A perfect spy
By Khaled Diab
An
ageing billionaire falls to his death in Mayfair. Vital evidence disappears. The latest Le Carré novel? No,
a real life Middle Eastern spy thriller.
October 2007
If John le
Carré is looking for inspiration for a new novel in this post-Cold War world
about the hazards, moral ambiguity, intrigue and murkiness of the spy game, he
should turn his attention away from Eastern Europe and towards the Middle East –
and to Ashraf Marwan, the Egyptian master spy, in particular.
Like many good spy thrillers,
the saga begins with a death. On 27 June, the 62-year-old
Egyptian billionaire fell to his death from the balcony of his luxury
fifth-floor apartment overlooking St James’s park in London. At first, the police
were treating the fall as “unexplained” but not suspicious. But then the plot
thickened, as it emerged that the dead man was no ordinary tycoon but a former
spy. Then, vital evidence began to vanish.
In August, The Times learned that the only known copy of
Marwan’s draft memoirs, which promised to reveal the truth about his role as a
spy, had disappeared from his apartment. Three volumes of the book, each about
200 pages, were taken as well as the tapes on to which they had been dictated.
A source said that on the day he died, Marwan was due to fly to the US to
finalise the last chapter.
The newspaper also revealed that the shoes the dead
Marwan was still wearing had wandered off from the mortuary. The footwear could
have provided vital forensic clues as to the cause of his fall, his family
believe.
Although the fact that he was a
spook is pretty certain, the question of which side he was on remains shrouded in
mystery. Was Marwan a profiteering spy for Israel who gave away vital
information ahead of the 1973 war or a cunning double agent for Egypt who fed
the Israelis with misleading disinformation?
Marwan’s identity as a spy was
revealed by Israeli historian Ahron Bregman – who was due to meet the late billionaire at
around the time of his death – and the prominent American journalist and author
Howard Blum in his 2003 book The Eve of Destruction: The Untold Story of
the Yom Kippur War.
Both men had been tipped off by
the disgruntled former head of Israeli military intelligence at the time of the
1973 war, General Eli Zeira, as part of his ongoing conflict with Zvi Zamir,
the then head of Mossad, over apportioning blame for the Israeli intelligence
failure in the run-up to the joint Egyptian-Syrian attack which was accompanied
by an Arab oil embargo. Zeira maintains that Mossad was duped by Marwan’s
artful feeding of fact mixed with fiction to mislead Israel as to Egypt’s
intentions to wage war in 1973, while Zamir believes that Marwan was a genuine
Mossad agent.
To get to the bottom of the
story, we need to flash back to the late 1960s. Marwan was the model Egyptian
insider of the clique-based order of the time. A chemist by training, he was
the son of an officer in President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s presidential guard and
married the late president’s daughter, Mona. While in the army, he became an
adviser to his father-in-law and, after the president’s death, advised his
successor Anwar Sadat, rising to head Egypt’s massive military-industrial
complex.
In 1969, he came to London on
the pretence of seeking medical care and, according to Blum, he visited a
doctor known to be a covert Arab-Israeli go-between. Along with his X-rays, the
Egyptian handed the doctor a file crammed with official Egyptian state documents
that he wanted delivered to the Israeli embassy in London.
Although Mossad deemed the
documents to be genuine, intelligence agencies are suspicious of so-called “walk-ins”.
“It was decided, however, that this walk-in’s credentials were worth the gamble,”
Blum writes.
Operating under various code names, including
‘Angel’, ‘Babylon’ and ‘the In-Law’, Marwan provided Mossad with so much
information that the agency must have felt like it had died and gone to
espionage heaven. One agent reportedly described the situation “as if we had someone
sleeping in Nasser’s bed”.
Armed with this information, Mossad developed what became known as “the concept” which assumed that Egypt would not wage war to reclaim the Sinai unless it possessed long-range bombers and was backed up by a genuine coalition of Arab countries.
In April 1973 (some five months
before the actual attack), Marwan sent a secret message to his Israeli
operatives warning of an imminent attack. Israel immediately tens of thousands
of reservists and deployed several brigades in the Sinai. The state of alert
lasted three months and cost around $35m (around $130m today).
Given that Israeli society and
the economy grind to a halt at times of major conflict, the second Marwan
warning on the eve of the actual war was not heeded by the Israeli cabinet and
Egypt managed to score spectacular early successes, turned around only with the
aid of massive airlifts from America.
So, was Marwan a cunning double
agent for Egypt or was his leaking of information perhaps found out and plans
hastily changed in the spring of 1973? Although Zamir maintains that he was
working for the Israelis, Zeira, Bergman and Blum, among many others, are not
convinced.
“On one occasion, when I asked
[Marwan] what kind of book [his memoirs] would be, he said that everyone in
Egypt, the whole system, worked to embarrass Israel. I concluded from this that
he really was a double agent,” the Israeli historian told Haaretz.
The Egyptian establishment seems
to concur. President Hosni Mubarak described the billionaire as a “patriotic
man who served his country ... although it is not yet the right time to reveal
exactly how”. Egypt also lavished him with a major state funeral.
That leaves the unanswered
question that, if Marwan was indeed murdered, who did it? Could it have been
Israeli or Egyptian intelligence fearful of what he might reveal in his
memoirs? Could it have been other intelligence organisations, since it is
believed by some analysts that Marwan was also a vital link between Egypt and
western agencies reassuring them that Egypt's war aims were limited to
regaining its territory? Could it have been a business associate in the murky
world of the arms trade through which Marwan is reputed to have amassed his
enormous fortune?
On 7 July, Egypt’s al-Masry
al-Youm, citing anonymous sources, reported that four key witnesses
were waiting to meet Marwan in an office building across the street from where
he lived and allegedly witnessed his apparent suicide.
At the end of August, police
said they were interviewing a new witness who claimed to have seen men wearing
suits and of Mediterranean appearance peering over the balcony at Marwan’s body
before disappearing inside the flat, the Times reported. Last week, Scotland Yard
summoned several Israeli citizens for questioning, Egypt’s Al-Ahram Weekly reported.
Police investigations are still ongoing and what they will reveal is anyone’s guess. But death by balcony seems to be an increasingly common occurrence for Egyptians with suspected espionage pasts, such as Souad Hosni, the “Cinderella” of the “beautiful age” of Egypt's silver screen, who fell to her death from a London balcony in 2001 in an apparent suicide.
This column appeared
in The Guardian Unlimited’s Comment is Free section on 19 September
2007. Read the related
discussion.
ã2007
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