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"You know the timing of this is very bad."
There was a long pause and then Freidman asked in an agitated tone, "How so?"
Freidman's frustration was not lost on Kennedy. Her Israeli counterpart was an unusually blunt man, but something in his voice told her that he was under a lot of pressure. He had his enemies in the cabinet, doves who wanted to disengage and start real peace talks. She was sure they were none too fond of this current operation.
"The President is meeting with the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia next week," offered Kennedy, "and the main topic of discussion was going to be a renewed peace initiative in the Middle East but now that we have dozens of Palestinian women and children being pulled from the rubble the whole thing might be a nonstarter."
"Irene, it was a d.a.m.n bomb factory."
"And it has taken the President months just to get the Crown Prince to sit down."
"You know as well as I do," spat Freidman, "that the Crown Prince will never support real peace. The day he recognizes Israel is the day he ignites the revolution in his country and slits his own throat."
"You think we don't know that?" asked Kennedy, maintaining her neutral tone.
"The President wants a.s.surances on other fronts. We want to see a real crackdown on the terrorist groups operating out of Saudi Arabia. We want to see the funding of these groups stopped."
"Irene," Freidman interrupted her and let out a sigh of frustration.
"We've been over all this before. I appreciate the efforts you make on our behalf, but this is our war. We are on the front line. We are the ones facing terrorist bombers every day. We will not sit on our hands. When we receive solid intelligence we are going to act, and if these cowards insist on hiding behind women and children, then so be it."
"Ben, I am well aware of your difficulties, but you can't go it alone.
You need to do a better job of keeping us in the loop."
"I am keeping you in the loop," he replied earnestly.
"What do you think I am doing right now?"
Kennedy was not about to let him know that she knew he was lying to her, so she simply said, "You're calling me nine hours after I put a call in to you stating that the President of the United States wished to know what was going on." Kennedy let the statement sink in and then added, "Now come on, Ben, you and I are veterans at this.
There's only a couple of reasons why you wait that long to return a call, and none of them are good from where I'm sitting." Kennedy listened intently while she pictured Freidman squirming on the other end of the line.
Finally, he said, "There's something I've been working to confirm. something that's very important. I didn't want to call you until I knew for sure."
"And what is that?"
"This goes no further than you. I don't want you telling the President until I can verify it. We had intelligence that a high-level meeting was taking place last night."
"How high?"
"I'll send you the list, but suffice it to say that there were key players from Hamas, the Popular Liberation Committee, Force 17, Islamic Jihad, leaders of the martyr brigades and possibly Mohammed Atwa, the head of Palestinian General Intelligence."
"You're serious?" Kennedy acted surprised.
"So the story about the bomb-making factory is-" "True! We did not know it was there. Our rockets set off secondary explosions that were unavoidable."
Kennedy wondered why it had been such a struggle for Freidman to tell her about the real intent of the operation and why, according to her facts, he was still lying to her about the bomb factory.
"When will you have confirmation on who was taken out in the strike?"
"By tomorrow I should have a good idea. I have an a.s.set posing as a cameraman who's photographing the dead. Those pictures, along with the intercepts we're picking up, should give us a fairly complete list. Listen now," said Freidman rea.s.serting control, "I have to go now.
If I find anything else out, I'll let you know."
"All right." Before she could say good-bye Freidman was off the line.
Kennedy sat there for a moment staring at the handset, trying to separate the fact from the fiction in an effort to discern what the head of Mossad was up to. In the end it could be nothing more than his inability to play things straight. There were plenty of people like him in the business. Never tell the whole story, only parts of it. Or it could be much deeper than that. Kennedy would have to monitor the situation closely.
Turning to her computer she fired off a quick e-mail to Jake Turbes that she wanted him to personally look into the events in Hebron, and do so without the aid of Mossad. She wanted clean untainted facts by which to judge Freidman's honesty, or more likely lack thereof.
FORTY FOUR.
Ben Freidman sat on the porch of the house sipping a gla.s.s of water and looking out at the rolling terrain under the moonlit evening sky. He desperately wanted a drink, but one had not been offered to him. It had been a very long day trying to manage the situation in Hebron. There were people in his government who didn't appreciate the victory he had achieved. They were weaklings. Men and women who didn't have the stomach to fight for the preservation of Israel.
The man he was waiting to see had the determination, though.
The ranch in the Jordan Valley belonged to Prime Minister David Goldberg. Goldberg, the head of the conservative Likud Party, had been elected by an overwhelming majority of the Israeli people despite the fact that his party held only a handful of seats in the 120 member Knesset. That had been two years ago, when the people had seen how duplicitous the Palestinians were. The Israelis extended the olive branch and Ya.s.ser Arafat took it from them and slapped them in the face. He used the new Palestinian Authority to secure his hold over the Palestinian people and bring in weapons and explosives to help wage an even bloodier war against the Jews, all the while he feigned a lack of control over the so-called martyr brigades.
Goldberg had been swept into office as a hard-liner who would crack down on the Palestinian terror groups and restore some security to the country. Unfortunately things had not gone as planned. They were up against a new form of terror. One that so far they had been unable to stop. The steady stream of homicide bombers had crippled Israel's fragile economy and frayed the nerves of even some of the stoutest patriots. The martyr brigades needed to be stopped, and Ben Freidman was willing to be every bit as ruthless as the enemy to get the job done.
He was worried about his old friend and current prime minister, though. There had been signs lately that Goldberg was beginning to crack under the pressure. His cabinet was filled with back stabbers and even his own party was asking if the old general had what it took to deal with the crisis. And then on top of that the d.a.m.n Americans were giving him orders to back down.
Freidman had seen it all before. He understood the visceral hatred the Arabs felt toward him and his country. In Freidman's mind it was based on jealousy. The Arabs and their closed patriarchal society couldn't handle being bested by the Jews. The Palestinians had held on to this land for thousands of years and had done nothing to improve it.
The Jews came back to their homeland and in one generation turned much of the arid landscape into plentiful farms and orchards. They had tried to negotiate a fair peace, but the Arabs would have none of it.
There would always be a large and influential segment of the Palestinian people who would never be satisfied until Israel ceased to exist. It was Freidman's job to make sure that never happened.
This was the important mission of Freidman's life. It was his vocation to make sure Israel survived, and he was willing to go to great lengths to ensure success. Doing it alone, though, was not possible. He needed help. He needed allies who would pacify the bleeding hearts in his country, those naive imbeciles who actually believed that peace was worth risking the entire security of a nation, of a people who had narrowly avoided extinction.
He needed lobbyists in America to lean on the right people. People who could get to other people who controlled the lifeblood of politics: money. People who could deliver the three states that every Presidential hopeful wanted: New York, Florida and the Crown jewel, California. He needed America's support more than ever and he would work diligently to make sure it was there when the time came.
Right now, though, the thing he needed most was a strong prime minister who would stay the course. He'd seen signs lately that his old friend was losing his stomach for the fight. This could not be allowed to happen. Prime Minister Goldberg needed to hold true to his commitment and stave off another attack from the liberals.
David Goldberg stepped onto the porch holding two bottles of Goldstar beer. He handed one to Freidman and apologized for making him wait. Even though Freidman would have preferred a stiff drink, he took the beer and watched his friend take a seat in the rocking chair next to him.
On the face of it, Goldberg was the most unlikely hawk you would ever meet. His plump fleshy appearance made him appear too soft for a war hero. He had a mane of white hair, which framed a tan face and heavy jowls. He was a large man, but not muscular and it was easy to see him as the grown-up version of the pudgy kid in school who was always picked on. This was a mistake. The man's temper and valor were legendary. Never one to shy away from a fight, Goldberg had the disposition of a bull. He had distinguished himself many times on the battlefield, and for that at least, he had the respect of his countrymen.
Unfortunately, though, his valor did not indefinitely guarantee their support.
Goldberg took a swig of beer and said, "Ben, you have created quite a stir."
Freidman listened to a dog barking in the distance and said, "Don't I always?"
"Yes, you do, but these are delicate times."
Freidman already disliked the tone of their conversation.
"When haven't they been?"
The prime minister disagreed by shaking his head.
"We have never seen the international pressure we see now:" "Forgive me for being so blunt, David, but the international community can kiss my a.s.s."
"Believe me, I share your feelings, but we cannot ignore them.
What you did last night is causing me problems."
Freidman looked away from his old friend and took a drink from his beer.
"David, you asked me to hit back, and did I ever find a way to hit back. It will take them years to recover from this."
The prime minister wasn't so sure anymore, not since these she-devils started blowing themselves up. More and more Goldberg was starting to think in terms of withdrawal from the West Bank and the occupied territories. There were only two things that prevented him from doing so. The first was the settlements. Thousands of Jews had moved into the areas and would die rather than leave. The second reason he wouldn't support the withdrawal and recognition of a Palestinian state was that he feared for his life. The man sitting next to him on the porch, along with many others, would have him killed if he were to gamble so recklessly with Israel's security.
Knowing he had to be careful with how he dealt with Freidman, he said, "The attack was the Crowning achievement of your career, Ben." Goldberg held out his bottle for a toast.
"Thank you." Freidman clanged his bottle against the prime minister's and said, "But?"
Goldberg finished his drink and in a confused tone asked, "But what?"
"Don't protect me, David. Remember I hear everything. I know your cabinet is furious with the number of casualties."
"They are rarely in agreement on anything."
"Well, if you'd like me to address them I am more than willing."
Goldberg considered this for a moment. It wasn't a bad idea. Ben Friedman could intimidate even the staunchest opponent.
"Maybe later, but for now I am more concerned about explaining to the international community how so many innocent civilians died."
He was tempted to remind him that the Palestinians living in the neighborhood were hardly innocent, but the director general of Mossad decided against it. Goldberg the warrior had transformed into Goldberg the politician. Instead he said, "They are an unfortunate casualty of war."
"But sixteen h.e.l.lfire missiles, Ben. What were you thinking?"
Freidman shrugged.
"This was a once in a lifetime chance. I wasn't about to let a single one of them escape if I could help it."
"I've been told your infiltrator had enough explosives in those cases to take out everyone at the meeting."
Freidman was more than a little surprised that Goldberg knew about the specifics, but he covered it well. He had intentionally told him little prior to the mission with the tacit understanding that if things went wrong, the prime minister would have deniability. Now someone within his own agency was talking to the prime minister and Freidman would have to find out who.
"David, don't tell me you've lost your stomach for this?"
A scowl formed on Goldberg's face.
"Don't confuse the issue, Ben.
I'm hearing things from other sources. I'm hearing that you went overboard on this thing that we could have avoided killing all the innocent civilians."
Freidman stopped rocking and looked harshly at his old friend.
"Do me a favor and stop calling them innocent. They have been blowing up women and children for years, and you know as well as I that the only way to make them stop is to hit them harder than they hit us."
Goldberg wasn't so sure anymore. When he'd been a young tank commander, he'd thought so. When he'd taken the reins of the country just a few years ago he had thought so, but now, after all the homicide bombs, he was wavering in his conviction.
"Ben, these are delicate times. The eyes of the world are upon us."
Freidman was disgusted by what he was hearing. He was tempted to tell Goldberg to step down if he didn't have the const.i.tution to see it through. Instead he said, "The eyes of the world have always been on us. It shouldn't matter any more now than it has in the past. We are not the aggressors here, David, and you know that. They are the ones who have continued to attack us, and both of us have been around long enough to know the only thing they respond to is force."
"But it has to end at some point. We need to find a way."
"What?" snapped Freidman.
"Do you want to pull out and build your stupid wall? Have you paid no attention to history? All you will be doing is giving them land that they will use to someday attack us from. You will be remembered as the Neville Chamberlain of Israel."
"I am talking about doing no such thing," replied a terse Goldberg.
"And don't sit here and lecture me about being Neville Chamberlain, when just last night you killed a hundred innocent women and children.
I've been briefed by the army, Ben. I know there was no bomb factory. Those people did not need to die."
Freidman did not intend for this meeting to head in this direction, but he was not about to back down.
"I will admit that some of those deaths are regrettable, but again, only a few. The overwhelming majority of the people who were living on that block were either terrorists or supporters of terrorists. I will lose no sleep over my decision, and I will gladly stand before your cabinet and defend my actions."
"It is not the cabinet that I am worried about," snapped Goldberg.
"It is the UN, and it is the Americans. If they decide to look into this, and they find out that there was in fact no bomb factory, you will have done us great harm."
"They will not look into it," promised an irritated Freidman.
"I can handle the Americans. I always have and I always will, and as far as the UN is concerned they are a bunch of impotent dilettantes. A week from now this will all be forgotten." Freidman took a swig of beer and confidently added, "I can promise you this will all blow over. Right now, though, we need to stay on the offensive. In the wake of an attack such as last night they will make mistakes. They will seek vengeance and we must be ready to pounce. This is what I propose we do."
Goldberg rocked in his chair and listened as the head of Mossad laid out his plan for how to keep the various Palestinian groups on the defensive. The prime minister was torn as he listened. The old soldier in him very much wanted to press the advantage, but there was another voice in his head that was preaching caution. It was the voice of a politician who had the support of less than half of his country.
So far the only reason he hadn't received a vote of no confidence was because there was no clear challenger willing to step into the ring.
His opponents were circling, though, and it wouldn't be long before they pounced. For the time being he would have to keep a close watch on Freidman. If the UN found out what had really happened in Hebron, his cabinet would turn on him in a second, and Israel would once again be forced back to the peace table with weak leaders.h.i.+p at the reins of power.