Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, July 1992, pages
41-42, 86
Thirty-Eight Years Ago This Month
The Lavon Affair: When Israel Firebombed U.S. Installations
By Richard H. Curtiss
"I just can't figure out what the Israelis think they're
up to...Maybe they think they just can't survive without more land...but
I don't see how they can survive without coming to some honorable
and peaceful terms with the whole Arab world that surrounds them."
U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower, October 1956 (As related
by Eisenhower speech writer Emmet John Hughes in his book, The
Ordeal of Power, A Political Memoir of the Eisenhower Years,
1964)
The election of General of the Armies Dwight D. Eisenhower as U.S.
president in November 1952 brought more than a change of parties
to the White House. After leading Allied armies to victory in Europe
in World War II, Eisenhower had returned to civilian life as president
of Columbia University. But as the U.S. and Western Europe grew
increasingly fearful of Soviet intentions, he returned to Europe
to organize the defense forces of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
By the time he had completed this task, he was so popular with
the U.S. public that he could have had the presidential nomination
of either party. He chose the Republicans, whose delegates, in an
open convention, nominated the general instead of "party insider"
Sen. Robert Taft of Ohio. Eisenhower then easily defeated a strong
Democratic candidate, Gov. Adlai Stevenson of Illinois, in the general
election.
As a result, when he entered the White House, Eisenhower was his
own man, with a personal political base so secure he could not be
challenged successfully by any single interest group, as the nascent
pro-Israel lobby learned toward the end of his first term.
While rank-and-file Republicans were overcoming the party regulars
to nominate Eisenhower in July 1952, Egyptians were overthrowing
their government in a nearly bloodless revolution. Egypt's 1948
debacle against Israeli soldiers in Palestine was a catalyst for
the coup by army officers humiliated at the high-level sloth and
corruption it had revealed in the government of Egypt's playboy
King Farouk. Two years later, Col. Gamal Abdel Nasser, the driving
force behind the original coup, deposed its figure-head leader,
General Mohammad Naguib, and assumed power himself.
Both Israeli and American Arabists who had picked the handsome,
eloquent colonel as the officer to watch in the Egyptian revolutionary
government now picked him as the leader to watch in the Arab world.
In each country, secret chains of events were set in motion, but
at least one of the Israeli plans was diametrically opposed to that
of the United States.
Eisenhower was uniquely qualified to understand the peacemaking
potential of a charismatic military leader with a strong personal
political base. Assured by his Middle East advisers that Nasser
was such a leader, he set out to woo the Egyptian president through
Kermit Roosevelt, grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt, an earlier
charismatic U.S. president whose political career began with a military
victory in the Spanish-American War and ended in a vain attempt
to keep the United States out of World War I.
To keep the American press, which already had developed strong
pro-Israel leanings, off the track, Eisenhower used U.S. and Egyptian
intelligence channels. The strategy was to assure Nasser that the
United States was ready to adjust its Middle East policies to his
politics of reform if the Egyptian leader was prepared to make peace
with Israel and thus remove at one stroke the greatest strain on
Egypt's budget and the only serious irritant in U.S.-Arab relations.
In Israel, without the knowledge of the United States, however,
at least three separate operations also were initiated to deal with
the Nasser phenomenon. One eventually was destined to become a cancer
in the political life of Israel, where some insiders later described
it as "Israel's Dreyfus case."
"Israel's Dreyfus Case"
There were two main forces in Israeli politics at the time. One
was David Ben-Gurion, Israel's first prime minister, who in 1948
had proclaimed the independence of the Jewish state and whose Old
Testament patriarchal mien was the symbol of Israel's war of independence.
Throughout his career, Ben-Gurion had moved steadily away from
the moderation and flexibility of Chaim Weizmann, who in the two
decades before and during World War II had secured British and American
support for a Jewish state, and toward the defiance that after 1948
became so familiar to Arab opponents and Western mediators. As prime
minister, Ben-Gurion stubbornly refused to implement repeated United
Nations resolutions calling on Israel to return the territory it
had seized in the 1948 fighting and repatriate or compensate the
Arab refugees who had fled or been expelled.
The other force was Moshe Sharett, Ben-Gurion's foreign minister
in 1953, who then succeeded him as prime minister during one of
the convulsions that increasingly racked Israel's ruling coalition
of non-communist leftist parties. Sharett believed that a policy
of Israeli moderation in the face of Arab guerrilla attacks, Israeli
compensation of Arab refugees, and an understanding with Egypt on
boundaries ultimately could bring about a peaceful acceptance of
Israel by its Arab neighbors.
First Ben-Gurion, and later Sharett, attempted to establish contact
with the new Egyptian leader. Ben-Gurion's attempt was through popular
Israeli military hero Yigael Allon, then a private citizen. After
the Oct. 14, 1948 cease-fire, Allon's troops had surrounded a large
force of Egyptian troops, including Nasser, in the Faluja pocket,
and then refused to return to the cease-fire lines. In the course
of negotiating U.N.-supervised passage of supplies to the encircled
Egyptian troops and, in February 1949, their withdrawal to Egypt,
Allon had met Nasser several times.
The Allon initiative slowed when Sharett assumed the prime ministership,
and himself attempted to initiate contacts with Nasser through other
intermediaries. However, possibly unknown to Sharett, the Israeli
army intelligence organization, which operated independently of
the Mossad, Israel's equivalent of the CIA, was laying its own secret
plans.
Both before and since Nasser's time, concerns of hard-line Israeli
leaders have focused not on the radical Arabs, but rather on moderate
Arab leaders who maintain ties to the West. Obviously, if the West
ever reached an agreement with the Arabs at the expense of further
Israeli territorial ambitions, it would be with such moderate Arabs.
Efforts by the Eisenhower administration to cultivate the charismatic
Egyptian colonel had been detected by Israeli intelligence operatives,
who also were concerned about Nasser's negotiations with the British
for withdrawal of their forces from Egypt's Suez Canal zone, scheduled
for July 1954.
In their 1979 book, The Untold History of Israel, Israeli
journalists Jacques Derogy and Hesi Carmel relate that in 1954 Israel's
army intelligence section conceived a plan to attack British personnel
seconded to King Hussein's government in Jordan. The purpose was
to sour relations between Britain and Jordan as well as between
both Jordan and Britain on the one hand and Egypt, which would be
blamed for such attacks.
Shortly afterward, the same Israeli army intelligence organization
activated two networks of Egyptian Jews first established in 1948.
These young people had been recruited in Egypt, secretly trained
in Israel, and then sent back to their homes in Cairo and Alexandria
to await orders to carry out acts of sabotage in case of war between
Egypt and Israel.
Now the networks were to explode small incendiary bombs in American
installations in Egypt, presumably to set off a chain of mutual
recriminations to spoil the budding Eisenhower-Nasser courtship.
After completing their sabotage of American installations, the same
networks next were to bomb public places in Cairo and Alexandria,
actions that Nasser would attribute to the Muslim Brotherhood, which
supported the deposed General Naguib, and thus create a climate
of Egyptian instability during the British-Egyptian Canal Zone negotiations.
An Israeli spymaster posing as a German businessman was sent to
Cairo to set the plan in motion. On July 14, 1954, while French-influenced
Egyptians celebrated Bastille Day as a symbol of the overthrow of
monarchies both in France and in Egypt, incendiary devices exploded
in U.S. Information Service libraries and consular offices open
to the public in both Cairo and Alexandria.
Although the resulting small fires caused minor property damage,
there were no casualties and none of the U.S. government buildings
targeted were destroyed. The sabotage of U.S. installations alerted
Egyptian police, however. They assigned special patrols to crowded
public places in both cities.
Nine days later, on July 23, during Egyptian commemoration of the
second anniversary of its revolution, members of the Israeli sabotage
network took firebombs to the Cairo railway station and to movie
theaters in Cairo and Alexandria.
As one of the young Egyptian Jews, Philippe Nathanson, stood in
front of an Alexandria theater, the incendiary device he was carrying
ignited prematurely. After bystanders beat out the fire in his clothing,
a policeman took him into custody for questioning about the fire
that witnesses said had begun in his pocket.
Within days 11 persons were in custody. They included all members
of both the Cairo and Alexandria sabotage networks and an additional
Israeli spy who was not a part of either network. Only the Israeli
spymaster who had set the plain in motion escaped, leading members
of competing Israeli intelligence services to question for years
afterward why the plan's instigator had been able to slip out of
Egypt, but another Israeli agent, whose identity was known to the
instigator, was caught.
Extinguishing Hopes of Moderation
Although the sabotage plan misfired, literally, it succeeded beyond
the wildest dreams of its Israeli planners in extinguishing all
hopes of moderation—not in Egypt but in Israel. The arrested
provocateurs were brought to trial in Cairo on Dec. 11, 1954. Among
them was an Egyptian Jewish girl, Victorine Ninio, who had to be
assisted into the courtroom after she reportedly twice tried to
commit suicide while under Egyptian interrogation. The unaffiliated
spy, Max Bennett, had been more successful in avoiding interrogation.
The Egyptian press reported he had killed himself with a rusty nail
pried from his cell door.
As the trial opened, the Israeli press reported emotionally the
details of what it assumed to be a show trial on baseless charges
intended to terrorize remnants of Egypt's once large Jewish community.
Assuming the same thing, British and French political leaders begged
Nasser in vain to halt the proceedings.
Seemingly most indignant of all was the first moderate prime minister
in Israel's brief history, Moshe Sharett. According to Israeli journalists
Derogy and Carmel, Sharett's indignation was not feigned.
This, they maintain, was because when his Egyptian Jewish agents
were exposed, the Israeli army intelligence chief, Col. Benjamin
Gibli, carefully covered his own tracks. Although there were others
in the chain of command who knew the truth, Gibli's immediate superior,
Gen. Moshe Dayan, seems to have assisted Gibli in assuring that
blame for the operation would fall on Dayan's own direct superior,
Defense Minister Pinchas Lavon. Lavon, like Sharett, according to
the Israeli journalists, may have known little or nothing about
the plan to drive a wedge between Egypt and the West by torching
U.S. government facilities in Cairo and Alexandria.
In any case, on Dec. 12, 1954, the second day of the Cairo trial,
Sharett angrily denounced "these calumnies designed to strike
at the Jews of Egypt." Later, when death sentences were handed
down against some of the conspirators, Sharett vowed, "We will
not negotiate in the shadow of the gallows."
At that moment, the separate Eisenhower, Ben-Gurion and Sharett
efforts to establish indirect contacts leading to Egyptian-Israeli
peace negotiations all began to unravel. Egyptians, angry at the
seeming hypocrisy of the Israeli prime minister's scathing denials
of actions that clearly had originated with the Israeli government,
began breaking off contacts.
By Jan. 20, 1955, two of the conspirators had been hanged in Egypt
and hopes among moderates for an Israeli-Egyptian rapprochement
died with them. Blamed by Sharett's political rival, Ben-Gurion,
for the botched plot, Lavon resigned on Feb. 7 and was replaced
as defense minister by Ben-Gurion later in the month.
Ben-Gurion immediately initiated drastic military actions against
Egypt. These included a massive Israeli incursion into the Egyptian-controlled
Gaza Strip, and the assassination by letter bomb of an Egyptian
officer the Israelis said was directing guerrilla raids into Israel
from Gaza.
Shaken by the Gaza raid, which he had been powerless to stop, Nasser
turned to the U.S. with a request for $27 million in arms. Mindful
of a 1950 agreement with Britain and France to maintain an arms
balance between Israel and the Arabs, and confident that Egypt was
short of funds, the U.S. informed Nasser that he would have to pay
cash for the arms.
"Our attitude may, with the advantage of hindsight, appear
to have been unrealistic," Eisenhower wrote later. It was.
The Soviet Union offered Nasser arms for Egyptian cotton instead
of cash. Nasser, however, was not eager to loosen ties with the
West.
Then, in September 1955, shortly before elections which brought
Ben-Gurion back into the prime ministership, Israeli troops raided
another Egyptian outpost. This time Nasser accepted Soviet-brokered
Czechoslovak arms on barter terms. This set off a punitive move
by the United States, which questioned Nasser's ability, with his
cotton and rice crops mortgaged, to repay loans he was seeking from
the World Bank to build what became the Aswan High Dam.
The Soviets in turn offered to finance the dam, while the Israelis
began pressing their major supplier, France, and the U.S. for arms
to offset those being supplied to Egypt. Seeing things were getting
out of hand, the U.S. again tried to initiate secret contacts.
This time President Eisenhower's emissary was his close friend,
former Secretary of the Navy Robert Anderson, who shuttled via various
European countries between Nasser and Ben-Gurion. Nasser insisted
that a personal meeting was unthinkable in the current bitter political
climate. Ben-Gurion insisted that only in a face-to-face meeting
could he reveal the full extent of the concessions Israel was prepared
to deliver.
By February 1956 the Anderson mission had failed, the Egyptians
were receiving their Soviet-brokered arms, and Israel, after its
arms request was refused by the U.S., was receiving secret deliveries
of French aircraft, tanks and munitions.
There followed the withdrawal by U.S. Secretary of State John Foster
Dulles, largely as a result of Israeli lobbying in Congress, of
U.S. funding for the Aswan High Dam. Nasser, in turn, nationalized
the British- and French-owned Suez Canal.
That triggered the buildup toward the Oct. 29, 1956 Israeli-French-British
attack, only days before the U.S. national election, on Egypt and
the Suez Canal. That in turn was followed by Eisenhower's successful
demands that Britain and France abandon their attempt to take back
the Canal by military force, and that Israel withdraw from the Egyptian
territory it had seized. It was the first and only attempt to link
U.S. aid to Israel to a peace settlement until 35 years later in
1991, when the administration of President George Bush tied U.S.
loan guarantees sought by Israel to a freeze on Israeli settlements
in occupied territories.
The 1954 Israeli plot and coverup that set in motion events leading
up to the 1956 Suez War became known as the "Haessek Habish"
(Ugly Affair) to Israeli journalists, who have written thousands
of words about the coverup, but very little to reveal that the original
"security mishap" for which so many Israeli officials
sought to evade responsibility had been a sabotage attempt against
U.S. diplomatic and cultural offices in Egypt.
Even worse has been the obfuscation in the mainstream American
press. Because the affair lingered on for a decade as a running
sore in Israeli political life, it could not be ignored. As it took
on a life of its own, U.S. and British journalists began calling
it the "Lavon Affair."
Forged Documents and Perjured Testimony
The reason was that Ben-Gurion had hounded Defense Minister Pinchas
Lavon from office on the basis of what later were revealed to be
forced documents and perjured testimony. Among Ben-Gurion political
protegés subsequently implicated in the manufacture of the
false evidence were Moshe Dayan and Shimon Peres, both of whom later
became fixtures of Israeli Labor Coalition governments.
Lavon, however, eventually was rehabilitated. His by then embittered
and irascible persecutor, David Ben-Gurion, twice had to leave public
office, the last time in 1964, because of the Lavon Affair. Four
years later, four surviving Egyptian Jewish provocateurs, including
Victorine Ninio and the luckless Nathanson, were released to Israel
by Egypt as part of the general exchange of prisoners which took
place after the 1967 Arab-Israeli war.
Their arrival in Israel received low-key coverage in the Israeli
press and virtually none in the U.S., reflecting the shameful dereliction
of the mainstream American media coverage of the story from the
beginning. Years after the event, The New York Times finally
described in its back pages the real nature of the sabotage operation.
Generally, however, U.S. newspapers continued describing "the
Lavon Affair" as a series of internal Israeli government investigations
of a highly classified, unspecified "security mishap."
To this day, few American journalists know, or will admit to knowing,
about this first detected instigation by the Israel Defense Forces
and intelligence agencies of anti-American incidents in preparation
for an attack by Israel on its Arab neighbors.
This report was adapted from Chapter Six of A Changing
Image: American Perceptions of the Arab-Israeli Dispute by Richard
H. Curtiss, which is available from the AET Book Club. Mr. Curtiss,
executive editor of the Washington Report, was an officer
of the U.S. Information Agency at the time of the Israeli firebombing
of its libraries in Cairo and Alexandria.
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