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Sunday,
December 13, 1998 Published at 21:56 GMT
Israeli spy issue resurfaces

President
Clinton promised an early decision in the case

Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu has once more in raised in
his talks with President Clinton the issue of Jonathan Pollard, the Israeli
spy jailed for life in the US in 1985.
Mr Pollard, an American-born Jew, spied for Israel when he was an
employee at the US defence department, passing thousands of documents to
Israeli agents.
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![[ image: Jonathan Pollard: In virtual solitary confinement for the past 13 years]](//www.oocities.org/azidan_1999/islam_files/plots/treason/index_files/jonathan.jpg)
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Jonathan
Pollard: In virtual solitary confinement for the past 13 years
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At the Wye River talks in October President Clinton refused to
authorise his release, which almost blocked the agreement.
President Clinton - speaking today at a joint press conference with
Mr Netanyahu - promised an early decision on whether Mr Pollard's sentence
can be reduced.
"My counsel, (Charles) Ruff, has invited the Justice Department
and all... the interested parties to say what they think about the Pollard
case, to do so by sometime in January," Mr Clinton said.
"I will review all that plus whatever arguments are presented
to me on the other side for the reduction of the sentence, and I will make
a decision in a prompt way," he said.
Top secret information passed
Mr Pollard, now aged 44, was a US Navy employee with access to top
secret material at the Pentagon, the headquarters of the US defence
department, who used his position to pass large amounts of information to
Israeli agents.
Much of what Pollard disclosed to Israeli intelligence is still
classified material, but US sources say he handed over highly sensitive
information.
When Pollard was first arrested, the Israeli Government denied all
knowledge of him.
However, supporters both in Israel and the United States have
incessantly lobbied for his release.
A year ago, Pollard was granted Israeli citizenship and the
government of Israel pledged itself to try to obtain his release.
The sentence Pollard is serving - he has been in virtual solitary
confinement for 13 years - is the harshest ever passed in the case of
espionage for a country America regards as friendly.
But correspondents say there are powerful lobbies in the United
States which do not want to see him let out. The director of the CIA,
George Trenet, is reported to have threatened to resign if Pollard were
released.
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