
“The Israeli right rejoiced as Jonathan Pollard, a convicted American spy who passed along secret documents to Israel in the 1980s, received a hero’s welcome at Ben-Gurion Airport early Wednesday morning.”
“Standing on the tarmac alongside his wife Esther, the former U.S. naval analyst, who spent three decades in American prison, was welcomed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. “Welcome home,” Netanyahu told the couple, “now you can start life anew, with freedom and happiness. Now you are at home.””
“Pollard was serving as a U.S. Navy intelligence analyst in the 1980s when he made contact with an Israeli official in New York; he began passing on U.S. secrets to Israel, specifically on the capabilities of American spy agencies, in exchange for money. He was arrested in 1985 and sentenced to life in prison in 1987.”
“Pollard was eventually released in 2015, but his parole forbade him from traveling to Israel, where his wife lives. Last year, Pollard publicly appealed to Netanyahu asking him to urge President Donald Trump to commute his parole so that he could leave for Israel and care for his wife, who has cancer.”
“The Israeli right has for years viewed Pollard as a forgotten national hero, particularly as successive Israeli leaders have had to balance their sense of duty to him with their relationship to the United States. Yet their sensitivity to Pollard’s case is astonishing when compared to Israel’s lasting, vengeful attitude toward Mordechai Vanunu, a Mizrahi Israeli who spent 18 years in an Israeli prison — 11 of them in solitary confinement — for revealing parts of Israel’s nuclear weapons program to the British press in 1986.”
“Since Vanunu’s release in 2004, Israel has made his life hell: banning him from leaving the country and speaking to tourists or people from abroad, forcing him to update the security authorities whenever he moves into a new residence, and other draconian measures that have been greenlit by Israel’s High Court.”
“As opposed to Pollard, Vanunu never provided intelligence to a foreign agent, was not convicted of passing information to another country, and did not reportedly turn to various different countries to try and sell his information. Furthermore, Vanunu never led a double life as a spy, but rather acted according to his conscience. He handed over information on and photos of the Dimona nuclear reactor to the press in exchange for little money.”
“The basis for Israel’s campaign of vengeance against Vanunu goes far beyond the nuclear facility in Dimona. It also lies in the fact that unlike Pollard, who is an American Jew of Ashkenazi descent, Vanunu is a Moroccan Jew who grew up in the ghetto of the southern city of Be’er Sheva, and linked the Mizrahi struggle for equality with the need for reconciliation with the Palestinians at a time when the government put down anyone — Mizrahi or Palestinian — who dared to oppose its policies.”
“Unlike Pollard, who worked to prop up Israel’s violent regime, Vanunu is a Mizrahi Jew who does not buy into Zionism’s racial hierarchy, which has always seen Mizrahim as both inferior to Israel’s Ashkenazi hegemony and as a threat to its political, economic, and cultural power.”
“While Pollard’s offense was by all accounts treacherous, the fact that he acted on behalf of the Jewish state, in the eyes of the Israeli right, erases the criminality of his treason. Vanunu’s politics, on the other hand, pose a central threat to the Israeli regime, offering a vision of freedom and equality for all rather than oppression for Palestinians and crumbs for Mizrahim. Vanunu’s biggest crime, then, was that he broke out of the narrow box Zionism had designed for Mizrahim like him.”
Read more: Praising the Ashkenazi spy, punishing the Mizrahi dissident
2021-week27