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The Man Who Knew Too Much
The Ordeal of Mordechai Vanunu
By ROBERT FISK
The Independent
March 26, 2004Wh
Any Israeli who bought the 16 February edition of the daily newspaper Yedioth
Ahronoth would have believed that a truly wicked man was about to be released
from Ashkelon prison.
Each time a suicide bomber
blew himself up, the prisoner would celebrate. Worse still, said the paper,
the inmate--once a keeper of
Israel's nuclear secrets--wants to endanger his country further after his
release. "He
told me," a former prisoner was quoted as saying, "that he has additional
material and that he will reveal secrets..."
Should it be a surprise, then, that the very same prisoner, supposedly celebrating
the slaughter of innocents while preparing to betray his country yet again,
holds a clutch of awards from European peace groups, the Sean McBride Peace
prize and
an honorary doctorate from the University of Tromso?
In 2000, the Church of
Humanism told him: "You are honest, courageous and morally highly motivated,
and may the great sacrifice you have made serve to protect not only those living
in Israel but all the peoples of the Middle East and perhaps the world."
The
same man has also been put forward as a nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize.
Mordechai Vanunu, it seems, can only be loved or loathed. Indifference to
the former Israeli nuclear technician is impossible. For he is the man who,
in
1986, took evidence to The Sunday Times of the full story behind Israel's
secret nuclear
weapons plant at Dimona in the Negev desert, complete with the total number
of advanced fission bombs there--200 at the time--and, even more disturbingly,
complete
with pictures. He said that Israel had mastered a thermonuclear design and
appeared to have a number of thermonuclear bombs ready for use.
He was subsequently
lured
by a girl from London to Rome and then kidnapped, drugged and freighted back
to Israel by Israeli secret policemen.
But in just six weeks' time, after 18
years of imprisonment--12 of them in solitary confinement--the world's most
famous whistleblower is scheduled for release.
Israel--not to mention the world--is
holding its breath.
Will he divulge further secrets of Dimona--always supposing he has any after
18 years of incarceration--or curse the country of which he is a citizen, albeit
a citizen who converted to Christianity before his arrest and who wants to
emigrate
to the United States? Will he emerge a cowed man, anxious only to apologise
for the terrible betrayal he inflicted upon his country? Or will he, as his
friends
and supporters and his adopted American parents hope, become an apostle of
peace, one of the greatest of this generation's prisoners of conscience, the
man who
tried to rid the world of the threat of nuclear annihilation?
The Israeli government
is still uncertain how to confront Vanunu's release on 21 April. They are
known to be considering--perhaps have already decided
upon--"certain
supervisory means" and "appropriate measures" to shut Vanunu
up.
In the second half of January, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon met with Menachem
Mazuz, Israel's attorney general, and the defence minister, Shaul Mofaz, and
discussed whether Vanunu should be refused a passport. Vanunu would be free
to sunbathe on the beaches of Tel Aviv but could not tour the world advertising
Israel's nuclear power.
It's a sign of how fearful
the Israeli administration has become at the prospect of this one man's release
that Sharon also summoned
to this conference Yehiel Horev's so-called "Defence Ministry Security Unit",
the country's internal and external intelligence services--Shin Beth and the
equally overestimated Mossad--and a representative of the Israeli Atomic Energy
Committee.
Horev, it is now known,
wanted to go much further than Sharon. He proposed clapping an administrative
detention order on Vanunu--Israel's usual way of
dealing with
Palestinians whom they regard as "terrorists"--although the meeting
apparently came to the conclusion that this would only enhance Vanunu's reputation
as a martyr for world peace.
There's another way of shutting Vanunu up, of course.
He can be publicly freed and then--the moment he starts talking about his work
as a nuclear technician--he can be tried again and thrown back into Ashkelon
jail--or Shikma prison, as the Israelis call it now.
But the real problem that Vanunu represents is that he will remind the world
at a critically important moment in the history of the Middle East that Israel
is a nuclear power and that its warheads stand ready to be fired from the Negev
desert. He will also remind the world that the Americans, despite battering
their way into Iraq to destroy Saddam Hussein's nonexistent weapons of mass
destruction,
continue to give their political, moral and economic support to a country that
has secretly amassed a treasure trove of weapons of mass destruction.
How can President Bush remain silent on Israel's nuclear power when he has
not only illegally invaded an Arab state for allegedly harbouring nuclear weapons
and condemned Iran for the same ambitions, but also praised--along with Tony
Blair's government--Colonel Gaddafi of Libya for abandoning his nuclear pretensions?
If the Arab states are
being "defanged"--always supposing they had
any real fangs in the first place--why should Israel not be "de-nuclearised"?
Why can't the United States apply the same standards to Israel as it does to
the Arabs?
Or why, for that matter, can't Israel apply the same standards to
itself that it demands of its Arab enemies?
This is the debate that the Israeli and the American governments wish to stifle.
In the United States, where
any discussion of the Israeli-American relationship that deviates from the
benign is routinely condemned as subversive or "anti-Semitic",
discussion of Israel's nuclear power is not something that Washington will
want to hear on the Sunday talk shows.
Vanunu, it should be said at once, is well
aware of all this, of his own importance--infinitely greater than it was when
he was a mere junior technician at Dimona--and of the role that tens of thousands
of anti- nuclear campaigners expect him to play in the world. Many times, through
friends and through his own brothers, Vanunu has said that he has no new nuclear
secrets but has the right to oppose nuclear weapons in Israel or anywhere else.
"All
I want to do is to go to America, get married and start a new life," he
says.
No one can doubt Vanunu's conviction. Born in 1954 to a religious Jewish family
in Morocco, he immigrated to Israel at the age of nine, performed his military
service in the mid-Seventies and began work at Dimona in November 1976 while
completing a graduate course in philosophy and geography.
Perhaps it was during
his travels in Thailand, Burma, Nepal and Australia in early 1986 that he decided
he had a moral duty to talk about Israel's nuclear weapons. In the same year,
he was baptised at an Anglican church in Sydney.
Vanunu had clearly become
deeply distressed at Israel's growing nuclear power when he walked into British
newspaper
offices in September of 1986 in the hope of telling the world the truth about
Dimona. He had dropped by Robert Maxwell's Daily Mirror at first, handed over
his photographs of the nuclear plant and waited for a reply.
Unknown to Vanunu,
Maxwell sent the pictures round to the Israeli embassy in London to "take
a look at them", supposedly to "confirm" whether or not the
story was true.
It seems likely that Maxwell
had motives other than journalistic integrity in this betrayal of Vanunu.
After his death at sea in 1991, Maxwell, who had
stolen millions in pensioners' funds, was given a state funeral in Israel at
which Shimon Peres praised his "services" to the state.
Maxwell's Daily Mirror ran
a "spoiler" story on 28 September, belittling
Vanunu and carrying the headline "The Strange Case of Israel and the Nuclear
Con Man."
The Sunday Times ran with the full story--but Vanunu had already
disappeared.
Entrapped by a female Mossad agent, he had been lured on to a
British Airways flight to Rome and promptly kidnapped.
It seems, in fact, that
he was
seized inside Rome's Fiumicino Airport.
Unable to speak to journalists,
he carefully wrote out details of his movements on the palm of his hand and
pressed
it to
the window of his prison truck as it took him to court. "Rome ITL 30:9:86
2100 came to Rome by BA504," he had written.
He had been kidnapped at 9pm
on 30 September at Rome International. Were the Italian authorities involved
in his kidnap? Were they present when he was seized? Perhaps Vanunu can tell
us.
He is certainly a man of endurance.
Once, during his 12 years of solitary,
the prison authorities accidentally freed him for exercise before Arab prisoners
in the jail-yard had been returned to their cells. Vanunu immediately walked
towards them. One of the Arabs, a Lebanese imprisoned for smuggling arms into
the West Bank, was among the first strangers to bring word of Vanunu's appearance
to the outside world.
"Vanunu fell into step with us and smiled at us and
it was a time before we realised who he was," the freed Lebanese later
told The Independent. "He said it was good to be with
us and we thought he was a brave man. Then the guards realised their mistake
and we were pushed and shoved
away from him, back to our cells."
An Israeli journalist visiting
another prisoner was amazed to see Vanunu. "For
a short moment I saw a bucolic scene," he wrote, "as if taken from
some other reality: a serene man, sitting on a bench in a garden and reading
Nietzsche in English. I approached him and extended my hand. Pleased to meet
you, my name is Ronen,' I said. I'm Motti,' the most confined prisoner in the
State of Israel replied. Before we could continue to talk, screaming wardens
rushed over and grabbed him away."
A former prisoner, Yossi
Harush, has provided another glimpse of the imprisoned Vanunu in the years
after his solitary confinement ended. "During the day," Harush
told Yedioth Ahronoth, "during walks, he meets people and talks
with them. I spoke a lot with Vanunu. We were friends. He would come to my
cell... He has
good conditions. He is treated nicely in prison... He has no restrictions on
leaving his cell, but he is restricted within the prison. I myself, as a working
prisoner, painted a red line that he is forbidden to cross. I was ordered to
do that, and afterwards our relationship cooled off."
Vanunu has been regularly
visited by an Anglican clergyman, Dean Michael Sellors. It was Sellors who
pointed out to him that his release date coincided with
the Queen's birthday. "He said that in that case, he'd better get a ticket
and greet her himself."
Vanunu has also taken heart
in the actions of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, a normally
conservative organisation, which has stated that, "any
sanctions against Mordechai after release would be illegal and immoral."
A
chatline on the Hebrew website of the Israeli daily Maariv shows that a number
of young Israelis regard Vanunu as a hero rather than a threat.
Mary Eoloff,
a retired American school teacher who, with her husband, adopted Vanunu in
the hope that he could be given US citizenship and released, was the first
to reveal
that when Israeli security men offered to release him a year before the expiry
of his 18 years in jail, Vanunu turned them down.
"He believes in freedom
of speech," she said.
It remains to be seen if Israel will allow Vanunu the free speech he loves.
Horev, the defence ministry security official who attended Sharon's meeting,
has spoken
of the threat that he believes the nuclear technician represents, which seems
to be about ambiguity rather than state secrets.
Horev compares this ambiguity
to water in a glass. "My job is to ensure that the water doesn't spill over
the glass," he said recently. "Up until the Vanunu affair, the water
was at a very low level. The affair caused the water level to rise significantly
and caused Israel great damage, but the water still didn't overflow. If we
let certain people act in the matter, the water will spill."
The Israeli journalist
Raanan Shaked was a good deal more cynical when he spoke on the subject on
Israel's Channel 10 TV. "Who is the main threat to Israel?" he
asked. "Of course, Mordechai Vanunu! He is the big danger. Israeli democracy
simply cannot withstand the impact of this one man saying what every child
knows: we have nuclear weapons."
On 21 April, when Vanunu is released, we shall
find out if the water is going to overflow--and whether Vanunu will cross
the red line painted so ominously
on the floor at the instruction of the authorities.
Robert Fisk is a reporter
for The Independent and author of Pity
the Nation. He is also a contributor to CounterPunch's hot new book,
The Politics of
Anti-Semitism.
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