El Al Crash Exposes Israel's Chemical Weapons Arsenal
by Christopher Bollyn
October 9, 2002
Israel's huge arsenal of weapons of mass destruction—not Iraq's—poses the most
serious threat to peace in the Middle East and endangers global health. While
the controlled U.S. press remains fixated on Iraq's alleged weapons of mass
destruction, it ignores the grave danger of the more sophisticated and lethal
arsenal of weapons of mass destruction being developed and stored in Israel—with
the support of the U.S.
Ten years ago, on Oct. 4, 1992, an Israeli cargo jet carrying three of the four
components of the nerve gas Sarin, as well as other hazardous materials, crashed
into an apartment building in Holland. The known facts of the crash of El Al
Flight 1862, the worst air disaster in Dutch history, reveal that Holland's
government engaged in a "huge cover-up" and lied to its citizens to help conceal
Israel's unlawful chemical weapons arsenal and the international network that
supports it.
The Israeli cargo plane, a Boeing 747-200F, with three crewmen, one non-paying
passenger and 114 tons of freight, left Amsterdam's Schiphol airport at 6:21
p.m. en route to Tel Aviv. Seven minutes later, both starboard engines ripped
loose from the wing. The pilot circled back to attempt an emergency landing and
crashed into a high-rise apartment complex in Bijlmer, 10 miles east of Schiphol.
While only four people died on the plane, the crash of El Al Flight 1862 became
the worst air disaster in Dutch history because it killed scores of people on
the ground and destroyed the health of thousands of others by exposing them to
the toxic chemicals on the plane. The exact number of dead is still not known.
In the immediate aftermath of the crash, Dutch government officials lied to the
public saying the plane was only transporting flowers and perfume. It took six
years before the Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad revealed the true contents of
the crashed plane and their destination. "The cargo documents show that the
aircraft carried dimethyl methylphosphonate (DMMP) and two other substances
needed to make the deadly nerve gas Sarin. The DMPP was destined for the Israeli
Institute for Biological Research (IIBR)," the paper reported in October 1998.
Mouin Rabbani, writing in Middle East International, describes the IIBR, located
at Nes Zion near Tel Aviv, as "the Israeli military and intelligence community's
front organization for the development, testing and production of chemical and
biological weapons."
I interviewed Pierre Heijboer, a senior editor with the Dutch Volkskrant
newspaper, who lives a mile from Bijlmer and was one of the first reporters on
the scene. "I was in Biafra and Vietnam, but I never saw anything like that
crash. It was like looking into a steel smelter," Heijboer said. "The concrete
of the flats was glowing red."
Heijboer despises the cover-up: "I just get angry that they lied. It wasn't that
the Israelis were flying cargoes of ugly stuff above my head. What angers me is
that my government lies to its citizens." Tapes of phone conversations between
El Al and Schiphol Air Traffic Control (SATC) reveal collusion to conceal the
plane's contents.
In one tape, recorded minutes after the crash and hidden in a safe for more than
six years, an El Al employee tells an SATC employee: "There is poison on board:
ammunition and flammable liquids." The SATC official responded: "We will keep
these things under the lid."
Dutch authorities sent workers to clean up the contaminated area without the
benefit of protective clothing. Even Holland's Queen Beatrix, despite being a
long-time Bilderberg participant, was not informed of the danger when she made a
visit to the crash site the next day. "For the government and authorities of
the Netherlands the safety of its own citizens is less important than the
security of El Al military cargo planes," Heijboer said.
Heijboer's new exposé on the crash, Doomed Flight, was released Sept. 21, and
quickly became a best seller.
Heijboer says 30 eyewitnesses saw Israeli agents in white chemical outfits at
the crash scene, sifting through the debris and removing critical evidence. A
1998 Dutch police report says officers on the scene recognized the men in white
suits who absconded with evidence as Israeli agents. "As they came near, I
thought I recognized them. They looked just like the young men from the Israeli
security service who regularly practice shooting at our police school," one
officer said. "I've often said to people: 'Mossad was there first.'"
Another officer said: "We started to unroll a red and white ribbon to seal off
the area. The 10 men ignored this and, when I managed to grab one by his arm, he
said, 'We're from El Al.' Oh well, must be okay then I thought. They must have
been in radio contact with the crew. How else could they have gotten here so
fast?"
A fireman, Carel Boer, said: "We had to stand aside while people in
astronaut-like suits carried away a kind of box. I couldn't see what it was
since it was covered with a blanket." The plane's "black box" flight recorder
was never recovered, and El Al refused to reveal the cargo manifest.
An estimated 3,000 Dutch residents suffer health problems as a result of the
chemical and radioactive poisoning that occurred when El Al 1862 crashed. Today
there is growing awareness in Holland of Israel's privileged and unregulated use
of Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport to transport dangerous military cargo, a
practice that clearly puts the health of the Dutch people at risk.
"El Al has its own security force at Schiphol," Heijboer said. "But they don't
work for El Al -- they are all from Shin Bet (Israeli secret service) and are
paid by the Israeli embassy. The Israelis run the airport like a little Haifa."
Dutch Attorney General Vrakking testified on Jan. 29, 1999, that the El Al
security detachment at Schiphol was a branch of Mossad.
"Schiphol has become a hub for secret weapons transfers," charged Henk van der
Belt, an investigator working with the Bijlmer survivors. "Dutch authorities
have no jurisdiction over Israeli activities at the airport." A TV Amsterdam
(TVA) report identified Schiphol as one of several European airports that allows
El Al to transfer cargo without supervision.
TVA said Belgian politicians now fear that "a disaster like the crash in Holland
in 1992 is possible at [Belgium's] Zaaventem. This airport is, like Schiphol,
under control by the secret police of Israel."
The Dutch press reported that security officials had been waiving Israeli air
cargo through Schiphol, El Al's European hub, since the 1950s. "Of course it
continues," Heijboer said. "There are rules, but there is an exception—El Al is
allowed to ignore the rules."
A Dutch Air Guidance Organization employee told a parliamentary hearing that
"policy" since 1973 was to keep quiet about all El Al activities. Schiphol
workers testified that customs or the Dutch Flight Safety Board never inspected
El Al planes.
A parliamentary committee discovered that every Sunday evening a mysterious El
Al cargo flight routinely touched down at Schiphol en route from New York to Tel
Aviv. These flights did not appear on airport arrival monitors, the cargo was
never checked, and the documentation for the flights was processed in a special,
unmarked room.
Shipping precursors of chemical weapons, such as those aboard 1862, is a
violation of the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC), which the U.S. is party to.
Solkatronic Chemicals of Morrisville, Pa., had sold the DMMP. The chemical is a
Schedule 2 precursor for Sarin under the CWC and its export is strictly
controlled by the U.S. government. In spite of this, the Department of Commerce
repeatedly granted Solkatronic a license to ship DMMP to IIBR. Spokesmen at the
Dept. of Commerce were unable to say whether such shipments would continue.
I asked the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) in the
Hague about Israel's use of Schiphol to transport components for chemical
weapons.
Peter Kaiser, spokesman for OPCW, was not familiar with the details of flight
1862 but said that Israel, as a non-member, which has signed but not ratified
the treaty, was obliged to "respect the convention."
Israel has never admitted producing chemical or biological weapons and, because
it is not a member state of the CWC, is not required to divulge what chemical
weapons it has or accept inspectors. However, a member state, such as the
United States, is proscribed from providing a non-member state like Israel
chemical weapons or precursor chemicals such as DMMP.
The Israeli government was finally compelled to admit that the jet had been
carrying 190 liters of DMPP, a crucial component of Sarin. Sarin, 20 times as
lethal as cyanide, kills by crippling the nervous system and was used in a
terror attack on the Tokyo underground system that killed six passengers and
injured more than 3,000.
In 1992, any revelation that the U.S. was supplying Israel with the components
to make chemical weapons was played down, because alleged Iraqi development of
chemical weapons has been used for propaganda purposes to justify U.S.
aggression against Iraq. Jan Medema, a chemical weapons inspector from the
toxic substances division at the Dutch Defense Research Institute in The Hague,
said the quantity of Sarin components on the plane was sufficient to generate
more than a quarter of a ton of the deadly nerve gas.
Heijboer said this was the third known shipment of these chemicals to the IIBR.
The fact that the IIBR was the destination of the cargo indicates to Medema that
this shipment was to create a large amount of Sarin.
"We have been trying to think what possible research purposes you would need
this compound in such large quantities for," Medema said. "The likelihood has to
be that it was for Sarin. Either they had some special plan for an experiment or
they needed a quantity of Sarin for some special purpose. This raises many
questions."
Uzi Mahnaimi of the Times said that Israeli assault aircraft crews had been
trained to fit an "active chemical or biological weapon within minutes of
receiving the command to attack. The weapons are manufactured at the Institute
for Biological Research in a suburb of Nes Zion."