NOVANEWS
The Israeli Shabak announced (and in Hebrew) with a flourish today that on September 11th it had apprehended an alleged Iranian spy who had been working on behalf of the Iran Revolutionary Guards. He is Ali Mansuri, 55, a dual Belgian-Iranian citizen. He went by the name Alex Mans when he entered Israel. He was born in Iran and lived there until 1980. Then he emigrated to Turkey, where he lived till 1997 as a businessman. Then, Belgium offered him a visa to reside there and continue his business activities. In 2006, he applied for and received Belgian citizenship by marrying a Belgian citizen from whom he was later divorced.
Because of his dual nationality, Mansuri was an especially attractive target for Iranian intelligence. It should be remembered that the Mossad too recruited Israeli dual citizens like Ben Zygier who were citizens of friendly countries and would not attract undue attention.
The Israeli security service claims that he visited Israel a total of three times under cover of being a businessman. Anyone visiting his website will wonder how he could be a successful businessman, let alone spy:
Hello, World!
European Folded Glass System is Big Company in Europe
We sell the beauty happiness and comfort You could change your design with our system to be more relax and space We have several model such a balcony ,elegant , ray Balcony model in two tempered glass 8 and 10 mm you could use for your any place. Elegant model with 100mm tempered glass Ray model with 10mm tempered glass All usable in different profile and glass color
Among the charges offered against Mansuri is this strange one:
The detainee tried to aid Iran in its efforts to circumvent the trade embargo and transfer funds [internationally].
Why and how an Iranian spy would focus on Israel as a target to transfer funds or circumvent the trade embargo makes very little sense unless he was attempting to export forbidden products from Israel to Iran. If so, it would seem a fool’s errand given the level of security in place inside Israel to prevent such developments. In fact, the Shabak report says he attempted to establish business connections inside Israel by providing roofing and windows for restaurants and other businesses. Do these sample products featured on his website appear to be of the sort that would allow massive violations of international sanctions?
This arrest follows another a few weeks ago of a mentally-troubled Israeli citizen who visited the Iranian embassy in Berlin asking to spy on its behalf inside Israel. The Shabak believes that Iran turned him in in the hopes of distracting from the real spy it was working in Israel’s midst.
Though I don’t doubt the IRG would want to infiltrate its agents into Israel, I somehow find it highly suspect that Israel didn’t know from almost the first moment Mansuri showed up at Ben Gurion that he was a suspicious character. Even if he tried to conceal his Iranian ethnicity, these things aren’t hard to trace. I believe that Shabak knew almost from the first moment he arrived what or who he was. It allowed him to enter Israel, tracing what he was doing to figure out the methods being used by the IRG to try to spy on the country.
My Israeli source confirms that the timing of this announcement is deliberate. Haaretz confirms this with the following:
Exposure of Iranian agent: ammunition for Bibi’s UN speech
Mako goes even farther:
Security Sources: the Timing of the Arrest of the Iranian Spy is No Accident
Maariv quotes a “senior official accompanying the prime minister,” who my Israeli source tells me is Bibi himself, giving this desperate spin to the incident:
At a time when Iran was denouncing terror on American soil, it sents its agent to gather intelligence for a terror attack against the U.S. embassy in Israel.
Holy smokes! Because they found a single picture in his camera that means Iran was about to blow the U.S. embassy sky-high!
Haaretz columnist Uri Misgav is brutally acerbic in his evaluation of the Shabak’s performance:
An Embarrassing, Troubling Episode in Shabak History:
The report was hurried and amateurish. The timing ridiculously transparent. The substance not earth-shaking. The security services don’t usually supply PR and hasbara services for the prime minister, nor political fodder for the road.
Only the NYT’s Isabel Kershner naively and typically called the timing “serendipitous.”
As Yossi Melman so rightly noted in his latest piece for The Post (Jerusalem Post’s Hebrew edition), Bibi has cried Wolf so many times in the past that it no longer registers with anyone but his own followers. No one believes that Israel can or will attack Iran given the latest moderating voices that have been heard in New York and Washington.
Yediot also notes that Shabak uncharacteristically released this story before it had completed its investigation. Another reason to suspect political timing to the report.
Bibi is desperate to change the momentum in world discourse away from Iran’s peace overture and Obama’s embrace of it. What better way to do that than to remind the world Iran is a perfidious enemy stopping at nothing to attain regional domination through infiltration of its enemies territory and sabotage of its infrastructure. You’ll note however, there was no display of the weapons, bomb-making equipment, etc. Mansuri was using in his dastardly plot. All they had to offer was a picture of the U.S. embassy in Tel Aviv that Mansuri allegedly shot. Incriminating!





