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World

US-Israel relations hit nadir over spy allegations

May 16, 2014 08:30

ByAnshel Pfeffer, Anshel Pfeffer

1 min read

Two high-profile reports in Newsweek magazine on Israel’s espionage campaign against its American allies are a sign that the relationship between the two countries has sunk to a new low point.

The reports quote former American intelligence officials and Congressional staffers who claim that Israel has “crossed red lines” in its attempts to obtain confidential information.

The Newsweek reports mainly contain quotes from unnamed American sources and, besides an unattributed story of a man hiding in the air vents of former vice president Al Gore’s hotel room during a visit to Jerusalem 16 years ago, offer no new details.

The claims that Israel conducts more aggressive spying against America than any of its other allies run counter to assurances of senior Israeli intelligence chiefs. They say that since the sentencing of Jewish-American spy Jonathan Pollard in 1987, Israel has been extremely careful not to conduct spying missions on US soil. Israeli ministers denied the claims, with Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz insisting that “Israel does not spy in the US, does not enlist spies in the US, and does not do intelligence gathering in the US.”