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Israel: Did the Alleged Mossad Hit in Dubai Really Help? (Time.com)

Tue, 09 Mar 2010 08:35:00 GMT

As more details emerge about the Jan. 19 assassination of a senior Hamas operative in Dubai, it looks increasingly like a badly botched operation. When the Dubai police first announced that the hotel room of Mahmoud al-Mabhouh had been locked from the inside, I had dismissed that as an unimportant detail - maybe a way to delay the discovery of his body. But it turns out that the assassins had, in fact, wanted the Dubai police to believe that Mabhouh had died of natural causes, a heart attack. It certainly looked that way at first. Mabhouh was found in bed, undressed, and his pants were folded on a chair. That impression, though, was upended when the autopsy showed traces of a paralyzing agent in his bloodstream. From what's been pieced together so far, it seems that Mabhouh was incapacitated and then smothered. (Read "Israel Faces Growing Fallout Over a Hamas Hit.")

No one with any sense doubts it was Israel's Mossad that assassinated Mabhouh. While Israel has not admitted it, it has also not denied it. The killing was publicly applauded by Tzipi Livni, leader of Israel's opposition and herself a former Mossad agent. And it had all of the hallmarks of a Mossad operation - motivation (Mabhouh was buying Iranian arms for Gaza), the large number of people believed to be on the assassination team (26 at the latest count) and a network that spans Europe and the U.S. (where two of the alleged assassins traveled to from Dubai).

If Mossad was indeed responsible, it means that blame for Mabhouh's assassination can be put at the doorstep of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Israel's Prime Minister has historically approved hits staged in countries with which Israel is not at war. Such details are unlikely to be made public any time soon, but it does make you wonder what the deliberations might have been leading up to Mabhouh's assassination. (See pictures of life under Hamas in Gaza.)

More than a few Middle East hands shrugged their shoulders at the question: Netanyahu wouldn't have cared whether Israel was fingered for the assassination of Mabhouh or not. The whole point, they argue, was to send a reminder to Israel's enemies that it will eliminate them anywhere it can find them. When Mossad went after the Palestinian Black September movement in retaliation for the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre, it didn't give a damn about the diplomatic blowback. It was a case of an eye for an eye, and the belief that the best deterrence is to strike fear into your enemies

But the evidence that the assassins tried to make it look as if Mabhouh died in his sleep belies the deterrence explanation. And it doesn't answer the question why Mossad would risk exposing 26 operatives. A small intelligence service, Mossad cannot afford to take this many people out of circulation by having their pictures beamed around the world. It also doesn't explain why the alleged assassins stole the identities of Israeli citizens. Israelis may be proud that their secret service can reach its enemies anywhere, but it serves no national or political interests to expose their own people to retribution. (See the top 10 assassination plots.)

If Netanyahu authorized the hit, though, the real question is whether he really considered the strategic implications. Look at the map. If Israel goes ahead and bombs Iran's nuclear facilities, it will need over-flight clearances from the Gulf Arabs. Antagonizing the U.A.E. in this way, leaving almost no doubt Israel was behind Mabhouh's assassination, does not seem the best way to facilitate such clearances. Nor does it help build an Arab Sunni coalition against Iran and its Lebanese proxy, Hizballah.

Vice President Joe Biden arrived in Tel Aviv this week to try to convince the Israelis that they should allow more time for new sanctions on Iran to work before taking any decision on bombing Iran. But the uncomfortable truth that must have hung in the air when Biden and Netanyahu met is that Iran's economic Achilles heel is refined gasoline. The Islamic Republic imports about a third of its needs. And, unfortunately, 75% of Iran's gasoline imports pass through the U.A.E. I would bet that, right now, Netanyahu is wishing that Mossad had been just a little better at covering its tracks.

- Baer, a former CIA field officer assigned to the Middle East, is TIME.com's intelligence columnist and the author of See No Evil and, most recently, The Devil We Know: Dealing with the New Iranian Superpower.

See pictures of 60 years of Israel.

See pictures of a Hamas recruitment day.

View this article on Time.com

Related articles on Time.com: Israel Sees Fallout as Mossad Blamed for Dubai Hamas Hit




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