Uzi Mahnaimi, Tel Aviv
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AN Egyptian millionaire who mysteriously fell to his death from the balcony of his London flat after being named as a Mossad spy was writing a book that threatened to expose the murky world of Arab-Israeli espionage.
Ashraf Marwan, the son-in-law of the late President Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt, was more than halfway through a book about the 1973 Yom Kippur war - in which he is alleged to have played a key intelligence role - when his body was discovered last week.
Marwan’s death, which police are treating as “unexplained”, has sent ripples across the Middle East and shocked some of Britain's wealthiest people.
The 62-year-old financier was a former shareholder of Chelsea football club and counted Ken Bates, its former chairman, Adnan Khashoggi, the Saudi arms dealer, and Tiny Rowland, the late business tycoon, among his acquaintances.
But it was Marwan’s espionage activities that have surrounded his death with intrigue. Israeli intelligence sources claimed this weekend that he had been one of the greatest spies recruited by Mossad.
They said Marwan had supplied the Israeli secret service with a treasure trove of information, including the secret plans drawn up by Egypt’s leaders to cross the Suez Canal and attack Israel in 1973.
Ahron Bregman, an Israeli historian at King’s College London, however, believes Marwan was a double agent who misled the Israelis over Egypt’s plans for the war. This weekend Bregman said the Egyptian had left three messages on his answerphone last Tuesday, urgently asking him to make contact.
“I was out, but eventually spoke to him at around 4pm,” said Bregman. “He asked me about the recent libel case in Israel.”
The case involved two former Israeli intelligence officers, one of whom had accused the other of leaking Marwan’s name as a spy. Bregman said Marwan had described the court case as “a headache” and asked to meet him at King’s College the following day.
“It was very clear that we were going to meet, but there was no call on Wednesday and I heard later in the day that he had died,” said Bregman, who claimed in an Egyptian newspaper article in 2003 that Marwan had been a double agent. “He told me never to send anything to his address because it was watched. He was always very cautious and never referred to himself by name.”
Marwan fell four floors to his death from his flat at Carlton House Terrace overlooking St James’s Park. Police are exploring three possibilities: that he was murdered, that he jumped - although no suicide note has been found - or that he fell.
One possibility is that Marwan was taking medicinal drugs that made him faint. He had had three heart operations, according to a friend, Marwan, lived with his wife at the London flat where he died, was writing about the Yom Kippur war, in which he may have played a key intelligence role, and “had been very unwell”.
Other friends believe that he feared being assassinated after being “outed” as a Mossad spy.
The son of an Egyptian general, Marwan studied at Cairo university where he met Mona, Nasser’s daughter. He was 21 and she was 17. The couple married a year later and went on to have two sons, Gamal and Ahmed.
Marwan was soon leading a double life. In 1969, according to Israeli sources, he slipped into the Israeli embassy in London and - before being ejected - told a security guard: “Send my name to Tel Aviv. They’ll know who I am. I’ll be back in a week’s time.”
A week later one of Mossad’s most senior controllers - known by the initial D - flew to Britain and lavished five-star hospitality on Marwan. It was the start of a 30-year relationship that saw highly classified information, including the minutes of meetings between Anwar Sadat, the Egyptian president, and other world leaders regularly passing into Mossad’s hands.
“It’s as if we were sleeping in the bedroom of the Egyptian presidential couple,” recalled an Israeli source.
Marwan, who worked in Sadat’s office, made only two conditions in return for his services: he was to be paid £50,000 for each significant meeting he had with his Israeli handlers and he insisted that D was to be his sole controller.
Before long Marwan’s raw intelligence became essential reading for Golda Meir, the Israeli prime minister, and Moshe Dayan, her defence minister. “When information arrived from Marwan it was sent directly to the leaders,” said an insider. “It was better than any John le Carré espionage thriller.”
By 1972 Marwan was a millionaire and had revealed details to Mossad about secret arms deals between Egypt and the Soviet Union, according to Israeli sources.
But the best was yet to come. Marwan invited D to a meeting in London at which he handed his controller a suitcase full of documents outlining Egypt’s plans to cross Suez and attack Israel. Intelligence sources claim that overconfident Israeli military chiefs ignored the plans and they were left to sit in a safe in Tel Aviv.
In September 1973 King Hussein of Jordan tipped off Meir that Syria was also about to launch an attack. Meir sought Marwan’s advice.
But Marwan could not be reached. Finally, only 24 hours before the outbreak of war, a message was intercepted in the Mossad HQ in Tel Aviv: “Meet me tomorrow in London.”
Marwan managed to leave Sadat’s side by convincing the Egyptian president that he should travel to Libya to warn Colonel Gadaffi about the imminent conflict. From Tripoli, he flew to Malta and on to London.
Mossad stopped El-Al’s last flight to London as it prepared for take-off. The Boeing 707 waited on the tarmac for more than 30 minutes. Passengers saw a car speeding towards the aircraft and two fair-haired men climbed in. They were Zvi Zamir, the head of Mossad, and D, Marwan’s controller.
According to Israeli sources, Zamir rang Tel Aviv in the early hours of the morning and told colleagues: “Call Golda [Meir]. It’s today at 6pm, both Syria and Egypt.”
Marwan’s tardiness raised suspicions that he was a double agent but he was exonerated by Mossad. In Egypt Marwan remained a hero and was decorated by Sadat before moving to London, where he became active in the business world.
Meanwhile, in Tel Aviv, Marwan’s former controller, D, received the news of his death with sadness. With Marwan’s book unfinished, perhaps the motives for his secret life will never be fully explained.
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Just think that Ashraf Marwan was only one informer of the MOSSAD amazing intelligence ...... what an interesting job is to be a part of the wise and brilliant side of the ME conflict. As far as I see the story, Marwan was a true lover of Israel other wise, what agent will harshly leave his country in the eve of war to warn "hi enemies" that his native country to attack them the day after?
People should know that any such information change the all war story and let the other side, Israel, to arrange forces as needed to face the starting of the war. That why, in any case, I think that Marwan did excellent job for Israel. I think that the Israeli - Palestinian conflict can't be solved in our generation just because the Arabs in Palestine don't accept the Jews in Palestine as equal entitled to their own national state. The Arabs in Palestine want all Palestine for their own. So don't expect to peace in the near future.
Abe Bird, Brussles, Belgium
MR Zakito,
First of all, the Palestinians never had any problem with the jews and therefore lived together for centuries. The same scenarios along the North African coast, Jews lived in peace and freedom for centuries and during the Spanish inquistion they fled to Arab lands (N-Africa). For what reason may I ask? Simply for peace and security. When they were killed in other parts of Europe (France, UK, Germany etc..) their only shelter was the Muslim countries that welcomed them and gave them shelter. So don't bring in your Zionist ideology into the Arab Jewish conflict because no nation on earth looked after the Jewish nation like the Arab Muslims.
Dahmane, London,
Bravo, zakito mir, for loading so many untruths into one post. Readers who want the truth should read Jimmy Carter's excellent book Peace Not Apartheid. Nothing that zakito mir posted here is true.
Shanda, St Louis, USA
A leak? It cannot be so easy! Right now when "operation fear" is under way in London!! Right now when Mr Brown was about to bring back the British troops from Irak!! Oooops! Sad but true, but all seems more of the same. Too many coincidences.
The order from Washington is clear: UK forces must remain in Irak until the end...
marcello, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Hollywood should read the article & make a movie about it. I`ve no doubt it will make a lot of money & if it`s done right I bet it will be a n excelleent candidate f or The Oscar.
Remember, you first read tt here.
Of course, I know a hefty royalty will be deposited in my name.
Dream on, Rashelle.
rashelle newlin, Lake Forest Il, U.S.A.
It was never any real secret that Egypt would cross the canal because it was a serious Israeli mistake to remain in the position which it couild not keep - without long-term and impossible mobilisation. The secrets had to do with possibility to make the Egyptian succes to a honorable peace.
There two extra factors affected the outcome.
Syrian, other possible participations, created military and political uncertainty.
The foreseen use of the oil weapon doubled the effect of uncertainties.
Thus the war and the crossing were no secrets. Lots of other things were it. But in 1956 too it was an Egyptian, Dr Henry Curiel in Paris, who delivered the info about the allied strength, then to Nasser, to convince him. It did not work like expected. Mr HC died too, be it later, after the 1973 war. He was shot dead.
You shoul have a look at his case too. It ties. May-be Robert Maxwell ties too. He was interested in all that in 1973 after the Jom Kipput war.
P J Järvinen, Copenhagen, Denmark
the arab israeli conflict, which seems to draw much attention, is rooted in the arab unwillingnes to share the land of israel with the jews. even though the arabs originated in the arab peninusla (saudi arabia), from which they came out to conquer their empire, that stretched from spain to india, forcing their religion and culture on all the people they conquered, they insist that land is an arab land, and refuse to share it with the jews, who came without force, bought land and settled on it, not forcing their religion and culture upon the local arabs.
for many centuries that land was no longer under arab rule. when the jews started to move back to that land, it was a part of the ottoman emprie. in the early tweniteth century, the british removed the ottomans and took over control of the land.
spies do not create national intentions and goals. the part marwan took in this never ending conflict, if he was a mossad agent, or if he was a double agent, is not of much significance.
zakito mir, burnaby, bc, canada