Sunday, September 29, 2013

What Can You Do, When It's an Iranian and a Jew?

From the NSP News Service:  Don't get the idea here that the NSP is Israel's supporter in any way, yet it is true that the sort of espionage described below can be very harmful, certainly when nuclear arms are in the picture. What grabs us at the NSP is the (not unusual) description of Israel as a "Jewish state." Let's remember that there are many people living in Israel who are not Jews, and have been subject to many prejudices and discrimination, not to mention outright unlawful imprisonment and/or execution. Furthermore, what entitles the Jews to their own "state." Do other religions/races have their own state -- with the possible exception of the Vatican City, which serves very different purposes than Israel? Let's work to bring about the eradication of the idea that Jews are specially entitled, anywhere and any time, to get whatever they please -- usually via some sort of underhanded dealings or extortion!

-- Karl Wolff III, Associate Director, NSP.  1488!

Israel says it caught Iranian spy with photos of U.S. embassy

This undated photograph released by Shin Bet, Israel's security service, purports to show Belgian-Iranian businessman Ali Mansouri, who entered Israel with a Belgian passport under the name Alex Mans.

JERUSALEM — Israel disclosed on Sunday the arrest of an Iranian-Belgian citizen on suspicion of spying for Iran, saying he had photographed the U.S. embassy and intended to establish business ties in the Jewish state as a cover for espionage.
Israel and Iran are bitter adversaries. Israel, widely believed to be the Middle East's only nuclear power, says Iran is covertly seeking to develop atomic weapons. Iran says it is enriching uranium solely for peaceful purposes.
Ali Mansouri, in his mid-50s, was arrested on September 11 at Tel Aviv's Ben-Gurion Airport, the Shin Bet intelligence service said in a statement. The disclosure coincides with the start of a visit by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to the United States where Iran's nuclear program will top his agenda.
 
 
The Shin Bet said the Iranian-born Mansouri had legally changed his name in Belgium to Alex Mans and used his Belgian passport to enter Israel. It said he was recruited as a spy by Iran's Revolutionary Guards and had visited Israel twice before his arrest.
Photographs which the Shin Bet said Mansouri had in his possession, and which it released along with the statement, included one taken of the rooftop of the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv from a nearby high-rise balcony.
The statement said Mansouri planned to establish commercial ties with Israeli businesses as a cover for intelligence-gathering and "terrorist activities".
The Shin Bet said Mansouri was being held under a court order and that he would be brought before a judge on Monday for a hearing on extending his period of detention. No formal charges have been announced.
Netanyahu was due to meet President Barack Obama on Monday and address the U.N. General Assembly the next day, to try to counter what the Israeli leader called "sweet talk" by Iran's new president, Hassan Rouhani, on reaching a pact with the West to settle the nuclear issue.


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