Tag Archives: Spying

Possessions of Israel’s most famous spy recovered — 60 years after he was executed in Syria

Israel has retrieved thousands of items belonging to the country’s most famous spy after a covert operation in Syria. 

On Sunday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shared some of the 2,500 items from the Syrian archive relating to Eli Cohen, an Israeli spy who infiltrated the political echelon in Syria, with Cohen’s widow. Sunday marked 60 years since Cohen was hanged in a square in Damascus.

The items recently spirited into Israel include documents, recordings, photos, and items collected by Syrian intelligence after his capture in January 1965, letters in his own handwriting to his family in Israel, photographs of his activity during his operational mission in Syria and personal objects that were taken from his home after his capture.

Among the items recovered was a handwritten will penned by Cohen hours before his execution, Agence France-Presse reported.

Suitcases of items brought to Israel included worn folders stuffed with handwritten notes, keys to his apartment in Damascus, passports and false identification documents, missions from the Mossad to surveil specific people and places, and documentation of all the efforts of his widow, Nadia Cohen, begging world leaders for his release from prison.

In this undated photo released by the Israeli Prime Minister’s Office, identity documents of Eli Cohen are displayed. 

Israeli Prime Minister’s Office via AP


A Syrian government spokesperson did not immediately respond to a Reuters news agency request for comment on how the items had been retrieved from Syria.

Cohen, who was born in Egypt to a Jewish family, was sent by Mossad to Syria, where he posed as a Syrian businessman named Kamal Amin Taabet, the BBC reported.  After befriending influential political, business and military figures, he was able to obtain secret information, which he passed back to Israel. 

Cohen’s success in Syria was one of the Mossad spy agency’s first major achievements, and the top-secret intelligence he obtained is widely credited with helping Israel prepare for its swift victory in the 1967 Middle East War.

Eli Cohen managed to forge close contacts within the political and military hierarchy of Israel’s archenemy in the early 1960s, ultimately rising to become a top adviser to Syria’s defense minister. In 1965, Cohen was caught radioing information to Israel. He was tried and hanged in a Damascus square on May 18, 1965. His remains have yet to be returned to Israel, where he is regarded as a national hero.

Isreal previously recovered a watch belonging to Cohen from Syria, the BBC reported in 2018. Details of how Israel got hold of the watch were not disclosed, other than it was returned “in a special Mossad operation.”

In 2019, actor Sacha Baron Cohen portrayed Eli Cohen (no relation) in a six-episode Netflix series called “The Spy.”

“We conducted a special operation by the Mossad, by the State of Israel, to bring his (Eli Cohen’s) archive, which had been in the safes of the Syrian intelligence for 60 years,” Netanyahu told Nadia Cohen on Sunday in Jerusalem.

Ahead of viewing the items, Nadia Cohen told Netanyahu that the most important thing was to bring back Cohen’s body. Netanyahu said Israel was continuing to work on locating Cohen’s body. Last week, Israel recovered the body of an Israeli soldier from Syria who had been missing for more than four decades, after he was killed during a clash with Syrian forces in Lebanon in 1982.

“Eli is an Israeli legend. He’s the greatest agent Israeli intelligence has had in the years the state existed. There was no one like him,” Netanyahu said.

This picture taken on January 25, 2000 shows a close-up of a postage stamp commemorating Israeli spy Eli Cohen, who was executed by Syria in Damascus in 1965. 

MENAHEM KAHANA/AFP via Getty Images


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Russia spy ring members sentenced to prison in U.K. case involving hidden cameras, love triangle and

A U.K. court Monday handed down jail terms of up to 10 years to six Bulgarians convicted for belonging to a Russian espionage cell described as like something from a “spy novel.”

Fake passports, hidden cameras, a spy love triangle and secret online chats about potential abductions and “honeytraps” were uncovered by investigators.

Orlin Roussev, 47, headed the operation from a run-down former guesthouse in the eastern English seaside resort of Great Yarmouth where police found a “treasure trove” of spy paraphernalia.

Sentencing the group at London’s Old Bailey criminal court, judge Nicholas Hilliard said the potential risks of spying on the U.K. and the individuals targeted would have been clear.

The cell’s operations are believed to be among the “largest and most complex” enemy operations ever uncovered on British soil.

Judge Hilliard said the defendants were “motivated by money,” with substantial sums of up to 1 million euros ($1.1 million) discussed, the BBC reported.

An undated Metropolitan Police handout photo of Bulgarian national Vanya Gaberova wearing glasses capable of recording video, in an unknown location. 

Metropolitan Police via Reuters


The judge added that the sums of money paid to the spies demonstrated the value of their covert activities to Russia.

The spies operated across borders in the U.K., Austria, Spain, Germany and Montenegro, the court heard.

Hundreds of spy gadgets were recovered from Roussev’s property including ones hidden inside a rock, men’s ties, a Coke bottle and even a Minions toy.

Police unraveled six operations dating back three years to August 2020 from a vast cache of Telegram messages on Roussev’s phone.

In the chat Roussev, nicknamed “Jackie Chan,” referred to his spies as Minions — characters from the animated film “Despicable Me” — while his second in command Biser Dzhambazov, 44, went by “Mad Max.”

In one sinister message about a potential abduction, ringleader Roussev responded: “If you are serious about it, I have the resources to kidnap, drug him and lock him up in a secure cave.”  

Like a “spy novel”

Dominic Murphy, head of Counter Terrorism Command at London’s Metropolitan Police, described the cell as an “extremely sophisticated intelligence gathering operation.”

The network’s activities had been a “real threat” to both targeted individuals and national security with tactics like something from a “spy novel,” he said ahead of the sentencing hearing.

The cell was directed by alleged Russian agent Jan Marsalek, an Austrian businessman wanted by Interpol after the collapse of German payment processing firm Wirecard.

Marsalek acted as a go-between for Russian intelligence and Roussev.

Roussev, Dzhambazov and Ivan Stoyanov, 33, pleaded guilty to spying. They were sentenced to 10 years and eight months, 10 years and two months, and five years, respectively.

The other three, former competitive open water swimmer Tihomir Ivanchev, 39, laboratory assistant Katrin Ivanova, 33, and beauty salon business owner Vanya Gaberova, 30, were found guilty of espionage after a trial in March.

An undated Metropolitan Police handout photo of Bulgarian national Katrin Ivanova who was on trial at the Old Bailey accused of being part of a Russian spy ring, in London. 

Metropolitan Police via Reuters


They were sentenced to eight years, nine years and eight months, and six years and eight months, respectively.

Gaberova’s defense lawyer Anthony Metzer said Gaberova was “controlled, coerced into this conspiracy by Mr. Dzhambazov,” who was her lover and also involved with Ivanova, the BBC reported. The court was told she had been diagnosed with depression, panic disorder, claustrophobia and anxiety.

The network engaged in a series of surveillance and intelligence operations targeting people and places of interest to the Russian state.

They discussed using Gaberova as a “honeytrap” to snare a high-profile journalist and dropping pigs blood on the Kazakhstan embassy in London by drone.

Another plot aimed to sweep up the mobile phone data of Ukrainian soldiers thought to be trained at a U.S. airbase in Germany.

When police raided the cell members’ homes in February 2023, they found Dzhambazov, who was in a long-term relationship with Ivanova, naked in bed with his lover Gaberova.

Giving evidence, Gaberova claimed she had been deceived by Dzhambazov who she thought was an Interpol officer with brain cancer.

Bellingcat investigative journalist Christo Grozev was among those targeted by the network after he exposed Russian links to the Novichok nerve agent attacks in the English city of Salisbury in 2018 and the downing of a Malaysia Airlines plane in July 2014.

Discovering the Bulgarian spooks had followed his and his family’s movements and spied on their communications over a prolonged period had been “terrifying, disorientating and deeply destabilizing,” he said in an impact statement.

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