Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06TELAVIV1870
2006-05-12 10:39:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Tel Aviv
Cable title:  

NEW NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL CHAIRMAN

Tags:  PREL PGOV PINR IS IR GOI INTERNAL 
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C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 TEL AVIV 001870 

SIPDIS

NSC FOR ABRAMS AND LOGERFO

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/10/2016
TAGS: PREL PGOV PINR IS IR GOI INTERNAL
SUBJECT: NEW NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL CHAIRMAN

Classified By: Ambassador Richard H. Jones. Reason 1.4 (B/D)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 TEL AVIV 001870

SIPDIS

NSC FOR ABRAMS AND LOGERFO

E.O. 12958: DECL: 05/10/2016
TAGS: PREL PGOV PINR IS IR GOI INTERNAL
SUBJECT: NEW NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL CHAIRMAN

Classified By: Ambassador Richard H. Jones. Reason 1.4 (B/D)


1. (C) Summary: Prime Minister Olmert has appointed as the
new chairman of National Security Council Ilan Mizrahi, a
former Deputy Head of the Mossad, to replace Giora Eiland,
who will retire in several weeks. The National Security
Council (NSC),created in 1999 during the tenure of then-PM
Binyamin Netanyahu, will move some of its staff from its
present location on the outskirts of Tel Aviv to the Prime
Minister's Office in Jerusalem, a move reflective of its new
role as in-house advisory body for the prime minister.
According to press reports, the NSC will be subordinate to
Yoram Turbowicz, who will serve as Olmert's Chief of Staff
(septel) and will not be involved directly in diplomatic
negotiations or managing ties with international bodies. End
Summary.

-------------- ---
NSC Chairman Mizrahi -- Mossad Expertise on Iran
-------------- ---


2. (C) The Ambassador had an opportunity on March 7 to
exchange views with Mizrahi on Iran in a closed discussion at
Haifa University, where Mizrahi found a home after his
retirement from the Mossad in 2003. Mizrahi, in his late
fifties, served as head of the Human Intelligence (HUMINT)
Division and head of intelligence within the organization.
Mizrahi's appointment is read by many pundits as a signal of
Olmert's focus on the Iran issue.


3. (C) In February, Mizrahi (protect),articulated to the
Ambassador and several Haifa University faculty his view that
"more carrots" needed to be extended to Iran in order to
influence the outcome of political battles ongoing within the
clerical leadership. Mizrahi acknowledged that the current
situation in Iran is dangerous: "I believe him (Ahmadinejad)
when he calls for a 'Second Revolution'" -- but Mizrahi
nonetheless argued in favor of more carrots to help those
inside Iran influence the infighting among the conservative
elites. "We can definitely take advantage of this debate,"
he said, making the following points:

-- Mizrahi assessed that "the Iranians will have nukes. They
would get them even under (former President) Khatami. They
have been slow to advance, but firm (in their intention) to
advance because they feel threatened. They are not just
attempting to be the hegemon (in the region),but they have a
Sunni challenge from the East and West. We are not playing
this enough." The Iranian leadership views the U.S. and
Israel as prime threats, and Mizrahi said they believe that
the threat they face from the U.S. is "regime change."
According to Mizrahi, this Iranian leadership needs some kind
of reassurance that what we (U.S. and Israel) seek is a
change in policy, not a change of regime.

-- Mizrahi emphasized that "change in Iran will happen from
within, not from outside." There is debate at the top
between two conservative leaderships: those with Ahmadinejad
and those against him who are more practical. Mizrahi said
that in 2003 (after U.S. action in Iraq),the Iranian
leadership might have been ready to strike a deal, but
Mizrahi was not sure that the same situation now held with
Ahmadinejad, who, Mizrahi claimed, sees the U.S. as stuck in
Iraqi mud. Ahmedinejad is getting more powerful, and is
changing people within the sensitive security apparatus. For
example, Mizrahi said he has nominated ex-Pasdaran guards to
positions within the army and intelligence service elites.
-- Khamenei may not be content with these developments,
according to Mizrahi, who claimed that Ahmadinejad's vision
poses a direct challenge to Khamanei and Rafsanjani.
"Rafsanjani is very angry," Mizrahi added. Mizrahi warned
that both Ahmadinejad and Khamanei are looking "more East
than West" -- to Russia and China for support. Mizrahi
offered that "we have more cards to play -- like the
(Iranian) minorities: Azeris, Baluchis, Kurds, Arabs and
Pashtuns. There remains lots of support for the U.S. in the
Iranian street."


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JONES