Wednesday, July 2, 2025
  • About us
    • Write for us
    • Disclaimer
    • Terms of use
    • Privacy Policy
  • RSS Feeds
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact us
DefenceTalk
  • Home
  • Defense News
    • Defense & Geopolitics News
    • War Conflicts News
    • Army News
    • Air Force News
    • Navy News
    • Missiles Systems News
    • Nuclear Weapons
    • Defense Technology
    • Cybersecurity News
  • Military Photos
  • Defense Forum
  • Military Videos
  • Military Weapon Systems
    • Weapon Systems
    • Reports
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Defense News
    • Defense & Geopolitics News
    • War Conflicts News
    • Army News
    • Air Force News
    • Navy News
    • Missiles Systems News
    • Nuclear Weapons
    • Defense Technology
    • Cybersecurity News
  • Military Photos
  • Defense Forum
  • Military Videos
  • Military Weapon Systems
    • Weapon Systems
    • Reports
No Result
View All Result
DefenceTalk
No Result
View All Result
Home Defence & Military News World Affairs News

FBI sent money to Hamas

by Editor
October 7, 2003
in World Affairs News
5 min read
0
14
VIEWS

, While President Bill Clinton was trying to broker an elusive peace between Israelis and Palestinians, the FBI was secretly funneling money to suspected Hamas figures to see if the militant group would use it for terrorist attacks, according to interviews and court documents.

THE COUNTERTERRORISM operation in 1998 and 1999 was run out of the FBI's Phoenix office in cooperation with Israeli intelligence and was approved by Attorney General Janet Reno, FBI officials told The Associated Press.
Several thousand dollars in U.S. money was sent to suspected terror supporters during the operation as the FBI tried to track the flow of cash through terror organizations, the FBI said in a rare acknowledgment of an undercover sting that never resulted in prosecutions.

“This was done in conjunction with permission from the attorney general for an ongoing operation, and Israeli authorities were aware of it,” the bureau said.

The FBI said the money was given through one of its operative's charities to see if it would be diverted for terrorism. The amounts were kept small, usually just a couple of thousand dollars, so it could not be used to fund a major attack. Court testimony indicates that in one case, a Hamas figure used the sting money to help orphans.

Efforts to reach Reno for comment were unsuccessful.

BUSINESSMAN COOPERATED
One of the FBI's key operatives, who had a falling out with the bureau, provided an account of the operation at a friend's closed immigration court proceeding. The AP obtained and reviewed the court documents.

Arizona businessman Harry Ellen testified he permitted the FBI to bug his home, car and office, allowed his Muslim foundation's activities in the Gaza Strip to be monitored by agents, arranged a peace meeting between major Palestinian activists and gained personal access to Yasser Arafat during more than four years of cooperation with the FBI.

Ellen's FBI handler in the late 1990s was Kenneth Williams, an agent who later became famous for writing a memo to FBI headquarters before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks warning that Arab pilots were training at U.S. flight schools. The warning went unheeded.

Ellen, a Muslim convert, testified that he was taking a trip to the Gaza Strip to bring doctors to the region in summer 1998 when Williams asked him to provide money to a Hamas figure.

Williams wanted “the transfer of American funds to some of the terrorist groups for violent purposes,” Ellen testified to the immigration court in a closed June 2001 session.

At the same time, Clinton and his negotiators were trying to reinvigorate stalled Middle East peace talks, an effort that culminated in the Wye Accords in October 1998.

Clinton's national security adviser, Sandy Berger, said in an interview that the White House was not informed of the FBI activities. “We were not aware of any such operation,” Berger said.

Ellen testified that the operation ended abruptly in early 1999 when he and Williams had a series of disagreements over the operation, disputes that began when Ellen angered the FBI by having an affair with a Chinese woman suspected of espionage.

FBI officials said that they tried to get Ellen to end the relationship and that his work was terminated for failing to follow rules.

LOST OPPORTUNITY?
Melvin McDonald, the former U.S. attorney in Phoenix who has championed Ellen's cause, said the FBI's abrupt end to the investigation squandered an important intelligence opportunity.

“Harry had been a tremendous resource to the bureau,” McDonald said. “We did not have that many people like him with connections like that to the Middle East.”

Former Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Dennis DeConcini, R-Ariz., another Ellen supporter, said Ellen's work could have greatly assisted the FBI.

“I know some of the wonderful cases and sheer positives the FBI has done. But when it comes to spying and espionage they really screwed up, and I think Harry is one of those cases,” DeConcini said.

The Justice Department inspector general is investigating some allegations that came to light in Ellen's case, including that FBI agents in sensitive probes moonlighted at private companies that were using FBI assets or investigative subjects to assist their personal interests.

Ellen, the stepson of an Air Force intelligence officer, had worked for U.S. intelligence since the 1970s as an “asset,” a private citizen paid to provide information or conduct specific tasks. His work started in Latin America and also involved China and the Middle East.

Ellen, whose stepgrandfather was Jewish, converted to Islam in the 1980s and began helping poor Palestinians.

In 1994, he began assisting the FBI Phoenix office, which had become a hotbed of cases involving terrorism and intelligence because of a large, active Muslim population, the proximity to the U.S. southern border and a large concentration of aerospace companies.

Ellen testified that by 1996 his humanitarian work, monitored by the FBI, had won him unprecedented access to Muslim militants from groups fighting for Palestinian independence, including Hamas, the informal name of the militant Islamic Resistance Movement.

HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE
In a rare meeting Ellen organized, he testified, the major groups created an informal alliance to ensure safe passage to any foreigner providing humanitarian assistance. Ellen was named a spokesman and met several times with Arafat.

Ellen also created a foundation named al-Sadaqa to further his work by bringing sewing machines, eyeglasses and other assistance to Palestinians.

Impressed by the extraordinary access, Williams insisted that the new foundation be funded in part by the FBI, Ellen testified.

In an interview, he said he agreed to help the FBI “not as a snitch, but as a good American.”

“I agreed to cooperate with the FBI in the facilitation of the peace process that would lead to an independent Palestinian state, stopping the half-century of violent and oppressive occupation,” Ellen said. “During that period of time I never did anything nor would I cooperate in any way to harm the Palestinian or Israeli people.”

He testified that Williams provided him $3,000 to $5,000 in the summer of 1998 and instructed him to give it to a Hamas figure named Ismail Abu Shanab, whom Israeli forces killed earlier this year in retaliation for a Hamas terrorist strike.

“He [Williams] said they [the money] would be for terrorist activities,” Ellen testified. Abu Shanab distributed the money to Palestinian orphanages and health care facilities, he said.

Ellen testified that Williams told him he hoped the transfer would lead to more money exchanges through terror groups, but Ellen refused to earmark money for terrorism. He testified that he later learned that another FBI operative had offered Hamas and Palestinian figures larger amounts for terrorist attacks.

The court testimony shows that Ellen allowed his home, office and car in Arizona to be bugged so the FBI could listen, without a warrant, to visiting Palestinians or Americans if they discussed illegal activity.

The FBI said it commonly used such recordings. “Consensual monitoring does not require a warrant. In cases where the FBI conducts consensual monitoring, the one party is aware he is being recorded,” it said.

One of those to visit Ellen in Arizona was Palestinian Gen. Mahmoud Abu Marzouq, an ally of Arafat's who oversaw Palestinian civil defense. Marzouq became involved with Ellen's foundation and later wrote a letter praising him.

“The United States will, in my opinion, lose a valuable opportunity for communication in the Middle East if Abu Yusef [Ellen's Muslim name] is further restricted from his honorable efforts for the part of the widows, orphans and handicapped and the elderly in Palestine,” Marzouq wrote.

Source: Associated Press.

Previous Post

Russian Analysts Weigh Nuclear-Defense Reform Urgings

Next Post

Israel Is Losing

Related Posts

COVID-19 resurgence on the USS Theodore Roosevelt

May 17, 2020

File; USS Theodore Roosevelt. (Photo courtesy of CNN/file) 13 Sailors have been evacuated from the USS...

U.S. Pacific Fleet Commander & Fleet Master Chief visit Sailors in Guam

June 27, 2020

Sailors assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71) prepare to embark the ship...

Next Post

Israel Is Losing

Latest Defense News

Britain, Germany jointly developing missiles: ministers

Britain, Germany jointly developing missiles: ministers

May 17, 2025
Trump announces ‘full and immediate’ India-Pakistan ceasefire

Trump announces ‘full and immediate’ India-Pakistan ceasefire

May 10, 2025
Pakistan says Indian missiles strike air bases as conflict spirals

Pakistan says Indian missiles strike air bases as conflict spirals

May 10, 2025
J-10C fighter jet

Pakistan says India has brought neighbours ‘closer to major conflict’

May 9, 2025
North Korea fires multiple suspected cruise missiles

North Korea fires flurry of short-range ballistic missiles

May 9, 2025
China says ‘closely watching’ Ukraine situation after Russian attack

China vows to stand with Russia in face of ‘hegemonic bullying’

May 9, 2025

Defense Forum Discussions

  • The Russian-Ukrainian War Thread
  • Middle East Defence & Security
  • F-35 Program - General Discussion
  • Australian Army Discussions and Updates
  • Royal Australian Navy Discussions and Updates 2.0
  • ADF General discussion thread
  • Indonesia: 'green water navy'
  • Royal Australian Air Force [RAAF] News, Discussions and Updates
  • The Spanish Navy - Armada Española
  • China - Geostrategic & Geopolitical.
DefenceTalk

© 2003-2020 DefenceTalk.com

Navigate Site

  • Defence Forum
  • Military Photos
  • RSS Feeds
  • About us
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact us

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Defense News
    • Defense & Geopolitics News
    • War Conflicts News
    • Army News
    • Air Force News
    • Navy News
    • Missiles Systems News
    • Nuclear Weapons
    • Defense Technology
    • Cybersecurity News
  • Military Photos
  • Defense Forum
  • Military Videos
  • Military Weapon Systems
    • Weapon Systems
    • Reports

© 2003-2020 DefenceTalk.com