"The whole world can see who it is," said Netanyahu on Fox News Sunday. "You would have known or been able to surmise it from Cyprus a week ago." A "Hezbollah operative" in Cyprus was caught planning "exactly the same attack, exactly the same modus operandi," he said.
But the case to which Netanyahu referred is much less clear-cut than his dramatic description. In fact, it is unclear who the alleged Hezbollah operative really is and what he was actually doing in Cyprus. The 24-year-old Lebanese man with a Swedish passport was arrested in his hotel room in Limossol July 7 -- just two days after he had arrived in the country -- following an urgent message sent to Cyprus from Israeli intelligence that the man intended to carry out attacks, according to Haaretz July 14.
The Israeli press have portrayed the unnamed Lebanese as "collecting information for a terror attack" being planned by Hezbollah (Israel Hayom) and as identifying the "vulnerabilities that would allow for maximal damage among a group of Israeli tourists in their first hours on Cyprus." (Ynet News).
But those descriptions may not reflect what the Lebanese man was actually doing. A senior Cypriot official told Reuters a week after he was taken into custody, "It is not clear what, or whether, there was a target in Cyprus." And other Cypriot authorities were reported by the Cyprus Mail July 20 and by Associated Press Monday to have said they believe the man was acting alone.
The Cypriot Greek-language newspaper Phileftheros reported that he was found with information on tour buses carrying Israeli passengers, a list of places favoured by Israeli tourists, and flight information on Israeli airlines that land in Cyprus, suggesting that he planned to detonate explosives on board a plane or bus.
But despite an intensive search, no indication has been found that the man is linked to any explosives.
A lone individual arrested in his hotel room without any explosives hardly presents a close parallel to the bus bombing in Burgas. Contrary to Netanyahu's breathless description of what happened in Cyprus, the arrest may turn out to have been an over-reaction by Mossad to unconfirmed information the agency had obtained three months earlier that someone might be interested in harming Israeli tourists in Cyprus, reported by Ynet News July 15.
Details that have emerged about the cases of Lebanese and Iranian citizens arrested at the insistence of Mossad in Thailand in January and Kenya in June also suggest that sensational press accounts of alleged terrorist plans by the suspects inspired by the Israelis may have been highly distorted, and that the individuals arrested may turn out not to be terrorists at all.
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