Israel has
admitted to assassinating a Palestinian Liberation Organization leader 25 years
ago. The country was long suspected in the killing, but military censors only
recently cleared publication of the information.
Top-selling
Israeli newspaper Yediot Aharonot published a report Thursday in which the
government admitted to the killing of Khalil al-Wazir, saying the operation was
planned by the Mossad spy agency.
Al-Wazir,
also known as Abu Jihad, was shot dead April 16, 1988 during a commando raid on
the PLO headquarters.
"Israel
killed the number two man in the PLO, Abu Jihad, in Tunis in 1988, it can now
be reported," the paper said. "The intelligence part of the
assassination was overseen by the Mossad, and the operation side was carried
out by [the commando unit] Sayeret Matkal."
'Marked for
death'
Al-Wazir
served as deputy to long-time PLO leader Yasser Arafat, and played a lead role
in organizing the 1987-1994 intifada uprising against Israeli occupation.
Nahum Lev,
who commanded the operation, spoke about the assassination before his death in
2000 in an interview that was never published.
"I had
read every page of the file on him," he said. "Abu Jihad was
connected to horrific acts against civilians. He was marked for death. I shot
him with no hesitation."
"For
us, it was the state of Israel which assassinated Abu Jihad," said Mahmud
al-Alul, a former assistant to al-Wazir and current senior official in the
Fatah movement of Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas.
"Everybody
knows who the prime minister was and the defense minister, and the heads of the
security establishment," he added. "For us, they are responsible for
killing him."
The
assassination
Details of
the operation were published after six months of negotiations between the paper
and Israel's military censors.
The report
says that 26 commandos arrived in two groups outside Al-Wazir's Tunis house on
the evening of April 15. During the raid, Lev shot both a bodyguard and
Al-Wazir himself. A second bodyguard and a gardener were also killed.
"It
was too bad about the gardener," Lev said. "But in operations like
this, you have to ensure that all potential resistance is neutralized."
dr/msh (AFP, AP)

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