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Books that probe the secrets of the Mossad 

Seven books on Israeli intelligence agencies, which are spearheading the offensive against Hizbullah in Lebanon

A man holds an Icom walkie talkie device after he removed the battery during the funeral of persons killed when hundreds of paging devices exploded in a deadly wave across Lebanon the previous day, in Beirut's southern suburbs.
Photograph: Getty Images

FEW COUNTRIES take as much pride in their intelligence services as Israel. Led by the Mossad, founded in 1949, they have been at the forefront of Israel’s near-continuous battles against both terrorist groups and hostile states. The Mossad in particular, the equivalent of America’s CIA or Britain’s MI6, has acquired a reputation for audacity, inventiveness and ruthlessness. Detonating the pagers and walkie-talkies of members of Hizbullah, an Iran-backed militia in Lebanon, has the hallmarks of a Mossad operation. Similarly, the Mossad will probably have been deeply involved in tracking the whereabouts of Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of Hizbullah, who was killed in an Israeli strike in Beirut on September 27th. These operations will have gone some way towards restoring the intelligence services’ reputations after their failure to forewarn of Hamas’s bloody raid from Gaza on October 7th 2023. Nearly a year later, before the latest attacks on Hizbullah’s leadership, Yossi Sariel, the head of Unit 8200, the signals-intelligence agency, became the latest intelligence chief to take responsibility for that failure and resign.

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From the October 5th 2024 edition

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