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More Mossad ops from 1999
The Israeli Deception That Led to the Bombing of Pan American Flight 103
Over Lockerbie, Scotland
By Richard H. Curtiss
With the handover to the United Nations this spring for trial in The Hague of two Libyan suspects in the bombing of Pan American Flight 103 over
Lockerbie Scotland on Dec. 21, 1988, United Nations sanctions upon Libya were “suspended,” but not lifted. This ended the principal hardships
imposed since 1992 upon the Libyan people, which were the ban on international air travel to and from Libya, and the resulting high prices
and scarcity of foreign-made goods and equipment, which had to be imported via Libya’s
neighbours.
U.S. sanctions against Americans doing business with Libya or even travel by Americans to Libya remain in place, but obviously will be re-examined
at some point. The original object of the U.S. sanctions was to force Libya to turn over the suspects and, if they are found guilty, to force
Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi to accept responsibility for the crash of the Boeing 747 in which all 259 passengers, of whom 189 were Americans,
and 11 people on the ground were killed. However, Qaddafi already has distanced himself from the suspects by saying, in a BBC interview in
October 1998, that the bombing might have resulted from Libyans “taking their own revenge” for the U.S. bombing of Tripoli two years earlier.
The principal effects of the U.S. sanctions have been to penalize U.S. oil companies, which now operate in Libya with a U.S. government waiver but
without U.S. citizen employees there, and to discourage other U.S. companies from doing any business at all with Libya. As for any effect of
the U.S. sanctions on Libya itself, no other countries have the success rate of American exploration and drilling companies in finding and
extracting petroleum around the world, but there are few other goods or services provided by U.S. firms in any field that cannot be matched by
European, Asian or other sources.
So the principal result of the U.S. sanctions is to exacerbate the unfavourable U.S. balance of payments, and to inflict some residual
hardships on Libyans with relatives in or educational or business ties with the United States. Probably, therefore, as many Americans as Libyans
are hoping that the trial of the two suspects, Abdel Basset Ali Megrahi and Lamen Khalifa Fhimah, who have been on leave with pay from their jobs
with Libyan Arab Airlines for the past seven years, will somehow bring closure to the
long-running dispute.
A “not proven” verdict is also available under Scottish law.
There is little other than circumstantial evidence that Libyans had a hand in the catastrophe. Perhaps the most compelling such item is that nine
months later, in December 1989, a French airliner also blew up in the skies over Africa, with the loss of 170 people, after France had
intervened against Libya in its border war with Chad.
The conventional wisdom, therefore, is that if the defendants are acquitted, the U.S.-compiled case against Libya collapses, opening the way
for a lifting of the U.N. sanctions. Or that a guilty verdict will open
the way to a Libyan government compensation offer to survivors of the victims, which they can accept or reject in
favour of civil damage suits against the Libyan government.
However, a third verdict, “not proven,” is also available under Scottish law, under which the two Libyans will be tried in the international court
in The Hague. In the likely event that the court, consisting of three
Scottish judges, reaches that conclusion, the defendants walk, the U.N. will probably change the status of its sanctions from “suspended” to
abolished, and the U.S. will be left with no face-saving way to re-establish a normal relationship with Libya comparable to Libyan
relations with virtually all other nations in the world.
Such a result will call for more creative U.S. diplomacy than a North African version of the made-in-Israel policy of “dual containment” which
initially dominated Clinton administration Middle Eastern diplomacy, and which has had no ameliorating effect on the conduct of either Iraq or
Iran, the two countries at which it was aimed.
The U.S., in fact, has been quietly backing away from dual containment for the past two years, despite vigorous complaints from what Israeli
peaceniks have come to call “the Jewish thought police” in the United States, meaning Israel’s vigorous Washington, DC lobby and some of its
unquestioning supporters within the U.S. Jewish community.
In deciding what the U.S. should be doing about the impasse it has reached with Libya, a country of only five million people, there are two initial
questions to consider. Is Colonel Qaddafi, Libya’s principal leader ever since he led a successful military coup against the pro-Western monarchy
there in 1969, a seemingly incurable troublemaker or have his actions and eccentricities been exaggerated deliberately by the Western media?
An Unrelenting Campaign
Surprisingly, the Israel lobby’s principal American think tank, the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, predicts “a fundamental
reorientation of Libya’s foreign policy” in a study it released Aug. 16.
It complains, however, that Qaddafi’s “antagonism toward Israel” has not “ameliorated.” This means that Israel’s backers in the U.S. media will
continue an unrelenting campaign to keep alive the memory of his
transgressions, real or imagined.
There is a sinister aspect to this campaign of which Americans should be aware in making judgments about where U.S.-Libyan relations should go from
here. That is the fact that the current U.S.-Libyan problems were deliberately instigated by Israeli actions. Unfortunately, and this is the
sinister part of it, the U.S. media observe a nearly total taboo in discussing this Israeli role, although the facts are indisputable.
For example who, besides the Libyans themselves, remembers that the first victims in the brutal and seemingly endless tit-for-tat acts of
retaliation involving Libya and, later, the U.S. were the 111 passengers
and crewmembers killed in the crash of a Libyan commercial airliner downed on Feb. 23, 1973 by Israeli guns as it descended, slightly off course
during a dust storm, over Israeli-occupied Egyptian Sinai for a routine landing at Cairo International Airport?
The Israelis called it a case of mistaken identity. It is not clear whether U.S. journalists ever asked why the Israeli soldiers along the
Suez Canal were firing ground-to-air missiles at a civilian airliner at all, regardless of its identity. Nor why the U.S. media obstinately refuse
to recognize the role of this early outrage, only four years after Qaddafi came to power, and Western indifference toward it, in the shaping of his
mindset about the West in general, and the U.S. in particular.
Whether the Israeli killing of such a large number of Libyan and Egyptian civilians was or was not accidental, the next documented Israeli
intervention was a deliberate and successful attempt to instigate hostilities between Libya and the United States in February 1986. It led
directly to the April 1986 U.S. bombing of Libya’s two major cities, Tripoli and Benghazi, in which there were some 40 Libyan casualties,
including the death of Qaddafi’s infant adopted daughter. (She had been orphaned when her father, a former Syrian air attaché in Libya, was killed
in aerial combat with Israel.) If, indeed, the two accused Libyans were responsible for the Lockerbie bombing, it clearly was direct retaliation
for the U.S. attack.
The manner in which Israel’s Mossad tricked the U.S. into attacking Libya was described in detail by former Mossad case worker Victor Ostrovsky in
The Other Side of Deception, the second of two revealing books he wrote after he left Israel’s foreign intelligence service. The story began in
February 1986, when Israel sent a team of navy commandos in miniature submarines into Tripoli to land and install a “Trojan,” a six-foot-long
communications device, in the top floor of a five-story apartment building. The device, only seven inches in diameter, was capable of
receiving messages broadcast by Mossad’s LAP (LohAma
Psicologit—psychological warfare or disinformation section) on one frequency and automatically relaying the broadcasts on a different
frequency used by the Libyan government.
The commandos activated the Trojan and left it in the care of a lone Mossad agent in Tripoli who had
leased the apartment and who had met them at the beach in a rented van.“By the end of March, the
Americans were already intercepting messages broadcast by the Trojan,” Ostrovsky writes.
“Using the Trojan, the Mossad tried to make it appear that a long series of terrorist orders were being transmitted to various Libyan embassies
around the world,” Ostrovsky continues. As the Mossad had hoped, the transmissions were deciphered by the Americans and construed as ample
proof that the Libyans were active sponsors of terrorism. What’s more, the Americans pointed out, Mossad reports
confirmed it.
“The French and the Spanish, though, were not buying into the new stream of information. To them it
seemed suspicious that suddenly, out of the blue, the Libyans, who had been extremely careful in the past, would start
advertising their future actions…The French and the Spanish were right. The information was bogus.”
Ostrovsky, who is careful in what he writes, does not blame Mossad for the bombing, only a couple of weeks after the Trojan was installed, of La
Belle Discothèque in West Berlin, which cost the lives of two American soldiers and a Turkish woman. But he convincingly documents the elaborate
Mossad operation built around the Trojan, which led the U.S. to blame Libya for the bombing of the Berlin nightclub
frequented by U.S. soldiers. The plot was given added credibility since it took place at a time when
Qaddafi had “closed” the airspace over the Gulf of Sidra to U.S. aircraft, and then suffered the loss of two Libyan aircraft trying to enforce the
ban, which were shot down by carrier-based U.S. planes.
A Prompt Reaction
The U.S. reacted promptly to the attack on the Berlin nightclub. On April 16, 1986 it sent U.S. aircraft from a base in England and from two U.S.
carriers in the Mediterranean to drop more than 60 tons of bombs on Qaddafi’s office and residence in the Bab al Azizia barracks, less than
three blocks from the apartment containing the Trojan transmitter, and on military targets in and around the two Libyan cities. Some of the U.S.
missiles and bombs went astray, inflicting damage on residential buildings, including the French Embassy in Tripoli. The planes flying from
England were forced to skirt both French and Spanish airspace, and one of them, a U.S. F-111, was shot down over Tripoli, killing the two American
crew members.
“Operation Trojan was one of the Mossad’s greatest successes,” Ostrovsky writes. “It brought about the air strike on Libya that President Reagan
had promised—a strike that had three important consequences. First, it derailed a deal for the release of the American hostages in Lebanon, thus
preserving the Hezbollah as the number one enemy in the eyes of the West. Second, it sent a message to the entire Arab world, telling them exactly
where the United States stood regarding the Arab-Israeli conflict. Third, it boosted the Mossad’s image of itself, since it was they who, by
ingenious sleight of hand, had prodded the United States to do what was right…
“After the bombing, the Hezbollah broke off negotiations regarding the hostages they held in Beirut and executed three of them, including one
American named Peter Kilburn. As for the French, they were rewarded for their non-participation in the attack by the release at the end of June of
two French journalists held hostage in Beirut.”
Ostrovsky doesn’t mention, however, the other apparent direct result of the Mossad “success”: the
bombing of Pan Am Flight 103.
Despite the refusal by mainstream American media to revisit the well-documented facts presented above, they contain some obvious political
lessons for the United States. For example, the U.S. government might
decide to continue its sanctions on Libya in retaliation for the deaths of
the 270 victims of the Pan Am bombing, regardless of the verdict of the Scottish judges. In that case, however, true justice would also
require imposition of similar U.S. sanctions against Israel for deliberately instigating the U.S. bombing of Tripoli, in retaliation for the bombing of
La Belle Discothèque, a crime which the Israelis knew from the beginning that the Libyans had not committed.
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Richard H. Curtiss is the executive editor of the Washington Report on
Middle East Affairs.
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