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Long walk to freedom
Long walk to freedom
Mordechai Vanunu served 18 years in an Israeli prison for blowing the
whistle on the country's nuclear weapons programme. Last week he was
arrested again - but not before he had given Duncan Campbell the following
exclusive interview
Monday November 15, 2004
<http://www.guardian.co.uk>The Guardian
It was precisely noon in Jerusalem and the bells in the tower of St
George's Cathedral were echoing over the city. The short, trim man in the
apricot shirt and dark trousers who was ringing them was smiling broadly.
"Down there," he said, when he had given a final pull to the centre bell
and was gazing from the turrets to the sprawling civic building below,
"down there is where they sentenced me to 18 years in prison. This is my
way of saying I am still here."
That was 10 days ago. Since then, Mordechai Vanunu, who emerged from his
18-year sentence for revealing that Israel had a nuclear weapons programme
only seven months ago, has been re-arrested and accused of disclosing
classified information and of breaching the restrictions that forbid him
from associating with foreigners. This week, the Israeli attorney general
will decide what action to take. For the time being, he is back under house
arrest in a small room at the cathedral.
The inscription at the foot of the cathedral's bell tower reads: "When He
beheld the city, He wept over it. O, pray for the peace of Jerusalem." For
the past few months, Vanunu, who converted to Christianity in 1986, had
been climbing the steps to the top of the tower thrice daily, partly to
keep fit but, more importantly, to behold the city. Once at the top, he was
in no hurry to descend, pointing out the Mount of Olives in the distance,
the sun glinting on the dome of the Russian church, the Palestinian school,
the Hebrew university, the gardens below with their pomegranate and fig
trees and the rose and lavender beds that give the impression of an English
country churchyard transplanted to the Middle East.
"I was very hungry for these views," he said. "One of the greatest
cruelties of prison is that you become like a blind man, you do not have
any views. But I would still rather be on the top of the Tower of London."
It was from London that Vanunu was lured abroad to Italy 18 years ago by a
woman who was working with Mossad, the Israeli intelligence agency. Vanunu,
a former nuclear technician, had been in England giving information about
the Dimona nuclear plant to the Sunday Times, but, depressed by the delay
in publication, had wanted to get out of the city, ironically because he
feared that Mossad was on his tail.
"It was a race between me and Mossad, so my concern was to publish
immediately. When the Sunday Times delayed publication I decided to leave
London," he said. But despite his realisation that Mossad must have known
his movements, he was persuaded by the blonde American woman he met in
Leicester Square - who pretended to be a tourist and critical of Israel -
to accompany her to Italy for a romantic break. Once there, he was
overpowered, drugged, bound and shipped back to Israel where, after a
secret trial, he was jailed.
He does not feel anger towards the woman, who called herself "Cindy". "I
see her as a spy, part of a team, rather than as a woman," he said. "They
would like me to be angry with her as a woman but I am not." And he said
that the woman, since identified in the media as Cindy, supposedly a Mossad
agent living in Florida, was not the one who lured him to Italy.
"She was pure American, she could have been CIA, she could have been
recruited by Mossad but she was not an Israeli woman," he said. He believes
that possibly British, French and Italian intelligence services were all
involved. One of the people on the ship that carried him clandestinely back
to Israel was a Frenchman, he said, and his flight to Italy from London had
been delayed, possibly, he surmised, because British intelligence services
were cooperating.
Famously, when he was bundled into court for his secret trial, he scrawled
the message that he had been kidnapped on his hand. "They told me I could
not talk about the kidnapping or even mention the word 'Rome'. I hoped that
by revealing the kidnapping on the palm of my hand it would make the
government of Italy demand my release." But the Italian government did
nothing and he was jailed for 18 years.
Vanunu was 10 when his family arrived in Israel from Morocco. When he was
18, he resolved to travel the world, but he ended up first doing his
national service in the Israeli defence force and then becoming a student
studying geography and philosophy, watching football and basketball and
enjoying college life. He became active in student politics, and identified
with the Palestinian students he met. It was then that he became concerned
about peace issues, not least because one of his professors was jailed at
the time for refusing military service.
Despite his radical student past, he was cleared to work as a technician at
the Dimona nuclear plant in the Negev desert and it was there that he
became disquieted by his discovery of a secret weapons programme, which is
still not officially acknowledged. He took photos of the plant and smuggled
them out. What prompted him to take such a risk?
He was aware, he said, of what Daniel Ellsberg, now himself a vociferous
admirer of Vanunu, had done by leaking the Pentagon papers, which had
helped to end the Vietnam war. He was also inspired by the 1979 film, The
China Syndrome, the story of a nuclear whistle-blower, which starred Jane
Fonda, Jack Lemmon and Michael Douglas - "You remember the man inside
taking photos, trying to bring it to the attention of the media and they
killed him" - and, later, by Mike Nichols's 1983 film Silkwood, the true
story of Karen Silkwood, played by Meryl Streep, who leaked her concerns
about the nuclear industry before dying mysteriously. But his main
motivation was Hiroshima, he said. "I didn't have any real role model, it
was more the danger of the atomic bomb."
He did not know what to do with his information, which he first divulged to
a church group in Sydney, where he had arrived on his travels. He was
encouraged by an erratic Colombian freelance journalist there to go public
with the information, which led him eventually to the Sunday Times.
If he has regrets about what he did, it is about the way he chose to leak
the story. "It was a mistake to go with one newspaper but I didn't have any
experience with the media," he said, sitting in the cathedral's garden in
the morning sun with news of Arafat's impending death hovering in the
background. "My target was to bring information to the world, so the best
way would have been a press conference or to send it to 20 newspapers so
that it would not be controlled by anyone. Now things have changed and the
internet has made it much easier for information to be passed on."
For more than 11 years he was kept in solitary confinement, initially in a
two-metre by three-metre cell. "There was a lot of pressure, a lot of
attempts at brainwashing," he says. "They would talk to me about the
Holocaust and say that the Palestinians are terrorists or the Arabs want to
destroy the Jewish state so they need an atomic bomb. I didn't accept this:
the Holocaust is not the real issue, it does not justify having the atomic
bomb or taking the Palestinian land. Also I was very angry about the trial;
if I had received a fair trial, an open trial, that would have been
different."
In prison his main motivation was survival. "I decided from the beginning
that they could have my body in prison but my spirit, mind, brain, I would
keep free, under my control; that would be my way out. I used my
Christianity as my defence, my barrier." He would sing hymns to himself, he
said. He was visited by a priest but there was a glass between them and
they were only allowed to communicate by exchanging notes. After five
years, he decided that he wanted to meet the priest in person or not at
all. The meetings ended.
His conversion to Christianity, which had happened in Australia in 1986
before he went public with the secrets, has been one source of division,
not least with his family, who live in an orthodox community in Bnei Brek,
near Tel Aviv. They do not visit him and dissociated themselves from him
years ago, with the exception of two of his brothers, Meir, a photographer
now travelling the world after guiding Mordechai's first steps outside
jail, and Asher, now teaching in Chile.
Rumours have abounded since he was released. After he spoke by video link
to the European Social Forum in London last month, word went round his
supporters in Scandinavia that he had "escaped" and was in England. There
were also reports that he had married.
"That is the Israeli media - maybe to prevent other women's interest in
me," he said with the wide smile that frequently punctuates his often
intense manner. "There was a woman who came here, a friend; she was very
friendly. The bishop encouraged me to marry and the rumours started and
they published a picture of us together. Now every time I go on the street
the Palestinians say: 'Are you happily married now?' But she is now in the
United States. But I do plan to find a woman and have a family."
Currently barred from leaving the country at least for a further five
months, he still hopes to live abroad, preferably in the United States,
where his adoptive parents, an American couple, live. Some people have
asked why he wants to go to the one country in the world that had actually
used an atomic bomb.
"They made a mistake. At least America has not made that mistake again.
That is good - 50 years without the atomic bomb. I am going there because
of its democracy, its freedom, there's a lot of possibilities to write, to
learn. I hope my future will be in the academic world, reading, teaching. I
don't know if I can do it, but that is what I would like. Also I want to
continue to seek the abolition of nuclear weapons around the world, not
only in Israel but in England, France, the US, China, Pakistan, India. The
enemy now is terrorism but you cannot use atomic bombs against terrorists.
I will try and find a way to contribute. I would like to work with the IAEA
(International Atomic Energy Agency) in Vienna or with the UN."
There had not been much coverage of his case in the American media with the
exception of the leftwing Pacifica radio network. "Most of the American
journalists are worried that they will be expelled [if they talk to him]
and no one wants to be expelled," he said. "Also their bosses don't want to
be in conflict with Israel. They don't want to sacrifice their situation
here for my case. The US media is very pro-Israel; they never wrote about
their nuclear weapons. They don't want to be called anti-semitic."
On the current situation between the Israelis and Palestinians, he said:
"If President Bush decided to do something, they could solve it. What we
have now is an apartheid state. There used to be 30% Christian
[Palestinians] in east Jerusalem, now it is less than 2%. A lot have
emigrated. If I was a Palestinian, I couldn't live under occupation. What
kind of life is that?
"But the way to resist the occupation and aggression is not by terror but
by non-violence, civil disobedience and, all-important, to build a society,
an economy, universities to prove that they are no less educated and
developed and compete with them. To have a classical orchestra, sports
teams that can compete abroad, a scientist who can compete with the
Israelis. That is the way. Since the second intifada, the reality is very,
very bad. I used to have optimism but when I came out and saw the wall and
saw the reality ... young people who live here don't have any hope.
"Non-violence is still the only way to resist. The fact is that Israel
wants the Palestinians to react, they make use of the terror for two
things: to raise a new generation who will be much more anti-Palestinian
and more rightwing and they use the terror for more occupation, building
the wall, justifying what they do to the Palestinians."
Vanunu had decided to talk despite the fact that the restriction on him
having any contact with foreigners has just been renewed for a further six
months. "I don't know what is the best way to overcome this restriction -
is it by silence or is it by speaking? I decided it was by speaking," he
said, talking a few days before he was seized by the Israeli army. "If I
speak, they can see I have no more secrets, all I am doing is expressing my
views and also I am teaching them that they cannot silence anyone ... If
they take away your right to speak, you are not a human being any more." He
did not speak at all about Dimona.
Officially, the reason given for him not being allowed to talk or leave is
that he may divulge more secrets. However, Jerusalem-based correspondents
say that some government ministers privately believe that the restrictions
were an error, imposed at the behest of an intelligence service who were
wrong-footed by the disclosures in the first place and are anxious to avoid
further embarrassment. It is generally accepted that his information is now
so old as to be of little significance.
Vanunu continues to provoke strong reactions. He is lionised in many
countries, particularly in Europe, as a whistle-blower who was prepared to
risk his life to draw attention to the dangers of nuclear warfare. He has
recently received the Lennon Ono peace prize in New York and the CND
building in London was just named after him. Daniel Ellsberg, on a recent
visit to London, hailed him as a hero. Supporters threw a 50th birthday
bash for him last month, complete with personalised cake. Performers,
including Susannah York, Arthur Smith and Mark Steel, appear this week in a
benefit concert for him in London.
In Israel, however, he is still regarded by many as a traitor and when he
emerged from jail, extremists tried to attack him, rushing his car and
making throat-slitting gestures as he left the prison gates. Now he faces
the courts once more. How had people reacted to him?
"The people in east Jerusalem are very sympathetic and very happy to see
me; they shake my hand and invite me to coffee. Three or four times,
Israeli youths have shouted at me but I ignore them," he said. "I have
received some hint of threats that they could kill me. If they want to do
something, it's not a big problem for them but I am not in fear, I am just
living my life. Fear will not help me."
He has no income and lives modestly. His room is free, courtesy of the
Anglican bishop. Friends and supporters - and he has a number of dedicated
Israeli peace campaigners who have been battling for him since the early
days - have given him clothes and a laptop. His days have been spent
talking to visitors, walking the nearby streets, swimming at a local hotel.
And, until he was re-arrested at least, climbing to the top of the bell
tower to savour the chimes of freedom.