, — 0*. .41111W1,11111111181110.1111 !BEHIND THE HEADLINES FREE REPRINTS OR ENLARGEMENTS I CIA Helped Israel Destroy Iraqi Reactor WOLF BLITZER Special to The Jewish News W • GET 3 COLOR REPRINTS or ENLARGEMENTS FOR THE PRICE OF 2! Expires November 18th Order three same-size reprints or enlargements and get the third one free. Use different negatives if you want: Beautiful colors that last 100 years, and more' "under normal dark storage conditions" Konica "WE DO THE BEST WORK IN TOWN" Mite ONSITE 1 HOUR Photo (2 BLOCKS NORTH OF 14 MILE RD. ON ORCHARD LK. RD.) NEXT TO iBROWSE BOOKSTORE WEST BLOOMFIELD • 851-6340 _!! el . •.:ft ashington — Wil- liam Casey, the late director of the Cen- tral Intelligence Agency, was a great admirer of the Israeli intelligence services and for a time even provided them with "almost unlimited" access to previously restricted U.S. sat- ellite reconnaissance photog- raphy, according to a new book on the CIA written by Washington Post editor Bob Woodward. The book, entitled Veil: The Secret Wars of the CIA, says that Casey overruled the number two man in the CIA, Bobby Inman, by authorizing U.S. intelligence for Israel, in- cluding information that helped Israel destroy Iraq's nuclear reactor on June 7, 1981. Immediately after the air strike, Inman "checked and found that, under the intelli- gence-sharing arrangement set up with Casey's approval, Israel had almost unlimited access to U.S. satellite photography and had used it in planning their raid." Inman, the book continues, opposed this policy. He "didn't see how the United States could maintain any balanced policy if Israel was permitted to drop bombs all over the Middle East using American intelligence. He quickly created new rules by which Israel could get photos and other sensitive intelligence only for defense. Israeli access would be restricted to photos of those countries that posed an immediate threat or were on Israel's border. Baghdad was five hundred miles away and Off the list." According to the book, Casey "went along" with the new restrictions but the CIA director "was pleased that the Israelis had disposed of the [Iraqi] problem, and he ad- mired their audacity. When the White House expressed shock and imposed sanctions on Israel, witholding delivery of several F-16s, Casey felt it might be a necessary diplo- matic and political gesture, but privately he called it 'bull Woodward, who had nearly 50 interviews with Casey in recent years as well as access to numerous other CIA of- ficials and documents, reports that the Mossad, the Israeli intelligence service, had ex- plored the possibility of a sabotage operation to destroy William Casey: Great admirer the reactor, "but the air strike was, correctly, determined to involve less risk for both Israelis and Iraqis." Casey, the book says, saw that Israeli intelligence had "a special hurdle of skep- ticism" to overcome among CIA professionals. "Before 1974," the book says, "the celebrated CIA chief of counterintelligence James Jesus Angleton had run the Israeli desk at the agency, keeping vital infor- mation from the Middle East operations people and ana- lysts. Even after Angleton was fired, all Israeli in- telligence was for years viewed as little more than a Mossad press release, de- signed to serve Israel's political goals." But the book suggests that Mossad, "in fact, had some good human sources in three places of vital significance — Lebanon, Syria and the So- viet Union. Casey had to work to make Mossad credi- ble." The book also notes that in "some important respects, Israel was more sinned against in intelligence mat- ters." It points out, for exam- ple, that the CIA had had secret PLO sources that "at times provided operational details about PLO attacks in Israel:' The CIA's Directorate of Operations "had convinced Casey that such information could not be passed to the Israelis, because the sources would dry up. It was a tough game, and Casey admired the way Israel accepted the rules: sources had to be protected at all costs. They were very so- phisticated about this; they realized that an ally could not give everything." Thus, .the book says that Robert Ames, a top CIA agent