day in a backpack and they would fantasize that the backpack could be used to smuggle classified documents out of the building. Some co-workers didn’t like him, he said, because he was a diligent employee who didn’t goof off on the job or join co-workers at restaurants for lunch or at bars after office hours. Some co-workers made anti-Semitic remarks behind his back, and a bag of pork rinds was once placed on his desk. He recounts that one reason people said they suspected him of spying for Israel was that he spoke Hebrew with the Israelis — ironically one of his major qualifications for being hired at TACOM in the first place. PHONY CHARGES Tenenbaum said his antagonists at TACOM sur- reptitiously set him up for false spying charges. Having no legitimate factual reason to have him investigated, they went to a high-level official at the command who suggested having Tenenbaum considered for a higher security level where he could be interviewed without an attorney present. Tenenbaum likened this to an interrogation. He was then told to take a lie detector test. The polygraph operator, however, destroyed his notes and then wrongfully reported Tenenbaum had con- fessed to spying for Israel, according to Tenenbaum and his attorney Harold. Based on the co-workers’ allegations and the bogus report of a confession, the FBI initiated a full criminal investigation. It was Shabbat lunchtime Feb. 14, 1997, when FBI agents raided the Tenenbaum house, seizing his computer and stripping the family residence of many personal effects, including drawings made by his then 4-year-old daughter. The girl remained ter- rified for months afterward, Tenenbaum said. For half a year, FBI agents staked themselves out in front of the Tenenbaum home in an unsuccess- ful attempt to turn his Jewish neighbors against him. To intimidate him, he said, they followed him wherever he went. They leaked misinformation to the news media that he was an spy for Israel, just like Jonathan Pollard, who had been jailed a decade earlier. Tenenbaum estimates the government spent millions of dollars in its efforts to investigate him. The investigation ended a year later. “I was cleared of everything,” Tenenbaum said. “They said to me I did nothing wrong, and that mine was one of the most investigated cases ever done.” In April 1998, he was returned to his job at TACOM. All his projects, however, were canceled, including the one to provide armor for Humvees. This proved ultimately disastrous for the rank-and- file soldiers, as Tenenbaum recounts. When military action was taken against insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan in the early 2000s, a new weapon was used against U.S. troops — the improvised explo- sive devise (IED). These IEDs were roadside bombs detonated by booby traps or remote control. As the Humvees drove by, the bombs penetrated the unprotected vehicles. Thousands of U.S. soldiers were killed or maimed, Tenenbaum said. His project, if not canceled by the Army some seven years earlier, could have provided protection. The Army later did devise alternative protection, but it was too late for the soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. “David’s false accusers have blood on their hands,” attorney Harold said. “The price of their prejudice was born by the soldiers.” Tenenbaum added, “No one has been held accountable. In fact, many of the instigators have been promoted. In private industry, no one would stand for this discrimination, anti-Semitism and false accusations. So, why isn’t the government held accountable?” continued on page 16 Making The Case For Ethics Washington must step up and right a longstanding discriminatory wrong cloaked in false spy charges. A In many ways, the American way lesser man would crack is a model for the civilized world. Not under the strain of a 21-year fight for redress from the U.S. in David Tenenbaum’s case, unfortu- nately. government against spurious claims of spying for Israel exac- THE STRIFE WITHIN erbated by an anti-Jewish It was in 1992 that U.S. work environment. Army Tank-automotive We as a nation have and Armaments Command belittled an Orthodox Jew from (TACOM) employees first Southfield for no legitimate alleged that Tenenbaum, a reason and can’t seem to chemical engineer, was an make amends for the ethnic Israeli spy. discrimination despite clear Robert Sklar Persistent behind-the- and convincing evidence to Contributing Editor scenes accusations against the contrary. Tenenbaum led to the 1997 If ever an American spying allegations, which not deserved to be called “a only rang hollow, but also demoral- dedicated, loyal and professional civil ized a devoted worker smart enough servant in the service of our nation,” it to figure out how to protect U.S. is David Tenenbaum. He wants to be Humvees in guerilla warfare. When exonerated, compensated and respect- the Army stepped up investigating ed by the government he so faithfully Tenenbaum, it also shut down a joint has served — a tall, but just order. program he had developed with the The U.S. Army civilian engineer, now U.S., Israeli and German armies to 60, continues to exhibit the patience of Job in wanting closure, reparation and a armor Humvees, a modern take on the vintage military jeep. Tenenbaum government apology 21 years after first asserts the shutdown cost the lives of hearing false accusations that he’s a American soldiers early on in Iraq and spy for the Jewish state. Afghanistan because of unarmored Humvees being ravaged by terrorist- FIX THE WRONG planted IEDs (improvised explosive His is a story of personal and profes- devices). sional hardship hoisted by allegedly In 2006, the Office of Inspector anti-Semitic Army colleagues as well as by a Department of Defense (DOD) General, at the behest of then-U.S. in prior administrations lacking the Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., visited the bureaucratic spine to accept the find- case against Tenenbaum. Two years ing of its Office of Inspector General later, the OIG found unlawful discrimi- that the “personnel security and nation. The upshot: The Army targeted counterintelligence process” against the engineer because he was Jewish Tenenbaum “was poorly handled and and openly expressed ties to Israel (as managed.” most Zionist Jews proudly do). Redemption lies in the capacity of In 1984, Warren-based TACOM current DOD leadership to stop the hired Tenenbaum as a liaison for charade of an interminable investiga- joint projects with the Israeli military tion and clear David Tenenbaum’s because he had been to Israel and good name. That would be the right could speak Hebrew. Those things got thing to do given the Inspector him hired, but also proved his undo- General determined the espionage ing along with his religious lifestyle allegations were without merit and not meshing with anti-Semitic ele- brought with discriminatory intent. ments documented on the work floor. On shaky legal grounds, the U.S. All of this swayed the later claim he government upended the lives of was an Israeli spy. Tenenbaum, his wife, Madeline, PRESSING ONWARD and their four children in 1997. The Federal Bureau of Investigation raided Thanks to the backbone of two mem- bers of the U.S. Senate Committee on his home on a Shabbat afternoon while presumably seeking evidence of Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, Tenenbaum may yet experi- espionage. The emotional hurt, says ence the remedy he so desperately Tenenbaum, still lingers. wants and deserves. In an Oct. 26 letter to Secretary of Defense James Mattis, Senators Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., and Gary Peters, D-Mich., ask Secretary Mattis to personally answer and address the case against Tenenbaum and direct the DOD “to take appropriate action” to initiate redress. The push and pull of Tenenbaum’s travails have locked him in TACOM’s narrow work strictures despite a restored top security clearance and an inventive mind. The senators write that he’s caught in “a professional stalemate” with no significant job opportunities within the DOD or else- where. You could say he’s blacklisted within the government contract field; the American people are worse for our government, in effect, stymieing Tenenbaum’s ingenuity. The Jewish community is lining up behind Tenenbaum based on the discrimination documented in the Inspector General report. Community support, resolved that Tenenbaum has built a case for justice, bucks a federal court ruling in Detroit that dismissed Tenenbaum’s 2009 constitutional rights suit against the departments of Army and Defense in which that report was cited as evidence. The ruling held that Inspector General investigators didn’t review Department of Justice sealed documents asserting protected state secrets. That meant the state secrets doctrine first invoked by the government in response to an earlier constitutional rights case brought by Tenenbaum still stood. Let there be no doubt: Tenenbaum’s journey for justice involves the entire Jewish community because of under- currents that reveal a Jew was target- ed primarily because he was Jewish. Every so often, someone comes along with the heart, spirit, tenacity and understanding of right to fight injustice. David Tenenbaum is such a person. Our government not only should admit accountability and redress David Tenenbaum, as so articulately cham- pioned by Sens. McCaskill and Peters, but also clean up the internal horror show that leeched discrimination and spurred the original 1997 spying allegations — confounding as they were. • Redemption lies in the capacity of current Department of Defense leadership to stop the charade of an interminable investigation and clear David Tenenbaum’s good name. David Tenenbaum jn January 4 • 2018 15