destruction of the Jewish state.

Israel's outnumbered forces fought back and recovered their key positions. 
After being rearmed by airlifts of weapons and supplies from the United States, 
they attacked. Before the month's end, Israel won the war.

Still, the Yom Kippur War was an Israeli intelligence disaster.

Decades later, the Mossad and military intelligence continued to argue over who 
was to blame. Zeira, who lost both his job as head of military intelligence and 
a good deal of his reputation, spent years sifting through the events leading 
up to the attacks.

He wondered: Who had spread the false Concept? Who had "cried wolf" in May 1973 
and persuaded Israel to call up its reserves? Who had been wrong about the time 
of the invasion? The answer, Zeira was certain, was that Israel had been 
deliberately and artfully misled.

>From the start, the In-Law had been a double agent. The Mossad formed a 
>special committee to examine the In-Law's role.

Its conclusion: Marwan was not a double.

But Zeira was unconvinced. He began to talk to journalists about his theory. I 
was one of those he spoke to. He never told me the spy's name, but he pointed 
me in a direction that made it easy - less than a half hour of searching the 
Internet - for me to deduce his identity. I used Marwan's name in a 2003 book 
about the Yom Kippur War.

Not long after its publication, Zvi Zamir called Zeira a "traitor" for 
divulging Marwan's identity. Zamir petitioned the attorney general for an 
investigation. But there was no official inquiry, and Zeira sued for slander. 
Last month, an Israeli Supreme Court justice ruled in arbitration that Zeira 
had in fact revealed Marwan's identity.

Now with his unexplained death, the many enigmas of Ashraf Marwan's complex 
life have grown even murkier. In Egypt, Gamal Mubarak, the president's son and 
possible successor, and Omar Suleiman, the head of the Egyptian intelligence 
service, attended Marwan's funeral. Sheik Mohammad Seyed Tantawi, Egypt's 
highest-ranking imam, led the prayers over the coffin, covered with an Egyptian 
flag.

On the following day, in response to reporters' questions, President Hosni 
Mubarak called Marwan "a patriot," according to Egypt's official Middle East 
News Agency. "He carried out patriotic acts which it is not yet time to 
reveal," the president added.

In Israel, an angry Zamir told the newspaper Haaretz, "I have no doubt that 
reports published about him in Israel caused his death." The former Mossad 
chief again called on the attorney general to indict Zeira.

In London, Marwan's sister was described as saying she saw him in good spirits 
only hours before his death. But another unidentified friend said Marwan, in 
declining health, lost his balance and fell.

And there were reports that he made many enemies through his activities in 
selling armaments. A coroner's inquest is expected to announce its findings in 
mid-August.

And now I am reminded of my last telephone conversation with Ashraf Marwan.

"Are you afraid?" I asked.

"Why should I be afraid?" he replied. "I was a soldier."

Marwan promised to reveal more about which country he was fighting for when we 
were to appear together on a news program in the United States. But two days 
before the taping, he called to tell me he would not speak in public until he 
had finished a book about the war.

I never heard from him again. Now Scotland Yard - and, I suspect, other 
agencies - is trying to find the manuscript he said was writing at the time of 
his death.

Howard Blum, a contributing editor at Vanity Fair, is the author of "The Eve of 
Destruction: The Untold Story of the Yom Kippur War."


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