About Us

IMRA
IMRA
IMRA

 

Subscribe

Search


...................................................................................................................................................


Thursday, July 30, 2015
Jerusalem Post editorial: Don’t parole Pollard

Jerusalem Post editorial: Don’t parole Pollard
There is something suspect in the timing of the news of Pollard's release.
By JPOST EDITORIAL 07/30/2015 23:15
http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Jerusalem-Post-editorial-Dont-parole-Pollard-410718

Last week, screaming headlines were generated worldwide by breaking news in
The Wall Street Journal that the US was preparing to release Israeli spy
Jonathan Pollard after 30 years in prison. This announcement, predictably,
unleashed a tidal wave of media coverage.

A subsequent announcement a few days later officially confirming imminent
parole for Pollard added to the deluge of reports, which continue unabated.

There is something suspect in the timing of these news stories.

Jerusalem’s rejection of Pollard’s release as intended to mitigate Israel’s
displeasure with the disastrous Iranian nuclear pact was predictable.

However, denials by US officials, claiming that Pollard’s release is
unrelated to the Iranian deal were less predictable.

There were simply too many denials, at too high a level and employing too
strident a tone to be credible.

Clearly, the media frenzy about Pollard occurs precisely when the Obama
administration needs headlines diverted away from the Iranian deal. The
public’s attention instead has become focused on a subject that many love to
hate: Israel.

No one loves a spy. Everyone hates an Israeli spy. Pollard, who has been
viciously bashed in the media for nearly three decades, is hated more than
most.

News of his impending release on parole has revived the vilification of
Pollard to levels which have not been seen since his arrest 30 years ago,
and along with him, the vilification of Israel.

This, despite the now-documented record, bolstered by newly declassified
materials and testimony by ranking American officials which show that
Pollard’s life sentence was “excessive” and “unjust.”

Considering the injustice, one has to wonder why Pollard is being paroled
after 30 years instead of being set free.

Parole is not freedom. It is, by definition, conditional release, which can
be revoked at any time, for any number of very complex and often inscrutable
reasons, including thinly veiled political motives.

The Jerusalem Post was the first to report that the life sentence that
Pollard received after his arrest in 1985 is a 45-year sentence, not 30
years, as a life sentence is defined today.

That means that under the terms of his parole, Pollard will have the balance
of a 45-year sentence hanging over his head. He can be rearrested and sent
back to prison for another 15 years – with all the accompanying screaming
headlines, at any time for the next decade and a half.

It would be naïve not to suspect that in a case so politically charged as
this one, that the conditions of his parole may be set up to be so
restrictive and so complex as to invite or even guarantee failure.

Given that the announcements of Pollard’s impending release on parole have
generated such a media backlash, replete with Israel-bashing and
Pollard-bashing, just imagine what a field day his return to prison would be
for the world media.

No reason would have to be given for his rearrest. It could be done on any
pretext for any number of undeclared and unsubstantiated reasons, at any
time that the US decides to exert pressure on Israel. As the US has
repeatedly demonstrated, Pollard is an easy means to foment world opinion
against Israel.

Pollard is the only person in the history of the US to receive a life
sentence for spying for an ally.

In a recent interview, former CIA Chief James Woolsey again confirmed the
excessiveness of Pollard’s punishment: “Spies from friendly countries, like
the Philippines and Greece, normally stay in prison in the US for just a few
years. Under 10 years. Keeping Pollard for 30 years was excessive.”

Woolsey said that Pollard should be free to return home to Israel, because
he no longer poses any threat to the US.

“The reason one would keep a convicted spy in the United States is because
[of] the information he had....” Woolsey stated unequivocally that Pollard’s
30-year-old knowledge poses no risk and that Israel is a friend of America.

US Attorney-General Loretta Lynch said it all when she recently confirmed
that Pollard has served his time in full.

Parole is just too convenient a tactic for continuing to keep Israel off
balance while holding Pollard hostage for another 15 years.

Pollard does not deserve parole. He deserves to be set free.

Search For An Article

....................................................................................................

Contact Us

POB 982 Kfar Sava
Tel 972-9-7604719
Fax 972-3-7255730
email:imra@netvision.net.il IMRA is now also on Twitter
http://twitter.com/IMRA_UPDATES

image004.jpg (8687 bytes)