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Tens of thousands of Israelis converged on the Knesset building in Jerusalem to protest against the passage of a new law that would curb the powers of courts. Picture: BLOOMBERG
Tens of thousands of Israelis converged on the Knesset building in Jerusalem to protest against the passage of a new law that would curb the powers of courts. Picture: BLOOMBERG

Herzliya — Every morning Amir sets up a protest stand to warn passers-by that Israeli democracy is in danger from hotly contested legislation to curb the courts.

But he is an unusual protester — a former Mossad spy who never before questioned the state for which he once risked his life on foreign missions.

Amir, who declined to be fully named due to his sensitive previous secret roles, is among former veterans of Mossad, Israel’s foreign intelligence service, who are taking to the streets in protest at their government’s judiciary overhaul.

Last week, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s nationalist-religious coalition passed the first phase of the legislation, limiting supreme court powers to void government decisions deemed “unreasonable”, despite months of protests by hundreds of thousands of Israelis.

They have drawn the support of reservists in elite special forces units and fighter pilots who have threatened not to show up for duty, and the dissension has spread among former members of the Mossad. Some serving Mossad officers have joined the protests, which they are permitted to do, two former officers said.

In Amir’s case, he said he had suspended for now the advisory assistance he had provided to Mossad after retiring.

“I served different administrations faithfully for 20 years, even ones that did not reflect my political views. I accepted the outcome of the election last year but when they (the current government) changed the rules of the game, that was it.

“They have crossed a red line and have broken their contract. People like myself are no longer bound by our duty,” Amir said in the Mediterranean coastal city of Herzliya, close to where he has his stand.

Morale concerns are emerging within Mossad with some inside the secretive agency considering early retirement, according to chat messages seen by Reuters.

A spokesperson for the prime minister’s office declined to comment. The government denies the judicial reforms jeopardise democracy, saying the top court has been “over-interventionist”.

A former head of Mossad, Efraim Halevy, said there are no signs such disaffection is affecting its vital abilities.

Reuters spoke with two other former Mossad officials who are also involved in the protests and fearful of the impact the legislation will have on Israel’s security system.

The decision by former spies to take part in protests raises the stakes, touching a legendary institution that has helped Israel defeat Arab states in many conflicts and wage a shadow war against arch-foe Iran.

“Many friends and colleagues of mine who served together feel that what is happening is damaging the security power of Israel,” said Haim Tomer, former head of Mossad’s intelligence gathering division and of its international liaison wing.

Tomer said Mossad was viewed with “a deep sense of respect” abroad. “Whether this deep sense of respect will survive, I don’t know.”

Mossad has long been viewed as one of the world’s most capable spy services. It has carried out missions such as hunting down Arab enemies through Europe, capturing Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann and, with agents disguised as scuba diving instructors, spiriting Ethiopian Jews out to Israel.

“When you are on an operation, you need to have belief in the system and you block out everything else,” said Gil, another Mossad veteran who withheld his full name. “Who’s to say now that you risk your life and you won’t have doubts whether it’s worth it, with everything going on and with this government.”

Reuters

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