Mossad
Mossad is the national intelligence agency of Israel. Its relationship with the Central Intelligence Agency was extensive, involving 28 formal cooperative ventures in strategic intelligence since the 1950s.
Mossad is the national intelligence agency of Israel. Its relationship with the CIA was extensive, involving 28 formal cooperative ventures in strategic intelligence since the 1950s. Many of these arrangements were financed off-the-books through a special contingency fund maintained by the Director of Central Intelligence. One such operation, code-named KK MOUNTAIN, provided millions in annual cash payments to Mossad, in return for which Mossad agents acted as American surrogates in North Africa and other regions. Other agreements financed Israeli operations in Syria and the Soviet Union, where the CIA found it difficult to operate.2
In 1977, Stansfield Turner, then Director of Central Intelligence, abruptly cut back intelligence liaison with Israel, leading to a sharp reduction in the flow of intelligence from Israel to Washington, D.C.. However, the CIA's "embarrassingly inept reporting on Iran", particularly their failure to anticipate the overthrow of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, forced the American leadership to turn back to Israeli help in anticipating world events. This contributed to the March 1979 KH-11 agreement, which granted Israel access to high-tech satellite imagery.2
Yitzhak Hofi, the director of Mossad, opposed the Israeli bombing of the Iraqi nuclear reactor at Osirak bombing in June 1981, primarily because there was no evidence that Iraq was yet capable of building a bomb.2
In the context of the Remote Viewers narrative, Uri Geller claimed to have worked with Mossad officials, along with Israeli military intelligence and Shin Bet. He stated that he was tested by these agencies and began to work for them, performing tasks such as clairvoyantly viewing intelligence targets and predicting troop deployments.1
However, Geller later chose to pursue a high-profile career as a stage performer rather than a psychic operative for Israel. Mossad officials, along with other Israeli intelligence, also visited SRI to assess Geller's abilities, seeking to determine if his psychic talents were genuine and how valuable he could be as an intelligence asset.1
Sources
Hidden connections 7
Entities named in this page's prose without an explicit wikilink — surfaced by scanning for known titles and aliases.
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Mossad's direct connections. Click any node to navigate, drag to pan, scroll (or pinch) to zoom. + 2‑hop expands the neighborhood one level further.
Mentioned in 48
- OrganizationAgranat Commission
- PersonAlfredo Stroessner
- PersonAnthony Pearson
- PersonAri Ben-Menashe
- PersonAvraham Harman
- PersonAvraham Shalom
- OrganizationBlack September
- PersonCarlos Cardoen
- OrganizationCentral Intelligence Agency
- PersonChapman Pincher
- PersonCindy Hanin Bentov
- PersonHans Mayers
- PersonHushang Lavi
- PersonIhsan Barbouti
- OrganizationIran-Israel Joint Committee
- PlaceIsrael
- ConceptKK MOUNTAIN
- OrganizationLEHI
- PersonMeir Amit
- PersonMeir Meir
- PersonMenachem Begin
- PersonMohammed Radi Abdullah
- PersonMordecai Vanunu
- PersonMoshe Hebroni
- OrganizationMossad
- EventMunich Olympic Massacre
- PersonNachum Admoni
- PersonOra Ben-Shalom
- EventOsirak bombing
- ProgramPROMIS Software Scandal
- PersonRafael Eitan
- PersonReuben Yirador
- PersonReuven Yerdor
- PersonRobert Maxwell
- PersonRon Robertson
- OrganizationRoyal Canadian Mounted Police
- PersonSean McDade
- OrganizationShin Bet
- PersonShlomo Gazit
- ProgramSTARGATE PROJECT
- ProgramUnit 8200
- PersonUri Geller
- PersonYehoshua Saguy
- PersonYekutiel Adam
- PersonYitzhak Hofi
- PersonYitzhak Shamir
- PersonYoav Shacham