[This is the headline over an article by David Wolchover published today on the website of The Jewish Chronicle. It reads as follows:]
The Arab Spring may have heightened tensions between Egypt and Israel
but, on the upside, it also achieved Colonel Gaddafi's overthrow.
Strangely, this could actually benefit the Jewish state - but only if
Libya takes the initiative.
With Gaddafi gone, the world could recognise, finally, that the perpetrators of the Lockerbie bomb were not
from the Libyan secret service, did not include the man who was
ultimately convicted, Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, and indeed had nothing to
do with Libya. The world could learn that the culprits were the original
suspects, a gang of Palestinian terrorists.
As it takes its first steps, the new Libyan leadership will likely
want to remove the stigma of Libya's association with the atrocity of
December 1988 and seek international acceptance of al-Megrahi's
innocence. A democratic Libya could wield a good deal of clout if it
applied the sort of economic and diplomatic pressures Gaddafi used to
secure al-Megrahi's release on compassionate grounds to urging the
Scottish and British governments to declare him innocent. And they may
be pushing at an open door.
It is no conspiracy theory to claim that the case against al-Megrahi
and Libya was manifestly absurd, or that the government knows that. Any
study of the details of his trial, a decade ago at Camp van Zeist in
Holland, will reveal that, unbelievable as it seems, the Scottish judges
who convicted him and rejected his appeal made an utter hash of the
evidence. Moreover, they actually missed a key piece of evidence which,
alone, would have been enough to sink the prosecution.
The Scottish government say they "do not doubt the safety" of
al-Megrahi's conviction, a statement which implies a rational
consideration of the evidence. Yet they have stonewalled on revealing
whether the cabinet ever actually deliberated on the issue.
They
know they are on weak ground. A little prodding from a powerful,
influential, oil-rich country looking to restock its armoury and they
will admit the obvious.
How do we know the true culprits were Palestinian terrorists? In July
1988, the battle cruiser USS Vincennes shot down IranAir flight 655
over the Straits of Hormuz. The Americans were steeled for a terrorist
response and the Western intelligence community was tipped off, probably
by Mossad, that a deal to carry out such an attack had been struck
between Iran and Ahmed Jibril, leader of the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine, "General Command". This was a Syrian-based
ultra-extremist splinter group of the PFLP, with an active cell in West
Germany. The deal was that Iran would pay them a bounty to destroy an
American civil airliner departing from a European airport.
As a result, the West German police set up the "Autumn Leaves"
surveillance operation, whereby a CIA proxy double-agent named Marwen
Khreesat, an expert bomb-maker from Jordan, was infiltrated into the
cell. He built a number of similar improvised explosive devices (IEDs)
one of which was virtually identical to that which brought down Pan Am
flight 103 a mere two months later.
The device was removed from under his nose and delivered to the
cell's airport security expert, Abu Elias. Khreesat tipped off his
control in Jordan and the police immediately swooped, rounding up
members of the cell and seizing a second device, also virtually
identical to the Lockerbie bomb.
"Abu Elias was never seized and the missing IED was never recovered,
two facts enough in themselves to prompt the strongest suspicion.
Combined with other compelling circumstantial evidence they plainly
connected the cell with the bombing."
This is not conspiracy theory. It is non-contentious stuff, most of
it given in evidence at Camp Zeist. Yet the judges turned a blind eye to
the obvious and based their decision on a series of weak findings. What
the Scottish judges did not appreciate was the utter horror Khreesat's
CIA controllers must have felt in the aftermath of the Lockerbie
tragedy: that a bomb made by their proxy in pursuance of his cover on
their behalf was almost certainly used to bring down the Pan Am jet.
Therein lies the clue to why attention was drawn away from Iran and
the PFLP-GC and why Libya became the scapegoat. But Israel has no need
to defer to the embarrassed sensibilities of a handful of long-retired
CIA staffers. Nor need it wait for pressure to build up from the new
Libyan leadership.
Benjamin Netanyahu's government might not want to be seen too openly
pressing for al-Megrahi's vindication and the corresponding condemnation
of Palestinian extremists. Yet behind the scenes they ought to be
attempting to secure that outcome. It can do Israel no harm for the
world to learn that her enemies were paid $4.5 million to murder 11
residents of Lockerbie, and 259 innocent passengers, of all religions.