Israeli Website Claims ISIS
Commander Revealed As Mossad Agent
Libyan security forces arrested a Daesh commander in
the city of Benghazi — only to find out soon after
that the man they had captured, Ephraim Benjamin,
was also an agent of Mossad, the Israeli
intelligence service. Was he working to defeat Daesh
or to strengthen it?
By Whitney
Webb
September 18,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- There
has long been speculation
regarding ties between the Israeli government and
the terror group Daesh, otherwise known as the
Islamic State. Such speculation has been fueled by
Israel’s reference to Daesh as a “useful
tool” and its
acknowledgment that it views a Syria under complete
Daesh control
as preferable to
the continuation of the current Syrian government.
It is supported as well by the extensive aid and
even medical treatments that
Daesh militants have received
from Israel. However, allegations have recently
emerged that could suggest that the connection is
even deeper than previously believed.
According to a report from the Israeli website
Inian Merkazi and
Abna news agency,
Libyan security forces arrested a Daesh commander in
the city of Benghazi — only to find out soon after
that the man they had captured, Ephraim Benjamin,
was also an agent of Mossad, the Israeli
intelligence service. Benjamin, who was known in
Libya as Abu Hafs, had begun work in Libya after the
2011 NATO-led invasion of Libya that ousted former
leader Muammar Gaddafi.
Middle East Monitor reported
that Hafs/Benjamin was said to have become a
prominent imam in a Benghazi mosque, before becoming
a Daesh leader who commanded more than 200 fighters.
Middle East Monitor has since removed the report
from its site.
Libyan
authorities have allegedly accused Benjamin of
gathering intelligence information on Daesh for
Mossad and Middle East Monitor noted that some
Libyan news outlets took to calling him the “Mossad
shiekh.” Inian Merkazi suggested that Benjamin’s
arrest showed that Mossad was influential in the
rise of Daesh in the region, given that Benjamin
began work in Libya in 2011 while Daesh did not
begin operation in Libya until 2015.
However,
MintPress News was unable to independently verify
the claims of Inian Merkaz linking the Daesh
commander to the Israeli Mossad.
Other
regional media outlets, such as Masr Alarabia, have
described Benjamin as being one of Mossad’s
“Arabists” — Mossad agents with Arab features who
fluently speak Arabic and use local dialects. Such
“Arabists” have gained a reputation for infiltrating
Palestinian protests and activist organizations, as
well as assassinating prominent Palestinians who are
vocally against the Israeli occupation.
However,
now it appears that Mossad “Arabists” may be
involved in more than the suppressing Palestinian
dissent. Given that Israel has repeatedly stated it
does not want Daesh to be defeated, it is clear that
Benjamin, who allegedly commanded hundreds of men in
Daesh, was not “gathering intelligence” in order to
defeat Daesh but rather to strengthen it.
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Given the reports of Benjamin’s arrest, last
year’s strange-seeming statement by Israel’s
military intelligence chief, Maj. Gen. Herzi
Halevy, makes more sense.
Halevy had stated
that Israel does not want to see Daesh defeated
and also had expressed concern about the recent
offensives against Daesh territory, lamenting
the “most difficult” situation the group had
found itself in at the time. He further added
that Israel would do “all we can so as to not
find ourselves in such a situation” where Daesh
faces defeat.
In light of
Benjamin’s arrest, part of Halevy’s concern for
Daesh may have been born out of the fear that a
Daesh defeat could put the lives of Mossad agents,
as well as years of their work within Daesh, at
risk.
Daesh
has long been regarded by Israeli think tanks and
politicians as a “strategic
tool” for
furthering Western and Israeli goals in the region.
In the case of Syria, Daesh was seen as a covert
means of overthrowing Syrian president Bashar
al-Assad, an event that Israeli intelligence
believed
would result in
Iran’s loss of “its only ally” in the region.
On a
larger scale, however, Daesh ultimately serves to
help divide whole nations — like Iraq, Syria and
others — into pieces. This is
a key component of
the Israeli strategic plan, otherwise known as the
Yinon plan, to dominate the Middle East by dividing
and then conquering its neighbors.
With
allegations of Israel’s direct involvement in
facilitating the terror group’s activities
continuing to grow, it’s become increasingly
difficult to defend the long-standing assertion that
Israel has been a
“neutral” figure in
the Syrian conflict and the rise of Daesh.
This
article was first published by
MintPress News
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