By RANNIE AMIRI
In
the Middle East, the link between political machinations, espionage and
assassination is either clear as day, or clear as mud.
As for the yet unsolved case of the
February 2005 murder of Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri, mud might be
giving way to daylight.
A crackdown on Israeli spy rings operating
in Lebanon has resulted in more than 70 arrests over the past 18 months.
Included among them are four high-ranking Lebanese Army and General Security
officersone having spied for the Mossad since 1984.
A significant breakthrough in the ongoing
investigation occurred in late June and culminated in the arrest of Charbel
Qazzi, head of transmission and broadcasting at Alfa, one of Lebanons two
state-owned mobile service providers.
According to the Lebanese daily As-Safir,
Qazzi confessed to installing computer programs and planting electronic
chips in Alfa transmitters. These could then be used by Israeli intelligence
to monitor communications, locate and target individuals for assassination,
and potentially deploy viruses capable of erasing recorded information in
the contact lines. Qazzis collaboration with Israel reportedly dates back
14 years.
On July 12, a second arrest at Alfa was
made. Tarek al-Rabaa, an engineer and partner of Qazzi, was apprehended on
charges of spying for Israel and compromising national security. A few days
later, a third Alfa employee was similarly detained.
Israel has refused to comment on the
arrests. Nevertheless, their apparent ability to have penetrated Lebanons
military and telecommunication sectors has rattled the country and urgently
raised security concerns.
What does any of this have to do with the
Hariri assassination?
Outside the obvious deleterious
ramifications of high-ranking Lebanese military officers working for Israel,
the very legitimacy of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL) is now in
question. The STL is the U.N.-sanctioned body tasked with prosecuting those
responsible for the assassination of the late prime minister. On Feb. 14,
2005, 1,000 kg of explosives detonated near Hariris passing motorcade,
killing him and 21 others.
It is believed the STL will issue
indictments in the matter as early as Septemberrelying heavily on phone
recordings and mobile transmissions to do so.
According to the
AFP, A preliminary report by the U.N. investigating team said it had
collected data from mobile phone calls made the day of Hariri's murder as
evidence.
The National likewise reported,
The international inquiry, which could present indictments or findings as
soon as September, according to unverified media reports, used extensive
phone records to draw conclusions into a conspiracy to kill Hariri, widely
blamed on Syria and its Lebanese allies ...
In a July 16 televised speech, Hezbollah
Secretary-General Sayyid Hassan Nasrallah speculated the STL would use
information gleaned from Israeli-compromised communications to falsely
implicate the group in the prime ministers murder:
Some are counting in their analysis of the
(STL) indictment on witnesses, some of whom turned out to be fake, and on
the telecommunications networks which were infiltrated by spies who can
change and manipulate data.
Before the (2006) war, these spies gave
important information to the Israeli enemy and based on this information,
Israel bombed buildings, homes, factories and institutions. Many martyrs
died and many others were wounded. These spies are partners in the killings,
the crimes, the threats and the displacement.
Nasrallah called the STLs manipulation an
Israeli project meant to create an uproar in Lebanon.
Indeed, in May 2008 Lebanon experienced a
taste of this. At the height of an 18-month stalemate over the formation of
a national unity government under then Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, his
cabinets decision to unilaterally declare Hezbollahs fixed-line
communication system illegal pushed the country to the
brink of civil
war.
Recognizing the value their secure lines of
communication had in combating the July 2006 Israeli invasion and
suspecting that state-owned telecoms might be compromised, Hezbollah
resisted Sinioras plans to have its network dismantled. Their men swept
through West Beirut and put a quick end to the governments plan. Two years
later, their suspicions appear to have been vindicated.
Opposition MP and Free Patriotic Movement head Michel Aoun has already
warned Nasrallah that the STL will likely indict uncontrolled
Hezbollah members to be followed by Lebanese-Lebanese and
Lebanese-Palestinian tension, and by an Israeli war on Lebanon.
Giving credence to Nasrallah and Aouns
assertions, Commander in Chief of the Israel Defense Forces Gabi Ashkenazi,
predicted with lots of wishes that the situation in Lebanon would
deteriorate in September after the STL indicts Hezbollah for Hariris
assassination.
Ashkenazis gleeful, prescient testimony to
the Knessets Foreign Affairs Committee betrays what Israel hopes the
fallout from the STLs report will be: fomentation of civil strife and
discord among Lebanons sectarian groups, generally divided into pro- and
anti-Syria factions. Ashkenazi anticipates this to happen, of course,
because he knows Israels unfettered access to critical phone records will
have framed Hezbollah for the crime.
Israels agents and operatives in Lebanon
and its infiltration of a telecom network have been exposed. At the very
least, the STL must recognize that evidence of alleged Hezbollah involvement
in Hariris death (a group that historically enjoyed good ties with the late
premier) is wholly tainted and likely doctored.
The arrest of Qazzi and al-Rabaa in the
breakup of Israeli spy rings should prompt the STL to shift its focus to the
only regional player that has benefited from Hariris murder; one that will
continue to do so if and when their designs to implicate Hezbollah are
realized.
It is time to look at Tel Aviv.
Rannie Amiri
is an independent Middle East commentator. He may be reached
at: rbamiri [at] yahoo [dot] com.
Note...Israeli companies have similar roles
in US communications links.
A Battle for the High Seas and the High
Ground
See also