 |
.American
Free Press |
| |
| ..Vol
VII . .#4 . January 22, 2007 . americanfreepress.net |
| |
Page 19, AMERICAN
FREE PRESS * January 22, 2007 AFP On the Bookshelf with Michael Collins Piper
Nabbing the Worst Spy
in U.S. History
By Michael Collins Piper
 |
. If you can imagine the average old-fashioned
American kitchen pantry (say six feet
by ten feet) stacked six feet high from wall
to wall with documents and files, then
you’ve got the idea of how many top secret
documents American born traitor Jonathan Pollard accumulated
on behalf of his Israeli handlers.
. . .That’s right, it wasn’t just a briefcase or two of highly classified
U.S. defense and intelligence documents that Pollard
made away with during the mid-1980s when he was an analyst
for the U.S. Naval Investigative Service. No, instead, it
was more than a million pages of documents that Pollard
gave to his favorite foreign nation, documents from almost
every major American intelligence-gathering agency. And
considering the actual number of secret documents Pollard
spirited away, it’s almost an even bet—according to most
informed observers—that there were “higher ups” who were
collaborating with Pollard and letting him do precisely what
he did.
. . .These days, of course, Pollard is serving out a life sentence
in a federal prison, much to the horror and disgust of many“respected” citizens in America who are devoted supporters
of Israel, folks who think it was justifiable for Pollard to steal
American secrets and give them to Israel because, or so they
say, “Israel is America’s closest ally.”

. . .In contrast to that point of view, many veteran American
military and intelligence officers say that Pollard did more
damage to America’s security than any other spy in American
history. And what’s important to keep in mind—in these
days when the regime of George W. Bush is constantly talking
about nuclear weapons of mass destruction in the
Middle East (everyone but Israel’s, that is)—is that much of
Pollard’s thievery involved the procurement of data designed
to help advance Israel’s covert nuclear weapons program.
. . .Now, for the first time, from a law enforcement officer’s
inside perspective, here is an account of the investigation
that nabbed Pollard. Ronald J. Olive, who spent 22 years as
a special agent with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service,
mostly in foreign counterintelligence, has written Capturing
Jonathan Pollard: How One of the Most Notorious Spies in American History Was Brought to Justice.
. . .This 300-page book, supplemented with illustrations, is a
fascinating “spy story,” but unlike the brilliant novels of John
LeCarre (who has dared to tackle the intrigues of Israel and
has thus been called “anti-Semitic”), this is not fiction. This
is real-life drama surrounding the strange intrigues of a
bizarre little man who is now considered a national hero in
Israel and for whom there are periodic demands from
American Zionist pressure groups for his release.
. .However, the U.S. Naval Institute has published this volume,
giving its distinguished imprimatur to this first-hand
account of the betrayal of the United States by its so-called “ally” and by one of its own citizens.
. . .What strengthens Olive’s account is that it is remarkably
detached and yet still passionate, and while quite detailed
(almost legalistic), still lively. The reader gets the feel of the
nature of the spy hunt that nabbed this American traitor. The
author keeps focused on the solid facts that are known about
Pollard and details his own specific involvement in (and
knowledge of) the investigation of the traitor. The author
avoids wide-ranging speculation about Pollard and leaves
that up to others. So this book is no shrill propaganda screed
by a critic of Israel, written as a counter to the pro-Pollard
(and pro-Israel) rantings that have predominated in literature
on the topic.
. . .There have been other books focusing on Pollard’s
crimes, largely by Jewish authors who put a favorable twist
on his treason, saying it was essentially a good thing since it
was helpful to Israel (even though it was treasonous).
However, this is the first-ever completely objective (and thus
highly damning) account by an American law enforcement
official whose only evident axes to grind are enforcing the
law and fighting treason. A good read that deserves widespread
recognition. You’ll find Capturing fascinating.
(Issue #4, January 22, 2007, AMERICAN
FREE PRESS)
|