"Israel's Staunchest Ally" - U.S. publishes details of missile base Israel wanted kept secret.HT: McClatchy.By Sheera Frenkel | McClatchy Foreign Staff.
TEL AVIV, Israel — Israel’s military fumed Monday over the discovery that the U.S. government had revealed details of a top-secret Israeli military installation in published bid requests.
The Obama administration had promised to build
Israel a state-of-the-art facility to house a new ballistic-missile defense
system, the Arrow 3. As with all Defense Department projects, detailed
specifications were made public so that contractors could bid on the $25 million
project. The specifications included more than 1,000 pages of details on the
facility, ranging from the heating and cooling systems to the thickness of the
walls.
“If an enemy of Israel wanted to launch an attack
against a facility, this would give him an easy how-to guide. This type of
information is closely guarded and its release can jeopardize the entire
facility,” said an Israeli military official who commented on the publication of
the proposal but declined to be named because he wasn’t authorized to discuss
the facility. He declined to say whether plans for the facility have been
altered as a result of the disclosure.
“This is more than worrying, it is shocking,” he
said.
Pentagon spokesman Lt. Col. Wesley Miller said he
couldn’t comment on the specifics of the Arrow 3 base, but he said the United
States routinely published the details of its construction plans on a federal
business opportunities website so that contractors could estimate the costs of
jobs. He said such postings often might be revised after contracts were
approved.
Israeli officials appear to have been well aware
of the danger of outsourcing building projects to the United States. In an
interview with the Reuters news agency in March, Lt. Col. Peleg Zeevi, the head
of the bidding process at Israel’s Defense Ministry, justified Israel’s long
history of relying on the United States to help build military installations by
saying that Israel needed “a player that has the knowledge, ability and
experience.”
“We are aware of the security issues that arise
in deals with foreign firms, but because we want real competition and expertise,
we will create conditions that will allow and encourage their participation,”
Zeevi said.
It appears, however, that Israeli officials were
caught by surprise that details of the facility at Tel Shahar, classified so top
secret that Israel’s military won’t officially confirm its location between
Jerusalem and Ashdod, would be made so public.Hmmmm......Who needs enemies with such 'Allies'?Read the full story here.
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