Information has come to
light about an Israeli Arab who was arrested last month at
Israel’s Ben-Gurion Airport after a return flight from Germany. Khaled
Kashkoush, 29, comes from the village of Qalansuwa in central Israel and had
been studying medicine for some years in Göttingen, Germany. His arrest was initially
reported in Spiegel Online International.
Kashkoush has admitted during
interrogation that while in Germany he was recruited by Hezbollah agents. In
2002 he made contact with Hisham Hassan, a Lebanese doctor who is also
head of the German branch of the Orphaned Children Project Lebanon. That
organization, in turn, raises funds for the Lebanese Martyr Institute—part of
Hezbollah’s civilian network in Lebanon.
The Martyr Institute, which
supports the families of Hezbollah terrorists killed during operations, spreads
Khomeinist ideology both in Lebanon and abroad, and raises funds for Hezbollah,
works similarly to the Iranian Shahid Foundation. In 2007 the U.S. Treasury
Department declared the Shahid Foundation illegal and the FBI raided and
closed its U.S. branch, known as the Goodwill Charitable
Organization, in Dearborn, Michigan.
Kashkoush met every two weeks with
Dr. Hassan and also helped him administer the Orphaned Children Project. After
three years Dr. Hassan put Kashkoush in contact with a Lebanese called “Rami”
who turned out to be the senior Hezbollah recruiter Muhammad Hashem, well known
to Israeli security.
Hashem gave Kashkoush a total of
13,000 euros. In return Kashkoush was supposed to provide information about
Israeli nationals studying abroad who might be potential Hezbollah recruits,
and to try and find work in an Israeli hospital so he could gather information
about security personnel or soldiers being treated there. At one of their
meetings Hashem also gave Kashkoush a map of the latter’s home village,
Qalansuwa, that had been downloaded from Google Earth and asked him to locate
buildings there.
According to Spiegel Online
International’s report, Kashkoush was aiming to get a job at Rambam
Hospital in the Israeli city of Haifa before being nabbed at the airport.
Kashkoush and his handler, Hashem, had apparently been in touch only via
unregistered cellphone and email.
The case is deeply troubling to
Israeli security because it fits into a pattern where Hezbollah and other
terror organizations have been using Israeli Arabs as a pool for recruits.
Although in the cases of three terror attacks by Israeli Arabs in Jerusalem
this year no clear links to organizations seem yet to have been found, also
this year two Israeli Arabs have been indicted for passing information on strategic
sites to Al Qaeda and six more have been arrested for
allegedly setting up
an Al Qaeda-affiliated network and plotting to shoot down
President Bush’s helicopter while he was visiting Israel.
Hezbollah, for its part,
particularly exploits the fact that Israeli Arabs can easily be contacted and
recruited while abroad, of which Kashkoush’s case is a classic instance.
Israel, thus, gets the worst of all worlds: while frequently being slandered as
an “apartheid state” it grants its Arab minority full freedoms that the global
jihad movement, and a small but increasing number of Israeli Arabs themselves,
exploit to Israel’s detriment.
And making life still harder for
Israel is the fact that in Europe particularly, Hezbollah can operate freely
because it’s not defined as a terrorist organization. Given that Hezbollah is
responsible, among countless other acts, for blowing up the U.S. embassy in
Lebanon in 1983, the Israeli embassy in Buenos Aires in 1992, the AMIA Jewish
cultural center in Buenos Aires in 1994, and in 2006 for killing and kidnapping
Israeli soldiers on Israeli territory while firing thousands of rockets at
Israeli civilians, the fact that Europe does not classify it as terrorist may
seem astonishing.
European countries claim to fear,
though, that doing so would harm prospects for Middle East peace talks.
European countries also, of course, have lucrative commercial ties with
Hezbollah’s patron Iran.
In other words, the Israeli
security services have their work cut out for them. In the case of Khaled
Kashkoush they appear to have succeeded. Since—as in other Western
countries—they’re the main or even only thing that stands between normal life
and catastrophe, one hopes they’ll keep working very hard.