© Jeff Haynes / Agence France Presse
The director of a supposedly independent group of Israeli lawyers privately admitted to a US embassy official it acted as a proxy for the Israeli government,
a leaked US embassy cable shows.
Nitsana Darshan-Leitner confided in 2007 that her
Shurat HaDin group in the past "took direction ... on which cases to pursue" and still "receives evidence" from the
Mossad and from Israel's
National Security Council.
This is in direct contradiction to public claims, such as on its website which states it is a "fully independent" organization "unaffiliated with any political party or governmental body."
The group has fought several high-profile "
lawfare" cases against Palestine solidarity activists around the world in recent years.
Mossad lead The leaked cable was unearthed by lobbying transparency outfit
SpinWatch in an article earlier this month. It was one of the US embassy cables leaked by former US soldier
Chelsea (formerly Bradley) Manning in 2010 and published by
WikiLeaks in 2011.
The cable's author quotes Darshan-Leitner as explaining the government's rationale for using a proxy rather than going to local courts directly: "The National Security Council (NSC) legal office saw the use of civil courts as a way to do things that they are not authorized to do."
"Among her contacts, Leitner listed Udi Levy at the NSC and Uzi Beshaya at the Mossad, both key [US] Embassy contacts on anti-terrorist finance cooperation," wrote the unnamed official who apparently authored the cable after meeting with Leitner in 2007.
The NSC is an Israeli military planning body led by generals and other senior military figures - including top Mossad figures.
At the time of the cable was written, the NSC's head was Ilan Mizrahi, a former deputy chief of Mossad.
Nitsana Darshan-Leitner and Shurat HaDin did not reply to an email sent yesterday seeking comment on the issues raised in this article.
Comment: There are no 'Islamic extremists' in Mali. There are, however, U.S./French agents and special forces stirring up trouble so that France, on behalf of its corporate owners, can send in troops to keep the natives away from 'her' uranium and gold mines.
The War in Mali and AFRICOM's Agenda: Target China