JERUSALEM (Reuters) – Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert on Sunday extended the tenure of the Mossad intelligence chief for a second time, testament to the hawkish spymaster’s role in crafting policy on Iran and other regional foes.
Meir Dagan, an army ex-general, took over Mossad in 2002 with what security sources described as a mandate to step up Israel’s monitoring of Iran’s nuclear program, Syria’s military moves and the countries’ ties to Islamist factions.
“Meir Dagan is doing his job with exceptional success and the list of Mossad’s achievements over the last six years is most impressive,” Olmert told his cabinet at its weekly meeting.
Many in the Arab world believe Mossad has been behind several high-profile assassinations in Lebanon and Syria, most recently of Hezbollah military chief Imad Moughniyah, who died in a February 12 car-bombing in Damascus. Israel denied involvement.
Israeli pundits have also credited Mossad with locating a suspected Syrian nuclear reactor which Olmert ordered bombed last September.
Prior to the sortie, Dagan came out against holding peace talks with Damascus, but indirect negotiations have since begun. Syria denied ever having a secret nuclear facility.
Israel, which is assumed to have the region’s only atomic arsenal, says Iran could enrich enough uranium for a bomb by 2010, though Tehran describes it nuclear plans as peaceful.
Dagan has been conferring regularly with Western counterparts while Mossad prepares for possible preemptive military action by Israeli against Iran, security sources said.
“There is no doubt that Mossad’s activities are gaining momentum,” Olmert said, without elaborating.
(Writing by Joseph Nasr, Editing by Alison Williams)