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Israel

Analysis: Drone signals new spy era for Israel

February 25, 2010 15:20
A Hamas man lays a wreath next to a portrait of his assassinated commander, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in Gaza

By

Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

2 min read

During the rolling-out of the Israeli Air Force's new spy-plane, the Eitan, on Sunday at Tel Nof airbase, one of the guests whispered to his neighbour: "Do you think they scheduled this for today to take the international attention away from the Dubai fiasco?" The neighbour answered: "To do that they would have had to roll out an atom bomb."
But already the next day, when the EU foreign ministers met in Brussels, it seemed the storm that had been caused by the killers of Hamas's Mahmoud al-Mabhouh in Dubai using false European passports was already abating. Israel was not directly linked to the kill by any of the ministers and escaped denunciation. After a few tense days for a number of Israeli ambassadors in Europe, things have calmed down. Barring the publication of damning new evidence of Mossad involvement and passport abuse, it is hard to see how the case will return to the headlines.

The understanding is that all involved have much more serious things to deal with right now, with Iran going forward on its uranium enrichment plans. Disciplining Israel for funny business with passports will have to wait indefinitely.

The fallout, though, is not just diplomatic. The Dubai killing may turn out to be also a landmark in the annals of clandestine operations.

At a lecture in Tel-Aviv University on Tuesday, former IDF chief of staff Dan Halutz said that the assassinations of Mabhouh and Hizbollah Operations Chief Imad Mughniyeh had enhanced Israel's deterrence towards its enemies. Mr Halutz of course stopped short of saying that Israel had carried out the killings, but he made it clear that it was imperative for Israel that the senior operatives in the Iran-Syria-Hizbollah-Hamas axis of evil continue looking over their shoulders constantly.