
Guilty, but not as charged
by Jonathan Rosenblum (The Jerusalem Post, July 4, 2003)
Jonathan Pollard's release has been hindered by the stridency of his supporters
The June issue of Moment magazine contains an important new article on the
Jonathan Pollard case by former Justice Department attorney John Loftus. Loftus
explodes the myth that Pollard did incalculable damage to American security
interests.
Pollard received the maximum sentence of life imprisonment for spying for
Israel despite a plea- bargain agreement under which government prosecutors
undertook not to seek the maximum sentence. In short, he traded away his
valuable right to a jury trial - a trial the United States government was eager
to avoid - and received nothing in return.
Despite the agreement not to seek a life sentence, at the sentencing hearing
prosecutors produced a last-minute letter and memo from secretary of defense
Caspar Weinberger. Weinberger accused Pollard of "treason," a far more serious
crime with which he was never charged, and alleged that even in "the so-called
year of the spy" Pollard had caused the greatest harm to national security.
Though the Weinberger memo remains classified, the US security establishment
has for years hinted to the media and interested public officials that
information provided by Pollard to Israel made its way into Soviet hands and
played a role in the elimination of more than 40 American agents in Russia.
At the time of Pollard's sentencing the American security establishment may
well have believed that story. Now, however, it is known that CIA official
Aldrich Ames and FBI agent Robert Hanssen sold the names of the American agents
to the Soviets. Ames, it appears, skillfully deflected suspicion to Pollard for
years. (Ames's ability to use Pollard as a red herring has itself been a source
of anger against Pollard in certain security circles. Ames was not arrested
until 1994, or Hanssen until 2001.)
Loftus's article contains one bombshell revelation: an internal navy
intelligence review of the Pollard case, conducted after the arrest of Ames and
Hanssen, found that Pollard lacked the security clearance to obtain access to
the names of American agents in the Soviet Union. He could therefore never have
provided that information to Israel.
Loftus further downplays the claim advanced by investigative journalist
Seymour Hersh that US intelligence short-wave radio guides provided to Israel by
Pollard forced the US to completely revamp its global communications system at
the cost of billions.
Loftus notes that portions of the guide had already been sold to the Soviets
by the Walker spy ring, and that the Soviets were so unimpressed they did not
even attempt to obtain the rest. He further points out that prosecutor Charles
Leeper originally characterized the damage caused by Pollard as "minimal."
The Moment article contains one other revelation. Loftus claims to have
learned from sources in military intelligence that Pollard transferred to Israel
a list of all Saudi and Arab intelligence agents known to America as of 1984.
Many of these were on the US payroll. Some of these former Saudi agents are
prominent today in al-Qaida and other terrorist networks - a fact highly
embarrassing to their former American spymasters.
DESPITE the publication of Loftus's revelations in a well-respected American
magazine they have received remarkably little notice in Israel. As far as I know
no Israeli newspaper, with the exception of the English- language Hamodia, which
reprinted the Moment article in full, has given extensive coverage to Loftus's
revelations.
In part this reflects an unjustified apathy to Pollard's plight among a wide
swath of world Jewry. His continued imprisonment, after 18 years in jail,
constitutes a major stain on American justice that no Jew, or non-Jew, need feel
the slightest hesitation about protesting.
That widespread apathy, however, also reflects the fact that the pro-Pollard
movement has largely shrunk to a hard core of dedicated activists led by Esther
Pollard. Too many potential allies have been alienated by suspicions that those
most dedicated to the cause are more interested in having Pollard acknowledged
as a great Israeli hero than in securing his freedom.
Those who prefer to keep the focus exclusively on the goal of securing
Pollard's release have frequently incurred the wrath of the activist core. As an
example, one dedicated Pollard supporter recently ridiculed Hamodia for
"worrying excessively about possible charges of dual loyalty."
The paper's crime? At the end of a long article detailing the procedural and
substantive injustices in the Pollard case, its columnist concluded, "This
article does not intend to glorify or even condone Pollard's crime. Anyone who
works for an organization like the United States Navy undertakes to consider
only the interests of the United States."
But the Pollard case does raise issues of "dual loyalty" - just ask any Jew
working in American intelligence about the stares he or she was subjected to
after the case broke. And American Jews are entitled to be concerned about that
issue.
Pollard has repeatedly insisted that he did what he did out of profound love
for Israel, not out of any venal financial motives. It is likely he was
convinced that none of the information he handed Israel could damage American
interests, but still, his motivation was his love of Israel.
Those concerned with ensuring continued American support for Israel have no
interest in highlighting the fact that the two countries' interests are not
always congruent. Nor does Israel have any great interest in reminding America
that it infiltrated American intelligence services. Yet the continued focus on
Pollard's crucial contributions to Israel's security does precisely that.
Not only does the stress on Pollard's heroic status not serve the interests
of Israel or American Jewry, it does not help Pollard himself. In an interview
with Wolf Blitzer shortly before his sentencing hearing, Pollard described
himself as having been moved by the intransigence of the American intelligence
community, which he viewed as endangering Israel's survival. Worse, his then
wife, Anne Henderson, told 60 Minutes that their actions were their "moral
obligation as Jews."
Their evident lack of remorse enraged the prosecutors and trial judge Aubrey
Robinson, and set the stage for the blatant violation of every aspect of the
plea bargain.
Nor was that the last time a failure to express remorse may have cost
Pollard dearly. According to David Luchins, a former top aide to senator Daniel
Moynihan, president Bill Clinton told Moynihan and Senator Joseph Lieberman in
early 1993 that he had no problem with clemency for Pollard, but would need a
letter of remorse.
The late Rabbi Ahron Soloveitchik, Luchins's rabbi, visited Pollard in jail
in Marion, Illinois, where guards made the aged rabbi remove his suspenders and
abandon his walker, despite a debilitating stroke. Rabbi Soloveitchik begged
Pollard to sign a letter stating: "I realize that what I did was not only
repugnant to American law, but was equally repugnant to God's Torah and to
natural law." Subsequently, Senator Lieberman hand-delivered the letter to
Clinton.
Two months later, however, Rabbi Avi Weiss called a press conference on
Pollard's behalf renouncing the letter, bringing to an abrupt end the most
promising effort until then to secure Pollard's release. (Of course, in light of
the way of the way Clinton reneged on a promise to prime minister Netanyahu at
Wye to release Pollard, no one can say with assurance that the earlier effort
would have ended successfully.)
Too often Pollard's supporters have shown a preference for emotionally
satisfying symbolic gestures and harangues to building a larger coalition of
support. At a Jerusalem rally two weeks ago his attorney called him a symbol of
America's consistent failure to honor promises.
What is the point of remarks calculated to infuriate the president of the
United States, the one person who has the power to free Pollard from jail?
Jonathan Pollard's dwindling band of intense supporters must ask themselves:
Would we rather have him hailed as a hero, or free? Let's hope they choose
freedom.
© 2003 The Jerusalem Post
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