Saturday, November 22, 2008

20 days of absence !!! but we will continue


This time we will say what really happened, we were forced to stop blogging, Why?!!!

You have to ask Israeli security officials and we wont say more...

Despite all attempts to mute our voice we will blog and say all what we know.

Dear Readers

We are back...but this time we wont stop..

Stay tuned more is to come


Ehud Haran

Sunday, November 2, 2008

PM spokesman: We don't comment on accusations about Mossad

A spokesman for Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said Sunday he would not comment on Arab media reports that Lebanon has arrested two leaders of a Mossad spy ring active in Lebanon since the 1980s.
"Every couple of weeks there is someone, somewhere accusing the Mossad of something. As a rule, we don't comment on all these accusations," said Mark Regev.
"If we started commenting, we'd never finish. There are always accusations and it's not our policy to comment on [them]," he said.

A Mossad spy ring which has been active in Lebanon since the 1980s has been uncovered by the Lebanese Army, and the leader and his associate arrested, the Lebanese newspaper A-Safir reported on Saturday.
According to the report, Lebanese security officials told the paper that the spies worked to pass information to the Mossad about a range of Lebanese activities, both through pictures of military and civilian installations, and through spoken contact.
The sources added that advanced communication equipment and cameras were captured with the two, whose names were not made public.
In a statement released by the the Lebanese army and quoted in the report, both members of the spy ring confessed to gathering information about politicians and their parties.
The paper also reported that in addition to collecting information about Lebanese activities, the spies noted Syrian activities in the country.
Many people have previously been arrested in Lebanon on suspicion of spying for Israel. Lebanon considers itself at war with Israel and bans its citizens from having any contact with the Jewish state.

The army did not name the parties or politicians but said the two were captured in the eastern Bekaa Valley bordering Syria and where Hizbullah is known to be active.
Many officials pass through the eastern Bekaa Valley on their way to Syria.
A Hizbullah official refused to comment on the army statement.
Hizbullah's top military commander Imad Mughniyeh was killed in a car bomb in the Syrian capital of Damascus in February. Hizbullah leader Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah blamed Israel for the attack and promised to take revenge.
In June, a Lebanese court indicted a retired Lebanese police officer and a Palestinian for allegedly working with Israeli intelligence to assassinate Jihad Jibril, the son of the leader of Syria-based Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command. Jibril was killed in a 2002 bombing in Beirut.
The retired Lebanese police officer, Mahmoud Kassem Rafeh, is facing death sentences in two other cases including a 2003 explosion in Beirut that killed Hizbullah official Ali Hussein Saleh.
In 2006, the Lebanese army arrested Rafeh, 60, on suspicion of killing two Lebanese brothers who were members of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad group.
In 2004, a Tu nisian woman of Palestinian origin and four accomplices were indicted on charges of plotting with Israel to assassinate Nasrallah.