The Obama administration is preparing to release convicted Israeli spy Jonathan Pollard from prison, according to U.S. officials, some of whom hope the move will smooth relations with Israel in the wake of the Iran nuclear deal.
Such
a decision would end a decadeslong fight over Mr. Pollard, who was
arrested on charges of spying for Israel in 1985 and later sentenced to
life in prison. The case has long been a source of tension between the
U.S. and Israel, which has argued that a life sentence for spying on
behalf of a close U.S. partner is too harsh. Israel has for years sought
Mr. Pollard’s early release, only to be rejected by the U.S.
Now,
some U.S. officials are pushing for Mr. Pollard’s release in a matter
of weeks. Others expect it could take months, possibly until his parole
consideration date in November.
A parole hearing for Mr. Pollard
was held in early July. Mr. Pollard’s lawyer, Eliot Lauer, said he
hasn’t heard from the parole commission “and I would expect that either I
or my client would be the ones who would be notified.’’ That hearing
would have been the moment for the U.S. to object to Mr. Pollard’s
pending release. Mr. Lauer wouldn’t say if the government raised
objections.
Some U.S. officials strongly denied Friday there was
any link between the Iran deal and Mr. Pollard’s prospective release,
saying that any decision would be made by the U.S. Parole Commission.
A
White House spokesman referred questions to the Justice Department,
where a spokesman declined to comment on a matter which may be before
the Parole Commission.
Mark Regev, spokesman for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, declined to comment.
Mr.
Pollard, 60 years old, was a civilian analyst with the U.S. Navy when
he was arrested for passing secret documents to Israel. He eventually
pleaded guilty and was sentenced to life.
Under sentencing laws at the time he was convicted, Mr. Pollard has
to be considered for parole after 30 years, though that doesn’t mean he
has to be granted parole. The Bureau of Prisons website currently lists
his possible release date as Nov. 21, which is the date the federal
parole commission is slated to consider whether to end his sentence.
Last
year, President Barack Obama told an Israeli interviewer: “I have no
plans for releasing Jonathan Pollard immediately, but what I am going to
be doing is to make sure that he, like every other American who’s been
sentenced, is accorded the same kinds of review and the same examination
of the equities that any other individual would provide.’’
To
get out before November would require unusual intervention. In the
federal prison system, often the easiest way to free an inmate early is
to cite deteriorating health. Mr. Pollard’s supporters say he is
suffering from a host of medical ailments that should qualify him for
mercy.
The U.S. has considered releasing him before but always
backed away from such a move, largely because of opposition from senior
leaders at the Central Intelligence Agency, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and the Justice Department. When he was sentenced,
then-Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said it was hard to imagine “a
greater harm to national security than that caused by” Mr. Pollard.
It
is possible that such opposition could again scuttle any release, but
it appears his chances of winning freedom are better now than they have
ever been, U.S. officials said. Some U.S. officials said they expect he
will be a free man before the year is over.
Mr. Netanyahu has
personally pressed for years to get the U.S. to release Mr. Pollard, who
is currently serving time in a federal prison in Butner, N.C.
Discord between Israel and the U.S., over the recent failed Middle
East peace initiative and how to handle Iran, has taken the relationship
between the two allies to new lows. Mr. Netanyahu has been a leading
opponent of the deal struck between Tehran and six world powers to curb
Iran’s nuclear program.
When U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter
visited Israel earlier this week, after the nuclear deal was concluded,
the two governments disagreed over how the two should deliver public
remarks. Secretary of State John Kerry has announced a trip early next
month to the region, but so far hasn’t included Israel as one of his
stops.
The fate of Mr. Pollard is close to a national obsession in Israel, where he has become a cause célèbre.
“I
can only say that like all of Israel I will be very happy if he is
released,” said Noam Shalit, father of former Hamas hostage Gilad
Shalit, and a public supporter of Mr. Pollard. “I can’t speak to
international relations…But on the human level, I’d say it’s about
time.”
Michael Oren, a member of the Knesset for the center-right
Kulanu party, and Israel’s ambassador to the U.S. from 2009 to 2013,
said he had been hopeful Mr. Pollard would be paroled. Mr. Oren,
however, drew a distinction between the Pollard news and the tensions
created by the Iran deal.
“While we are delighted that Jonathan
Pollard will be a free man again, this will not change in any way our
position on the nuclear deal,” he said. “The Pollard case is about
justice and clemency and the nuclear deal about security and survival.”
The
prospect of Mr. Pollard’s freedom still grates on many U.S.
intelligence officials, in part because his release likely wouldn’t come
as part of a like-for-like swap, as espionage cases are often resolved.
Other officials counter that 30 years is a fair punishment and that
keeping Mr. Pollard in prison until he dies would serve little purpose.
Mr.
Pollard has explained his espionage activity by citing a great affinity
for Israel, though counterintelligence officials say he was paid tens
of thousands of dollars for his work.
From June 1984 through
November 1985, Mr. Pollard removed large amounts of highly classified
U.S. intelligence from his office, made copies and delivered it to
Israeli operatives.
About a year after his spying began, federal
agents stopped Mr. Pollard as he was leaving work and questioned him
about the possible unauthorized removal of classified information.
During
that conversation, he twice took breaks to call his wife, using a
prearranged code word “cactus,” signaling that she should remove a
suitcase full of classified information from their apartment. She also
pleaded guilty and served three years in prison and later moved to
Israel.
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R., S.C.) said Mr. Pollard’s release
“would be nothing more than a pathetic attempt by a weak administration
to curry favor with our Israeli allies who across the board reject this
dangerous deal with Iran.’’
A spokesman for another GOP
presidential candidate, Rick Santorum said even though he supports the
release of Mr. Pollard, “this does not compensate for the tremendous
damage the Obama administration has done to Israeli-American relations
and the damage the Iran deal poses.’’
http://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-preparing-to-release-convicted-israeli-spy-jonathan-pollard-officials-say-1437766957
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