WSJ: Israel Spied
On US Talks With Iran
Israel denies eavesdropping on
confidential negotiations that it
used to lobby Congress, undermine an
Iran deal
By Al Jazeera Staff
Washington has
accused Israel of spying on
closed-door international talks with
Iran about its nuclear program and
relaying information from the
meetings to the U.S. Congress as a
way to build a case against the
deal, The
Wall Street Journal reported.
Citing more than a
dozen current and former U.S. and
Israeli officials, the WSJ said
Israel eavesdropped on the
negotiations and gathered
information from “confidential U.S.
briefings,” “informants” and
“diplomatic contacts in Europe.”
Israel has denied
the charges and said it received
information about the confidential
Iran talks by monitoring Iranian
leaders and discussions with French
officials about the negotiations.
The White House
discovered the alleged spying by
intercepting communications among
Israeli intelligence officials that
“the U.S. believed could have come
only from access to the confidential
talks,” the WSJ said, citing unnamed
U.S. officials.
While the United
States and Israel are longtime
allies who tend to tolerate spying
on each other, the White House was
angered by Israel’s sharing of
confidential details about
negotiations with Iran with U.S.
lawmakers in order to undercut
support for the deal, the WSJ said.
“It is one thing
for the U.S. and Israel to spy on
each other. It is another thing for
Israel to steal U.S. secrets and
play them back to U.S. legislators
to undermine U.S. diplomacy,” an
unnamed senior U.S. official who was
briefed on the matter told the WSJ.
The report said
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu and Israeli Ambassador Ron
Dermer sought to increase pressure
on President Barack Obama and
decided the best way to unravel the
deal was to lobby Congress before
any announcement about the talks was
made.
Obama
administration officials told the
WSJ that they feel betrayed by
Israel, and that the relationship
between the two nations has changed
as a result.
“People feel
personally sold out,” a senior
administration official told the
WSJ. “That’s where the Israelis
really better be careful because a
lot of these people will not only be
around for this administration but
possibly the next one as well.”
U.S.-Israel
relations took a hit in the last
week when newly reelected Netanyahu
declared just before Tuesday’s
election began that there would be
no Palestinian state on his watch.
While Netanyahu appeared to
backtrack during U.S. interviews
last Thursday, Obama — who has
sponsored failed talks aimed at
creating a Palestinian state — issued
rebukes in his own public statements
that day.
“We take
[Netanyahu] at his word when he said
that it wouldn't happen during his
prime ministership, and so that's
why we've got to evaluate what other
options are available to make sure
that we don't see a chaotic
situation in the region,” he said.