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British Intelligence and the Jewish Resistance Movement in the Palestine Mandate, 1945-1946
Definition of a Zionist: A Jew who pays another Jew to send a third Jew to Palestine.- Tailpiece to Air Levant HQ intelligence summary dated January 1947. WO275/121, The National Archives at Kew, London.
It was in the early hours on Saturday June 29th, 1946. The British Army in Palestine had
begun Operation Agatha, and was well underway into its searches for Jewish Agency, Haganah
and Palmach members and their arms. This mission had mixed success. About one hour before
British troops entered Tel Aviv, the British Military HQ at Citrus House in that city received a
phone call from a woman inquiring when the curfew would begin. This was the first sign that
British security had been breached and Jewish intelligence had advance warning of the operation.
In the weeks prior to the raid, special reconnaissance had been taken to ensure the locations of
specific targets, including that of the Haganah General Headquarters and its chief, Moshe Sneh.
The office was raided by the army and many individuals were arrested however, Sneh, known to
the British as head of the Haganah, as an advocate of violence and liaison with the terrorist
organizations, Irgun and Lehi, was nowhere to be found. Elsewhere, the British 6th Airborne
Division was busy searching for the address 107 Keren Kayemet Avenue, which was believed to
house David Ben-Gurion, the president of the Jewish Agency Executive who, with some
justification, was thought guilty of complicity with terrorism. The address did not exist. Ben-
Gurion was in Europe. When the army came to arrest David HaCohen, they found him at their
given address, only to discover that no important belongings or documents were on the premises.
HaCohen, a labour Zionist and head of the Building Contractors, told the troops who had come
for him that he was glad not to be disappointed, as he had been expecting this raid and his arrest
for two days. The British arrested about 2700 people, including most of the political leadership
of the Jewish Community of Palestine, the Yishuv, seized dozens of arms caches and returned
with three 3-ton trucks full of captured documents.
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The operation was considered a success.
The operation has demonstrated the firmness of HMG not to tolerate the situation where leaders engaged in lawful political activities lead double lives and direct and control the illegal armed organizations at the same time; it will be a salutary lesson to those who follow in the shoes of the arrested political leaders.The main value of the operation has probably been psychological, and it is this, if anything, which will have the effect of restoring law and order to Palestine.1
This view proved overoptimistic. Instead, the raids multiplied the level of Jewish
violence after Agatha against British forces and divided the number of Jews willing to work with
them. Within a month, the British High Commissioner in Palestine, General Sir Alan
Cunningham, concluded that “immediate partition is the only solution which gives a chance of
stability.”2 British policy had been beaten. So had its intelligence.
This paper will assess the function, the use of, and the usefulness of intelligence in
Palestine. From the winter of 1945 through to the summer of 1946, a united Jewish Resistance
Movement emerged between the Haganah and Palmach, Irgun and Lehi, directed and
coordinated by the Jewish Agency for Palestine, despite the objections of some of its left-wing
members. The JRM aimed to weaken or destroy British rule in Palestine, to delegitimize the
mandate’s rule through violence. More importantly it aimed to achieve a reversal, one way or the
other, of the restrictive immigration policy outlined in the 1939 White Paper, which limited
Jewish immigration to Palestine from European DP camps.
In the fall of 1945, the Haganah dropped its policy of Havlagah, or restraint, towards the
Mandate authorities, and forged a secret agreement with the terrorist organizations, Irgun and
Lehi.3 The Haganah originally was the Yishuv’s defence organization against the Arabs, who
1 “Appreciation of Success of the Operation” In Operation AGATHA. The National Archives at Kew, London. WO 275/27.2 “Cunningham to Secretary of State for the Colonies 24.7.46” in Telegrams, 10 November 1945 - 30 July 1946. Sir Alan Cunningham Collection. GB165-0072, Middle East Centre Archives, St. Antony's College, Oxford. 1/1.3 David Charters, The British Army and Jewish Insurgency in Palestine, 1945-47, Studies in Military and Strategic History (Basingstoke, England: Macmillan, 1989). 52-59.
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largely were hostile to Zionist settlement in Palestine. This organized territorial militia, under the
direct control of the Jewish Agency, defended the various Kibbutzim and Moshavim or Jewish
communes and settlements in Palestine. In 1938 certain Haganah units assisted the British in
fighting Arab rebels. During the Second World War the Palmach, an elite offensive unit, was
created by the British military in May, 1941 to assist them in the event of a German invasion of
Palestine.4 The Haganah provided legitimacy and a form of power to the Jewish Agency,
especially after the Second World War when many of its forces had wartime experience.
The Irgun Zvai Leumi, or National Military Organization, was created in 1931 when
some Haganah officers broke from the parent organization over the issue of socialist
politicization in the defence forces. The Irgun was unstable and unimportant until Menachem
Begin took leadership in 1943. He reorganized the group into a secret revolutionary army, an
independent body with its own front organizations for fundraising and political program,
separate but inspired by Revisionist Zionism, which opposed the socialist aspects of labour
Zionism. Irgun aimed at the establishment of a Jewish state on both sides of the Jordan River.
Known to the British as the Stern Gang, the Lochemi Herut l’Israel (Lehi) or Freedom
Fighters for Israel, split from the Irgun when the Second World War broke out, and the Irgun
agreed to cooperate with Britain during the war. Founded by Abraham Stern, the group was
originally fascist in ideology. It pursued agreements with Mussolini and the Nazis in 1940. For
obvious reasons, Hitler did not respond to the Jewish group’s request for an alliance. In 1942
Abraham Stern was killed in an arrest operation, allegedly while trying to escape, but the group
continued to function. It assassinated Lord Moyne in Cairo in November 1944. The arrest of
those responsible provided one important piece of intelligence on the group. Its security was
airtight. None of the three men knew the others’ true names or addresses nor those of their
4 Ibid. 43.
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commanders. Lehi, suppressed during the subsequent “hunting season” where the Haganah and
the British cooperated against illegal terrorist organizations, was reinvigorated during the Jewish
Resistance Movement.
This paper will survey British intelligence on Jewish political and paramilitary
organizations during the period of the Jewish Resistance Movement, especially from the
perspective of the most important British policymaker in Palestine, General Sir Alan
Cunningham, High Commissioner from 1945 until the end of the mandate in 1948. This story
illustrates the broader experience of British politics and military policy and procedure when
faced with insurgency in the colonies.
Both the evidence and the literature on these topics are multinational. They are divided
between two languages and countries, much of the evidence still is not available, while another
part was released only in February 2006. The most important English language work on this
topic is David Charters’ book, The British Army and Jewish Insurgency in Palestine, 1945-47
and his article British Intelligence in the Palestine Campaign, 1945-1947.5 These pieces are solid
discussions of British counterinsurgency and policy in Palestine, which also give a detailed
account of how British intelligence was collected, how it worked and to a lesser extent how it
was used. They remain good surveys of the topic, with clear limits. Little MI5 or SIS
documentation was available at the time Charters wrote these works, nor did he use part of the
evidence which was available, such as the records of the British 6th Airborne Division. Thus,
some of Charters’ comments are inaccurate. For instance, he states that
The security forces acquired strategic intelligence of adequate quality on the Haganah, but not on the Irgun or Stern Gang. That standard of strategic
5 David A. Charters, "British Intelligence in the Palestine Campaign, 1945-1947," Intelligence and National Security 6, no. 1 (1991).
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intelligence made possible more effective operations against the former than against the latter groups.6
This paper will demonstrate that the British had strong political intelligence on the
Yishuv as a whole but poor operational intelligence on the Haganah, and even less on Irgun or
Lehi. The limited information which was available was not put to effective use. Again, Charters
suggests there was no warning from intelligence prior to the King David Hotel bombing on 22
July 1946. In fact, intelligence warned Cunningham of this possibility in January 1946. A few
weeks after the police HQ bombing of December 1945, he received a copy of a report from A.J.
Keller of MI5 to the Defence Security Officer (DSO) in Jerusalem, noting that the King David
Hotel was among leading possible targets.7 Ultimately, Charters names intelligence failures as a
cause for failure in Palestine as a whole. This paper will argue that the problem was much more
policy than intelligence.
Other relevant works in English include Menachem Begin’s The Revolt and
autobiographical material by Begin, Ben-Gurion and the like which illuminate the political
dimension within the Yishuv and the resistance to Britain. The remaining important works
related to this topic are in Hebrew and generally take the perspective of insurgent intelligence. A
good example is Yoav Gelber’s The History of Israeli Intelligence Part I: Growing a Fleur-de-
Lis: The Intelligence Services of the Jewish Yishuv in Palestine, 1918-1947 (Hebrew, Israel
Ministry of Defense Publications), 2 Vols. Tel Aviv 1992.
The JRM was a formal agreement between the Haganah, Irgun and Lehi to coordinate
operations, In Charters’ words, it was a loose “marriage of convenience.”8 It was headed by a
three man high command that had to approve Irgun or Lehi operations before they could be
6 Ibid. 124.7 “Kellar to Isham 17.1.46” In Telegrams, 10 November 1945 - 30 July 1946. Sir Alan Cunningham Collection. GB165-0072, Middle East Centre Archives, St. Antony's College, Oxford. 1/1.8 David Charters, The British Army and Jewish Insurgency in Palestine, 1945-47, Studies in Military and Strategic History (Basingstoke, England: Macmillan, 1989). 53.
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carried out. Irgun and Lehi received legitimacy through the support which the JRM represented,
while the Haganah was able to restrain the two other groups.9 JRM planning and coordination
was done by the “X Committee” which consisted of two Haganah representatives; Moshe Sneh
and Yisrael Galili; Menachem Begin from the Irgun; and Natan Friedman-Yellin from Lehi.10
While joint operations were limited, the movement represented the Yishuv leadership’s united
opposition to Bevin’s decision to continue the White Paper policy, and a concensus that only
military action could reverse it.
The JRM’s first operation was a united countrywide attack on rail and police, but no
other joint attacks ever occurred again. The Haganah operated separately from Irgun and Lehi,
but still it undertook offensives and followed the spirit and guidelines of the JRM. Its political
goal was to pressure the British on the policy issues of immigration and statehood. The Irgun and
Lehi, however, used the agreement to conduct operations they could not have done without the
complicity of the Haganah and the Jewish Agency. “Complicity” is a key word, because it is
unclear how far the Haganah and Jewish Agency actually supported terrorist operations, other
than by giving the nod of approval at the X Committee.
The Jewish Agency was divided on the matter of terrorism. Chaim Weizmann, a
figurehead by this time, opposed it.11 Moshe Sneh advocated it. Ben-Gurion, ever a realist,
believed it could serve a purpose for the Yishuv. He viewed the 1939 White Paper as being
complicit with the Holocaust, hence, violence against it was certainly acceptable. In an October
reply to Sneh’s proposal to stage a “grave incident” Ben-Gurion said, “It is essential to adopt the
tactics of S [sabotage] and reprisal. Not individual terror, but retaliation for each and every Jew
9 Tom Segev, One Palestine Complete: Jews and Arabs under the British Mandate. (New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1999). 472.10 “t’nuat hameri haivri” Haganah Website. http://www.hagana.co.il/show_item.asp?levelId=59798&itemId=48198&itemType=3. Accessed June 14, 2007.11 This can be gathered from his correspondence found in Chaim Weizmann and Leonard Stein, The Letters and Papers of Chaim Weizmann : Series A: Letters, 23 vols., vol. 22 (London: Oxford University Press, 1968).
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murdered by the White Paper.”12 Either way, the JRM allowed all its signatories to get what they
needed at a given time. In practice it gave the Haganah some ability to guide and veto actions by
the Irgun and Lehi, while allowing them to minimize its opposition to their other operations. This
arrangement had its limits and the Haganah did not oppose many operations. Ultimately the JRM
served the interests of Lehi and Irgun far more than those of the Jewish Agency. The latter,
caught in a tough political situation, driven by emotion and frustration, tried to play the British
against Begin. This did not work well. Cunningham was not the only man to make political
mistakes during this period.
British respect for the mysterious “Jewish Intelligence Organization” or service
ubiquitously pops-up in the documentation. In a debate in Parliament after Operation Agatha, the
pro-Zionist labour MP Richard Crossman described the “Jewish Intelligence Service” as
“probably the best in the world.”13 A British 6th Airborne HQ report on Operation Agatha
acknowledged that “the Jews have an extremely efficient intelligence organisation” and stressed
the importance of secrecy before the operation.14 Little, however, has been written in the English
language about the Jewish intelligence services. Its most important and largest organization was
the Mossad L’Aliyah Bet, or Institute for Illegal Immigration which established a network in
Europe for getting Displaced Persons (DP’s) to Palestine. MI5 did not start to pay much attention
to the Mossad until August 1946. They did not know what it was called, but they had a good
sense of how it worked.15
12 The quotations are from the Irgun website. Yehuda Lapidot, The United Resistance ([cited May 30 2006]); available from http://www.etzel.org.il/english/ac08.htm.13 "Parliament: The Fighting in Palestine, Appeal for Urgent Decision, House of Commons " The Times of London, July 2 1946. 8.14 “Security of Operations” in Operation AGATHA. The National Archives at Kew, London. WO 275/27.15 “Robertson ‘Jewish illegal immigration from Europe to Palestine’ 4.8.46” in Jewish Illegal Immigration. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 3/56.
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In September 1946, (after the Jewish Agency and Haganah dropped the JRM following
the King David Hotel bombing) MI5 staff debated and established policy for contacting
representatives of the Jewish Agency intelligence service. This piece of documentation is
particularly interesting because the two names they considered approaching are blanked out
throughout the record. It is now clear that these men were Teddy Kollek16 and Ze’ev Sherf, two
important and senior intelligence officers for the Jewish Agency. Their names will come up
again, but contrary to the emerging view that these men betrayed the Yishuv to Britain, the
evidence suggests that they were central to a policy by the Jewish Agency and Haganah to
manipulate Britain.17 The next most important Jewish intelligence organizations were those
established by Ben-Gurion, including Shabak or Shin-Bet, and the Shai, the predecessor of the
Mossad. According to Dr. Yoav Gelber from Haifa University, the Israeli expert on the topic,
Britain knew very little about the SHAI and “understood even less.” He added that this ignorance
was mutual.18
During the Second World War, British security intelligence in the Middle East achieved a
triumph, blocking threats by German and Italian intelligence, and officials in Arab states, but
failed against the Yishuv. Generally, it viewed Jews less as threats than as allies, and more
reliable than most of them. In Egypt, Security Intelligence Middle East (SIME) had several
trusted Jewish officers and sources--including the famous controlled agent, CHEESE, aka.
Renato Levy ; a “Jewess-believe it or not-in the telephone exchange of the Dresdner Bank” in
Cairo, who allowed SIME before the war to monitor contacts between the Abwehr and the
Egyptian Prime Minister, Ali Maher Pasha; and above all, a “special volunteer organization of
16 “Kollek Never Denied Spying for the British” Nadav Shragai. Haaretz Online ed. http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/843857.html.17 Policy for Contacting Jewish Agency Intelligence Representatives in London 1946-1947. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 4/216.18 Email Dr. Yoav Gelber to Steven Wagner, dated May 5, 2006.
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Sephardic Jews ( who) gave their unpaid services to operate a country-wide organisation of
agents, rumour-mongers and useful under-world mouthpieces”.19 In Palestine, the MI5 liaison,
the Defence Security Officer (DSO) in Jerusalem and the political police, the CID, relied for
intelligence primarily on open sources, and the Jewish Agency. Since 1935, British officers had
aided the Agency’s security branches, which reciprocated with help during the Arab Revolt of
1936-39, in preparing a stay behind network against Germans during 1942, and against Jewish
terrorism in 1944-45.
British security authorities recognised that conflicts with the Yishuv were looming. In
1942, during Britain’s blackest moment in the Middle East, when allies were imperative, SIME
held that if Britain executed the 1939 White Paper, the Irgun and perhaps part of Haganah would
rise violently: “It is necessary, therefore, to weigh the immediate advantage of having an armed
and trained (sic) of young Jews, who would help to resist an Arab rising or an Axis invasion,
against the possibility that this force may be used against us in a few years’ time”. 20 By 1943,
MI5 held that “both Zionist and Revisionists” would use their paramilitary bodies “as a form of
blackmail for securing their demands” when negotiations reopened between Jews, Arabs and
Britain after the war. 21 In 1945, the DSO in Palestine, Lt. Col. H. Hunloke, noted about one
abortive bombing of British installations, “IZL usually more efficient. Cannot help wondering if
left wing implicated in order to try and frighten authorities into acceding to certain requests such
as immigration and Jewish Police forces”. 22
British officials also realised that intelligence on this issue would be hard to gather. From
1930, they thought it a truism that few Jews would report to Britain on the political attitudes of
19 Undated memorandum by RJ Maunsell, c. 1975, “Security Intelligence in Middle East 1914-1934 and 1934-1944”, RJ Maunsell Papers, Imperial War Museum. pp 7, 15 , 25, 5220 Extract from SIME Security Summary, No 51, 4.6.42, KV 5/34. 21 Kellar to Hunloke, 28.5.43, KV 5/3322 Telegram W: 963, 24.2.45, Clover to Cracker, KV 5/34
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their fellows, most of whom would be detected. During the war, many of their few agents in the
Yishuv were assassinated or fled to exile. Under wartime censorship, British intelligence
intercepted Jewish Agency traffic, but it had few officers who spoke Hebrew and barely any
human sources in the Yishuv-- none in terrorist groups, protected by ferocious security and
loyalty. After consultation with the DSO and the CID, a senior officer at SIME warned military
intelligence in London not to expect success like that against German espionage:
to penetrate small fanatical and intensely loyal terrorist organisations of this kind is infinitely more difficult than penetrating an intelligence organisation, which in its efforts to obtain intelligence must employ sub agents of uncertain loyalty and therefore leave itself open to penetration”. 23
This situation drove British security to rely on monitoring agencies outside the Yishuv
which might cooperate with terrorist organisations, such as French authorities in Syria, but above
all to cooperation with its counterparts in the Jewish Agency. This came at an obvious cost. A.J.
Kellar, head of the MI 5 branch responsible for the Middle East, noted that Britain relied entirely
for intelligence on Irgun and Lehi on the Jewish Agency, but the latter’s cooperation was
“conditional and limited”, on its own terms and for its own reasons. In some cases the Agency
named innocent people as terrorist suspects, “paying off old scores by giving the Authorities the
names of persons more of a nuisance to themselves than to us.” “Tactically, the Agency have
thereby become very well placed and in their collaboration are quite certainly following their
own interests rather than ours. The more the Police are made dependent on them, the more
authority the Agency consider they acquire, and indeed do, in the Civil administration of
Palestine”. By giving the Agency and its security arms an “extra-constitutional” position,
complete with powers to arrest and interrogate Jews, Britain “had in fact given it something of
23 Kirk to Montgomery, 19.8.44, SIME 009/135/234/B.1, KV 5/34
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Secretary of State for the Colonies
MI5
Defence Security Officer, Jerusalem SIME, EgyptThe GOC and British Military Intelligence
MI6/SIS
X2
MI9
Area and Field Security OfficersASO, FSOAir Levant HQField Security Sections GSI Military Liaison Officer
Alan Cunningham, High Commissioner, Palestine
Palestine CID
Jewish Affairs, Political Branch
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the status of an imperium in imperio”. 24 British authorities knew the situation left them open to
manipulation; this knowledge did not keep them from that fate.
Figure 1- The Flow of Information: How British Intelligence Functioned
The above figure is a simplified visual representation of how information flowed within
the British decision making system. Cunningham, as High Commissioner, had at hand three
principal sources for intelligence. The most important, and most under-researched, was the
Palestine Criminal Investigation Department. While other documents refer to or cite important
reports and reflections from them, the actual records have been discussed only in the Hebrew
language, especially in a 2003 PhD dissertation by Eldad Harouvi from the University of Haifa
titled “The CID in Palestine, 1918-1948.” According to Harouvi, the quality of the CID’s
information was very good, “on a scale of 1-100… 60-70 were the best numbers.” Harouvi
acknowledges the CID’s shortcomings, such as their inability to catch Menachem Begin, but
overall considers them to be the most important, though not the most senior, intelligence
24 “Extract from Mr. A.J. Kellar’s Report on his Visit to Mid-East-dated February 1945”, KV 5/34
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organization in Palestine.25 This paper shares Harouvi’s conclusion that lack of intelligence did
not cause British failure in Palestine.26 The CID had case files on important individuals, and
tracked them. For instance, during Operation Shark, the search for Jewish terrorists in Tel Aviv
which began on July 29, 1946, the Palestine Police administered the screening procedures for
individuals who were detained. Some disguises and hiding places, such as the secret
compartment that concealed Menachem Begin in his apartment27, defeated the police. Detailed
CID records, however, foiled disguises such as that of Lehi leader Yitzak Yesernitsky (later
known as Shamir). A kink in the future Prime Minister’s right eyebrow gave him away.28
Though the documentary record is incomplete, British authorities clearly gained much
from communications intelligence, but not enough to deliver a killing blow. According to Sir
Richard Catling, chief of the CID’s special branch when interviewed by Israeli researchers fifty
years after the event, opening letters and intercepting communications were standard practices of
Police intelligence.29 He also told his interviewers that he had only five human sources, though
they were all well placed and he trusted them. The CID immediately had every record of every
Jewish Agency Executive meeting, including ones that were not held at headquarters. There
were, however, limits to the value of this information. Jewish Agency sedition was public while
its support for insurgency was mostly secret. With a curiosity that evokes The Protocols of the
Elders of Zion, British intelligence seemed to have had a serious (and, as Catling admitted,
useless) curiosity in how the Yishuv raised funds around the world. Finally, according to Catling,
25 Eldad Harouvi. The Lost Records of the CID of the Palestine Police Force. Unpublished Paper. 15. 26 Ibid. 18-19.27 Menachem Begin, The Revolt. Rev Ed. (New York: Nash Publishing, 1978) 228.28“From the press section: eyebrow betrays suspect 2.8.46” In Stern Group. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/30.29 Eldad Harouvi and Israel Haran. “Interview with Sir Richard Catling 9 October 1997” 220.1. Haganah Archives, Tel Aviv. pp 25.
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all British intelligence services worked together and shared information on a routine basis. The
documentary evidence also shows that inter-service cooperation was good.
British Military intelligence, conversely, gained importance only towards the late summer
of 1946. The principal source of military intelligence was the British 6th Airborne’s 317 Field
Security Section. By the Fall of 1946 it produced regular, accurate and detailed reports,
especially unique because they contained rumours, showing it was tuned in to the happenings in
the Yishuv and Arab communities. This material was useful, but not available in the late spring
of 1946. Cunningham met regularly with the military and heard their information and opinions,
but it was not the tool of choice when fighting terrorism before Operation Agatha. Until then, the
policy in Palestine was to combat terrorism primarily through the police, police intelligence and
the courts. The General Officer Commanding (GOC) employed the army as a last resort, and to
support the police in larger operations. Terrorists were treated as criminals rather than a military
threat, and tried and sentenced in court.30
The Defence Security Officer (DSO) in Jerusalem, Sir Gyles Isham, ran the MI5 station
in Palestine. He collected information from all sources, especially the CID. He also met regularly
with Jewish Agency representatives such as Teddy Kollek (codename scorpion), Zeev Sherf
(misspelled in the documentation as ‘Sharif’) and, with a lesser frequency, Chaim Weizmann.
Both Kollek and Sherf were involved with Yishuv intelligence. Kollek, in the Jewish Agency’s
political department, served as liaison within the Yishuv and with other intelligence
organizations such as the OSS and SIME.31 Sherf was a deputy in the SHAI, the Haganah’s
intelligence service, whose focus was work against Irgun and Lehi.32 In 1945 information
30 This is clear from looking at the documentation as well as Charters’ book. The Cunningham Papers and the British 6 Airborne records (WO 275) reveal how the police-military relationship worked.31 Ian Black and Benny Morris, Israel’s Secret Wars: The untold history of Israeli Intelligence. (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1991). 74.32Uri Milstein History of the War of Independence: A Nation Girds for War. Vol. 1. Trans. Alan Sacks. (New York: University Press of America, 1996.) 239.
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provided by Kollek and Sherf allowed the British to pursue terrorist organizations, and so these
men gained their trust.33 Over the next year, however, these two often (it would appear)
deliberately misled the British, did another human source, codenamed Circus, from whom Isham
extracted much information. It is unclear who Circus was. The nature of the reports based on
Circus and the fact that the source once was described as “he,” suggest that it is most likely a
person rather than communication intelligence. Circus usually provided information on the
Jewish Agency and Haganah. Circus appeared regularly in MI5 reportage, but its information,
like that given by the Jewish Agency representatives, often was misleading. Where Kollek and
Sherf tended to not tell the whole truth during the JRM, Circus gave more false or inaccurate
information. Another source, Peke, described as having journalistic contacts and contacts within
the Irgun leadership, provided more information on the Irgun.34 Additionally, MI5 collected
volumes of intercepted letters and telegrams of the Jewish Agency.35 The DSO regularly reported
to MI5 and also to Cunningham’s staff meetings. Given the limits to the documentation on the
CID and the way that the local intelligence system operated, the DSO’s reports offer the best
overall picture of the view of British security intelligence in Palestine during 1945-46. Its main
consumers were Cunningham in Jerusalem and MI5 in London.
MI5 collected reports from the DSO, as well as from SIME. While an able organization,
SIME was less useful as Palestine was not its priority. MI5 also had a source called Buttercup,
likely a human source having contacts with French journalists or intelligence officers, though
possibly a form of signals intelligence based in Paris. Buttercup provided intelligence on all
matters within the Yishuv, though its accuracy was inconsistent. On rare occasions, MI5 would
intercept mail from suspected terrorists which were addressed to Revisionist offices in London. 33 Examples can be found throughout Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34.34 Examples can be found throughout Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34-36.35 The minute sheets keeping record of these lost messages can be found in The Jewish Agency for Palestine.. The National Arhives at Kew, London. KV2/1435.
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MI5 collected intelligence, analyzed it and then decided whether or not to pass it on to a relevant
authority. Usually, any information that MI5 took seriously was passed on to the Secretary of
State for the Colonies or his Undersecretary. Analyses often were passed back down to the DSO
for dissemination in Palestine.
A good example of the MI5-DSO relationship occurred in February 1946 in the context
of ongoing attacks and the upcoming Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry. For weeks MI5
and DSO debated whether there was an agreement between Haganah and Irgun. On 25 February,
1946, MI5 resolved that the Haganah appeared to be against terrorism and would not undertake
anti-British operations unless its other political options failed.36 Considering the Palmach attack
that occurred four days earlier, this report was strikingly inaccurate. The Haganah was blatantly
engaging in the insurgency, as even Cunningham knew. This exemplifies the gap between the
intelligence of the Palestine government and MI5. Even more strangely, earlier that month MI5
believed that the Jewish Agency and Haganah had decided to assist the Irgun, so long as it
stopped robbing Jewish individuals, businesses and banks.37 This was evidence of collaboration
between them. A captured Haganah circular on terrorist attacks of February 25, 1946, indicated
that it lacked foreknowledge of the recent attacks and did not condone them. It also called for
discipline in the ranks. MI5 took the document as legitimate, but read more into it than was wise.
As Haganah clearly was engaging in anti-British military operations four days prior to this
circular, Palmach men attacked British camps. This view suggests some naïveté on the part of
MI5, perhaps influenced by deception fed to Isham by Kollek, Sherf or Circus. Cunningham, on
the other hand, knew exactly who was responsible.
36 Extract on 25.2.46 Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34.37 Extract on 12.2.46 Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34.
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Cunningham had great experience in the use of intelligence. In 1940-41 he controlled a
campaign in Ethiopia which featured signals intelligence, deception, subversion and guerrilla
warfare. He was among the first British commanders to use ULTRA, during the preparations for
and early stages of the Crusader campaign in November 1941.38 Though primarily a soldier and
enraged increasingly at the Jewish Agency’s seditious and subversive stance, he had a tolerably
sophisticated grasp of politics in the Yishuv. Cunningham also received massive amounts of
information from various sources. The information generally flowed well, but one serious
problem seems to have existed in the period of the Jewish Resistance Movement.
In the early months of 1946, MI5 and the DSO were struggling to determine the nature of
the relationship between the various Jewish political and paramilitary organizations. They
regularly exchanged evidence and opinions on the matter.39 In May 1946 MI5 records first
mention a Jewish Resistance Movement,40 though its interpretation of the JRM was inaccurate.
MI5 did not mention the involvement of the Jewish Agency in the movement and saw the JRM
as the project of a faction of right-wing Haganah staff. Cunningham’s records, however, do not
mention any sort of agreement resembling the JRM until his June 1946 offensive was already
underway. Furthermore, MI5’s lack of understanding of the JRM is perplexing, because even if
they lacked the details, they had fully documented the October meetings which established it. A
SIME report based on the source, Peke, stated that, “The Irgun Zvai Leumi is now prepared to
accept the orders of the Haganah, if the Yishuv as a whole agrees to resort to armed resistance,
but it stipulates that it must be permitted to operate as independently as possible.”41 There clearly
38 John Ferris, “The ‘Usual Source’: Signals Intelligence and Planning for the Eighth Army ‘Crusader’ offensive, 1941.” Intelligence and National Security [Great Britain] 1999 14(1): 84-118.39 The records of the information sharing between AJ Kellar and sometimes JC Robertson from MI5 and Isham at the DSO can be found in KV 5/29,30,33,34,35.40 “Extract from report from DSO Palestine and Transjordan re Jewish Affairs. 8.5.46” In Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34.41 “Extract from SIME report re Jewish armed organizations in Palestine. 30.10.45.” in Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34.
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was a large intelligence gap between MI5 and the DSO, especially considering that they each had
record of Irgun’s willingness to accept Haganah’s orders. Not merely did MI5 and the DSO
differ over matters of assessment, so too did they and Cunningham. Either Isham did not pass on
some of MI5’s conclusions, which is unlikely unless he himself doubted them, or else
Cunningham himself ignored or misinterpreted these reports.
A separate intelligence effort also supported the fight against illegal immigration. The
Royal Air Force used reconnaissance aircraft with submarine spotters to locate illegal immigrant
ships which the Navy would then intercept.42 In general the RAF had poor security intelligence
as it suffered a number of attacks throughout the period in question. At one time, the Admiralty
deliberated on a plan to use “peaceful means” to induce illegal immigrant ships to sail directly to
the detention camps on Cyprus. The plan was rejected for its impracticability, although diversion
to Cyprus was agreed upon.43 This meant that the British were forced actively to engage
immigrant shiploads of Holocaust survivors on the high seas should their efforts at prevention at
points of embarkation failed. The Yishuv tried, with much success, to turn every such
interception into a propaganda coup.
In the late fall of 1945, as Alan Cunningham began his tenure as High Commissioner for
Palestine, the hot-button issues were illegal immigration and the 1939 White Paper. On
November 10th the Secretary of State for the Colonies sent Cunningham a telegram outlining
ways to stop illegal immigration, especially prevention at the points of embarkation and
interception and capture of ships on the high seas. The message was clear; stop this flow now.
Three days later, the Foreign Minister Ernest Bevin issued a statement on immigration policy
42 Correspondence with Yoav Gelber and reports ca. 8.46 in Air HQ Levant: Intelligence Summaries. The National Archives at Kew, London. WO 275/121.43Correspondence between Cunningham and the admiralty ca. 8.45 in Illegal Jewish Entry and Import of Arms into Palestine: Preventive Measures and Discussions Thereon. The National Archives at Kew, London. ADM 116/5648.
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which basically maintained the quotas of the 1939 White Paper.44 This decision pushed the
Jewish Agency towards the Jewish Resistance Movement, and led Haganah to drop its policy of
restraint. During early November, in the first JRM operation, Haganah and Palmach fighters
attacked the British in coordination with Irgun and Lehi.
Thus, Cunningham had two main tasks: To control and defeat terrorism and to make the
Yishuv accept British policy. He and most decision makers believed they could and would
achieve these aims, but also understood that in order to do so, they must overcome great Jewish
resistance. Some intelligence personnel, such as an MI9 officer sent to establish an escape
organization in Palestine in late 1945 and early 1946, thought that British policy would cause
“war” with much of the Yishuv.45 Cunningham himself appreciated from the start that in the end,
partition might be unavoidable.
On the 30th of September the DSO, after a discussion with a “senior Agency official,”
reported that Haganah’s policy was to use arms only to protect immigration, though it might
seize territory by force if the White Paper policy continued. Isham also believed that Irgun and
Lehi were allied, that Haganah probably would no longer restrain them, while some of its
members would defect to the latter. Like MI5, he thought the danger lay in unauthorized actions
by elements of Haganah, rather than in its official actions as a whole. There was no shortage of
evidence about the convergence of Haganah and Irgun. MI5, however, doubted that the Agency
and Haganah would openly take arms against the Palestine government. The DSO also was
informed that the Irgun was in financial straits.46 On 21 November, the DSO reported that Lehi
44“Cunningham to S of S 1.12.45” Telegrams, 10 November 1945 - 30 July 1946. Sir Alan Cunningham Collection. GB165-0072, Middle East Centre Archives, St. Antony's College, Oxford. 1/1.45 “14.11.45 re: escape organization Palestine” in Palestine Escape Organization, The National Archives at Kew, London. WO 208/3398.46“Extract from DSO dated 30.9.45” in Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34.
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had broken away from Haganah and Irgun, and would attempt to assassinate 6th Airborne
commanders, and the GOC. These threats were taken seriously in intelligence circles.47
During this time, Teddy Kollek was regularly meeting the DSO on behalf of the Jewish
Agency. It is likely that he was the source for this material, and if so, it is certain that he was
manipulating the DSO. For example, on 20 October Kollek led Isham to believe Haganah would
not control or work with the Jewish terrorist organizations, but rather was still trying to break
them up and negotiate their absorption.48 By October 20 1945 however, while the Haganah
offered Menachem Begin an agreement to absorb the Irgun as a part of a united effort against
Britain,49 it certainly was not pursuing terrorists and was trying to ally with them. This was
exactly the time when the Jewish Resistance Movement was being forged, which Ben-Gurion
already had told Moshe Sneh that he was inclined to support. Kollek would have been among the
first in the Yishuv to know about the negotiations that were going on. Hence, any discussions he
had with Isham were an effort by the Jewish Agency to deceive the British about its intentions.
Deception was possible because British intelligence relied so heavily on its counterparts
in the Jewish Agency for data on terrorism. It was easy, because in order to execute deception,
all Kollek and Sherf had to do was not to tell the whole truth- they did not even have to lie in
order to deceive. What remains unclear is how sophisticated this effort was: whether it consisted
merely of natural caution by Kollek and Sherf, or was part of a broader campaign of
disinformation. In any case, this campaign did throw dust in the eyes of British intelligence,
because of its reliance on one source, but had less impact on its ultimate target, Cunningham
47 “from DSO 21.11.45” in Stern Group. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/29.48 “Extract from report on interview no. 8 with Kollek, forwarded by DSO Palestine on 10.20.45.” in Irgun Zvai Leumi. National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34.49 Yehuda Lapidot, The United Resistance ([cited May 30 2006]); available from http://www.etzel.org.il/english/ac08.htm.
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himself, because he focused on areas where the Agency's intent was harder to disguise, as in its
public statements to the Yishuv
A combination of the lack of British understanding about the various Jewish groups and
the deceptive information from Kollek, led them to misunderstand the agreements that were
being forged. Since Lehi’s assassination of Lord Moyne in Cairo, the British had depended on
support from the Jewish Agency and Haganah against terrorists. In this process, Kollek himself
had given them good intelligence, and had effectively pursued terrorists for the Jewish Agency,
Haganah and Palmach. The British had some reason to trust him, but failed to follow the political
underpinnings for his actions. It should have been easy to estimate that Bevin’s speech and
Britain’s immigration policy would marginalize those Jews who still were willing to negotiate
with Whitehall on the matter. Indeed, for precisely these reasons, by December 1945
Cunningham already was becoming suspicious of the Jewish Agency. His distrust was not based
on Isham’s reports but rather the publicly expressed attitudes of the more hard-line Jewish
Agency Executive members, perhaps augmented by the CID’s records of their private
discussions.
Cunningham thought the Jewish extremists expected Ben-Gurion to form an aggressive
policy against the British, and concluded that Haganah might work with the Irgun and Lehi.50
While this was old news within Jewish circles, it shows that Cunningham understood the Jewish
political scene better than his intelligence officials did. His correspondence also indicates that the
military reactions to the JRM’s sabotage on the night of October 31st/November 1st were
conducted without much intelligence. The police conducted 123 searches. At one particular
Jewish settlement which their tracking dogs led them to, they encountered resistance and fought
50 “Cunningham to S of S 1.12.45” in Telegrams, 10 November 1945 - 30 July 1946. Sir Alan Cunningham Collection. GB165-0072, Middle East Centre Archives, St. Antony's College, Oxford. 1/1.
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a gun battle in which six Jews were killed. The police, that is, lacked the intelligence needed to
predict the attacks or to apprehend those responsible.
Through December, Cunningham told Whitehall that up to half of the Yishuv supported
armed opposition to Britain, and that he wished actively to disarm the population. By January
1946, he concluded that the Jewish Agency indirectly condoned terrorism; for it was the first
time he expressed the desire to occupy its building. He believed that the Jewish Agency had
some control over the Haganah, but none over Irgun and Lehi, yet that its funds were supporting
terrorist groups.51 Cunningham did not know precisely what was happening behind closed doors
at the Jewish Agency, yet he had a good sense of Jewish sentiment there and in the Yishuv. He
was right to be suspicious.
Cunningham based his opinions on terrorist incidences such as the attacks on the
Palestine CID headquarters in Jerusalem and Jaffa, which destroyed the former and damaged the
latter, and on the publicly expressed opinions of the Jewish Agency. In particular after Ben-
Gurion warned he could not control the Yishuv’s reaction to British policy, Cunningham wished
to close the political side of the Jewish Agency; he could not “ignore [its] defiant attitude.”52
Aware that he lacked the intelligence to defeat terrorism, he also believed that elements in the
Jewish Agency were aiding it. Despite his suspicions, he was “satisfied” that the Agency
generally opposed terrorism. He realized such an action would look bad politically and cause
“widespread disorder,” especially since British and other media already thought the immigration
policy was oppressive. Thus, the reasons for going after the Agency were outweighed by those
against it.
51 Ibid.52 “Cunningham to S of S 30.12.45” in Ibid.
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Meanwhile, the DSO reported on a meeting between Begin and the Palmach in Tel Aviv
on 29 November. If Cunningham knew about this, it would have confirmed his suspicions about
the Haganah and Agency. Again on the 27th of December, SIS estimated the Irgun and Lehi
membership at 2000 and 250, respectively.53 Irgun was a large organization, but one wonders if
the SIS estimate includes youths who merely posted propaganda posters. The point is that British
intelligence as a whole was beginning to track the size of terrorist groups in Palestine, indicating
that it was taking the threats more seriously, and was looking for more detailed and current
information on the groups.
After the New Year, MI5 collected as much intelligence as possible on the CID
bombings. Circus gave them the most valuable information, which at this stage was accurate.
The DSO discovered a rumour that Sneh was informed of the attack just before it happened, he
tried to phone Ben-Gurion and Bernard Joseph so to halt the operation but was too late. Some
300 former Polish partisans were believed to have joined the Irgun, which especially
disconcerted the DSO because of their experience in irregular warfare. The final point of the
telegram derived from Circus is most revealing.
The Irgun is believed to have sent an ultimatum to the Jewish Agency and Hagana (sic) command demanding that the next operation should be a joint undertaking, as was the attack on the railway on 31st October. The Irgun threatens to increase its sabotage activity unless the Hagana co-operate.54
This shows that MI5 had hard evidence about the Haganah’s October 31st offensive and
the nature of the JRM, which furthermore indicated that it was a weak alliance. Cunningham’s
next such report noted that a meeting of the Haganah command had decided on closer
collaboration with the Irgun. 460 Palmach men were to transfer to the Irgun in January and
during the next two months the Haganah would pay the Irgun £300 000.
53 “SIS estimate 27.12.45” Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34.54 “from DSO 10.1.46” in Ibid.
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Other information received during January illustrates how the Agency tried to control its
actions during JRM. For instance, MI5 gave the Colonial Office Circus information that
representatives of Haganah and Palmach would go to Europe to spread propaganda, that
Haganah would use arms only to support illegal immigration (this was confirmed by Kollek),
that Haganah and Palmach were pressuring the Agency for an aggressive policy while defections
to terrorist organizations were possible. Kollek also warned Isham that he was concerned about
splits in Agency policy.55 Since the start of the JRM, Kollek fed a consistent line to the British,
that Haganah would only use arms to support illegal immigration. Clearly his actions were
designed to throw the DSO off the Haganah’s case. A sliver of dishonesty in otherwise accurate
reports did confuse MI5 assessments.
Meanwhile, in January Cunningham was concerned about the attacks on the CID HQ
while MI5 warned that future potential targets included administrative and military headquarters
and the government house. The King David Hotel was deemed to require “special precautions.”56
The DSO replied that security steps already taken “should be adequate,” while he and the GOC
agreed that eventually a forceful suppression of Jewish insurgents should take place along the
lines of the Arab Revolt in 1936.
We are trying, in between outrages, to carry on a normal administration under “peace” conditions. The conditions are however nearer those of war than of peace. Most of the Jewish population is against the Government in sentiment, while the terrorists and the unlawful organizations, heavily armed, equipped, well-trained and holding the initiative as is necessarily the case, periodically exploit the situation by force of arms... So long as these conditions persist it is inevitable that risks have to be taken which might be susceptible of elimination if the Government could come out into the open and face the situation by giving up all pretence of normal administration (as was indeed done to some extent in the Arab rebellion of 1938/39), concentrating essential activities... and directing all its resources and energies to the forcible suppression of the armed opposition to the Government.57
55 Haganah. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/33.56 “Kellar to Isham 17.1.46 and Isham to Kellar 26.1.46” Telegrams, 10 November 1945 - 30 July 1946. Sir Alan Cunningham Collection. GB165-0072, Middle East Centre Archives, St. Antony's College, Oxford. 1/1.57 “Isham to Kellar 26.1.46” in Ibid.
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As 6 months later the King David Hotel was partially destroyed, MI5’s analysis and the
GOC’s preference for the use of force were reasonable, while security at the hotel was not as
adequate as Isham believed. If Cunningham ever asked himself the question, “If I were a Jewish
terrorist and wanted to conduct a spectacular terrorist outrage against the Palestine government,
what would I do?”, then this MI5 assessment should have provided the answer. On the other
hand, the King David Hotel incident occurred more because of elementary security failures than
anything else.
In February 1946 the situation appeared to be calming. The British promised to bump the
immigration quota from 500 to 1500, though Cunningham considered the outraged Jewish
reaction to this offer “ungracious.” As well, he recognized that there was public support for a
“maximalist program” within the Yishuv, and increasingly thought the Agency was complicit in
terror. Cunningham believed that the Haganah illegal broadcast station Kol Israel, or the “voice
of Israel,” had confirmed Haganah’s responsibility for January 21st attacks on the Coast Guard,
and an abortive raid on an RAF radar station. This, incidentally, shows that for over 10 days
neither he nor his subordinates had a clue who was responsible for the attacks, a clear indication
of the limits to their information. Later in the month, Cunningham noted a speech by Moshe
Shertok which seemed to confirm the guilt of the Jewish Agency. Shertok, a known dove, said:
The continued existence of the White Paper… causes people to despair of peaceful ways and abolishes the public basis for a stand against terrorism. Unable to subdue those who fight against it, Government retaliates by murderous and atrocious laws, which threaten the public as a whole. Elementary ideas of law and justice are trodden down. In a regime of suppressing the freedom of the individual and outlawing human life, peaceful Jewish citizens are being shamelessly murdered by military forces. Official communiqués hush up the bloody facts in distorted descriptions. Jews who have been abducted from their homeland by force and sent to detention abroad, are being abandoned there to acts of murder by human beasts who have been put in charge of them.58
58 “Cunningham to S of S 19.2.46” Ibid.
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Cunningham asked his legal advisors whether the speech was seditious enough to justify
an arrest or detention. He did not pursue the matter, but the Jewish Agency and specifically
Shertok were in Cunningham’s sights. He believed that Ben-Gurion and Shertok had led the
Agency to pursue a public anti-British agitation, which in turn motivated many members of the
Yishuv to participate in or support terrorist organizations, and that they could not draw back
from this language without losing authority over the Yishuv. The Jewish Agency was actively
and secretly supporting anti-British terrorist operations. Despite these suspicions, Cunningham
clearly was unaware of the Agency’s role in the JRM, reporting to Whitehall that “the extent to
which they cooperate with terrorist organizations is in some doubt.”59 Ironically, his assessment
of February that the Jewish Agency had bound itself to extremism and could not “draw back
without losing their authority over the Jewish Community,”60 would become true a few months
later, when Operation Agatha and the King David Hotel incident pressured the Agency to
abandon terrorism.
Cunningham concluded, “There are increasing signs that the Jewish leaders would accept
partition as a solution though any other solution would probably not result in an easement of the
tension for it is the extremist tail that wags the dog.”61 He thought partition a viable solution to
the Palestine problem, and the Agency reasonable enough to negotiate on those terms, but that
negotiations could not happen until the extremists were eliminated. He was charged with
imposing British policy on the Yishuv and refused to negotiate under threat. The goal of
elimination of terrorism was becoming a higher priority, because this would lead to a restoration
of peace and conditions for negotiations with the Yishuv, though he was not entirely sure to what
end.
59 Ibid.60 Ibid. 61 Ibid.
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On the night of February 25th, 1946 the Irgun and Lehi attacked RAF bases at Kfar Syrkin
and Lydda,62 destroying five aircraft and damaging 17.63 Four days earlier, the Palmach attacked
a Palestine Mobile Force camp, resulting in four insurgents dead.64 Cunningham observed that
the Jewish Agency’s attendance at the Palmach fighters’ funerals indicated its support for
terrorism. He noted how the fighters were eulogized as “martyrs of the Jewish Resistance
Movement.” This was the first time on record that Cunningham heard the term ‘JRM’, but
whether he realized what it meant is a different matter. The Jewish Agency was using seditious
language in communications to the public and showing moral support for dead Palmach fighters.
Cunningham believed that sooner or later those supporting terrorism must be arrested and
terrorist organizations destroyed.
In February, Zeev Sherf took Kollek’s place as liaison with British intelligence. In his
first meeting with the DSO he estimated the Lehi to have 300 militants and 200 youth members.
Soon, he said that he believed Lehi would not attack the Anglo American Commission. JC
Robertson at MI5 took this report seriously. This intelligence on Lehi’s restraint obviously was
accurate, though it is hard to tell if the membership estimate was correct. In general, despite the
changing political situation, British intelligence still trusted their liaison with the Jewish Agency,
and worried about terrorist operations abroad. In order to handle this menace, MI5 recommended
increased visa security, and extra screening of Jews and anyone from Palestine.
It also was concerned constantly about Soviet support for terrorists in Palestine,
especially in February when Lehi publicly threatened to seek Soviet support for its operations
and a Jewish state. The DSO concluded that Lehi, a right-wing organization, was unlikely to seek
62 Yehuda Lapidot, The United Resistance ([cited May 30 2006]); available from http://www.etzel.org.il/english/ac08.htm.63 David Charters, The British Army and Jewish Insurgency in Palestine, 1945-47, Studies in Military and Strategic History (Basingstoke, England: Macmillan, 1989). 189.64 Ibid.
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Soviet support and more likely to fear it. In fact, though Lehi would have preferred to avoid any
external political influence, it might well have sought Soviet support. It was willing to seek Nazi
and fascist support in 1940, therefore it likely considered any enemy of Britain to be a friend.65
Concern about a Soviet-Irgun relationship was quickly rejected in a long report on the Irgun by
Captain Guy Liddell, an old MI5 hand.66 Judging by Begin’s language in “The Revolt” and the
nature of the organization, the Irgun probably would not have sacrificed any of its autonomy to
any foreign movement.
Liddell thought, based on information from Peke, that Irgun’s intelligence organizations
had a “highly developed system of espionage inside the Government and Police offices.” His
report to Col. Vivian at MI6 continued, “They state that they know exactly when and where
searches are to be made, and make their arrangements accordingly. They are in a position to tap
telephones, open mail, and even to have access to official correspondence between government
departments.”67 Furthermore, Peke reported that the Irgun were confident that the Haganah
would join them and Lehi “under a single command” in the event of adverse government policy.
This view was obviously inaccurate; the JRM had been operating for months. Peke gave
information which was true but well-known, combined with a fib intended to confuse British
intelligence assessments. Liddell, an experienced MI5 officer showed concern for Irgun’s
penetration of the Palestine Government and British military, which was almost unavoidable
since the members of the Yishuv held almost all positions in the local administration and urban
economy. This breach of security exposed the British to a double threat; a lack of success against
Irgun and the potential that it might deceive the British. MI5 took the threat seriously in February
1946, which may account for the back-and-forth discussions about the relationships between
65 This was known from 6.41 in Stern Group. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/29.66 “from Liddell 14.2.46” Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34.67 “from Liddell 14.2.46” Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34.
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Irgun, Haganah and Lehi. However, through March British intelligence still had not learned
anything about the JRM, which was the most important piece of information they could have had
at that stage, especially if they wanted to delegitimize the Agency in front of the Anglo-
American Commission.
In March, Palestine was quiet for one reason: the Anglo-American Commission. Both
Jews and Arabs were trying to make good impressions and their cases. However, MI5 and the
DSO were busy through this time. Looking for links to foreign support groups, MI5 began to
track Jews abroad through the use of commercial and professional channels. In early February it
established a connection between Lehi and foreign revisionist youth movements.68 It also
received intelligence from the CID, that the High Commissioner and then Bevin would be targets
for assassination by the Lehi. MI5 believed that the leaders of the Lehi were meeting in
Jerusalem, while Lehi was receiving a “steady flow” of recruits and sympathy from “important
Jews in Palestine.” All staff took the reports seriously, including Kellar at MI5. There is no
reason to believe that this intelligence was wrong. Circus, until this point, had been a good
source.
In March, Jewish journalists also informed the DSO that the Haganah, Irgun and Lehi had
agreed not to attack the commission. This appears to be the first contact between Jewish
journalists and the DSO on such matters. Captured documents revealed a Lehi-Irgun agreement
on the nature of their war with the Mandate, assassinations abroad, the military character of
attacks and a rotational political council with a permanent military staff.69 This description fit the
way the JRM worked but it excluded mention of the Haganah. It is difficult to tell whether the
document was a plant, part of the JRM’s deception of British intelligence, or a separate
68 “6.2.46” Stern Group. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/29.69 “Robertson to Jones 28.3.46” in Ibid.
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agreement between Irgun and Lehi. In any case it tripped-up intelligence assessments. Also, in
March the Jewish secretary of a French liaison officer was kidnapped by the Irgun, who asked if
France would sell it arms. She was returned and the incident immediately reported. The DSO
took it seriously as did JC Robertson. He doubted that the French liaison would arrange a sale of
arms, but it became known that Irgun was on the market, trying to build its supplies for a
prolonged conflict or an eventual war. It is ironic that the Irgun’s approach to France was not
taken more seriously. Through May, the Irgun received large sums of money from that country70
and in August 1946 a 35 ton arms cache destined for Palestine was found near Bordeaux!71
In April 1946, MI5 began to tune more closely into political happenings in the Yishuv. It
followed the World Zionist Organization and Jewish Agency elections and assessed the
implications on the ground. It was surprised by an increase in support for revisionists which it
also expected to see within the Yishuv, meaning an increased support for the revisionist Irgun.
MI5 also followed each group. It knew about Mizrachi party meetings where the party decided to
allocate 75% of its defence funding to the Irgun. The DSO correctly believed that Haganah was
not associated with the Irgun or its blackmail and robberies. Buttercup accurately revealed that
Lehi was responsible for the April 25th attack on a British 6th airborne car park, where seven
soldiers were killed, and indicated that the Haganah was considering strong action to stop these
attacks.72 Cunningham, infuriated by the incident, his frustration growing, wanted to pursue
Haganah and the Agency. MI5, however, knew that it was not a Haganah operation and for once
it had accurate information when Cunningham did not, though MI5 exaggerated Haganah’s
willingness to act against Irgun. The ‘hunting season’ was long over. A political divide remained
70 DSO extract 18.5.46 in Ibid. KV 5/3571 Report 2.8.46 in Weekly Intelligence Reviews: Palestine Extracts. The National Archives at Kew, London. WO 275/120.72 “from DSO 29.4.46” Stern Group. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/30.
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however, as the Haganah newsletter, “Eshnav,” denounced the Irgun for blackmailing Jews, 73
while Haganah was increasingly irritated at Irgun’s violence against Jews and Lehi’s car park
operation. These political complexities likely contributed to the all-round confusion over the
nature of the relationship between Haganah, Irgun and Lehi.
On the 8th of May, 1946 the DSO made his first reference to the JRM, though the
information was clearly wrong. It described the JRM as an alliance between Irgun, Lehi and a
separate, extreme element of the Haganah.74 Here, the British either misinterpreted a source or
received false information. The JRM was a partnership between the three organizations, not a
subdivision of the Haganah. At the same time, MI5 was tracking other ubiquitous pieces of
information: It heard that Friedman-Yellin, the Lehi leader, had changed his appearance.
Explosives were discovered on the HMS Chevron, docked in Haifa Bay. Originally this was
thought to be an attempted sabotage but a Jewish crewman was smuggling the explosives into
Palestine and was caught and arrested.75 A Lehi broadcaster named David Blau visited Baghdad
to gain support from the Jewish community there. MI5 recommended that security be increased
on the Iraq-Palestine route.76 Robertson from MI5 learned of a meeting from early May where
Haganah, Irgun and Lehi agreed to take no offensive action until the 100 000 immigrants
recommended by the Anglo-American Commission reached Palestine, but to resume terrorism if
the British government pursued its demand for disarmament. This was probably false and
perhaps damaging information, because in May the JRM began to plan for its June operations.
The DSO discovered plans to attack Ramat David Aerodrome, petrol dumps and military
installations, which specifically indicated participation by Haganah and Palmach. One report
mentioned that when Ben-Gurion gave the orders, the Irgun and Lehi would attack British 73 “DSO to Kellar 30.4.46” in Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34.74 “DSO extract 8.5.46” KV 5/34.75“Whitestone to Clay 16.5.46” Ibid. KV 5/3476 Palestine extract “12.4.46” Stern Group. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/30.
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military installations in the same area.77 There is no indication that Cunningham received this
information, as he never referred to it nor expressed any outrage over it, although even if he did
it would not have changed his opinions. From the beginning of 1946 he was determined to
operate against the Jewish Agency and was just waiting for an appropriate opportunity. He saw
the Jewish Agency as being in a position to lead the Yishuv away from terrorism and thought
that by taking them down, he could stop terrorism. The British still did not know exactly what
the JRM was, although by this point they knew of some form of collaboration between Irgun,
Haganah and Lehi.
So, why were there still a large number of attacks in June? The plans detected by the
British never materialized, but other unexpected attacks involving the Haganah and Palmach,
Irgun and Lehi, did. Most likely, the JRM scrapped these plans once they were captured and
turned to other ideas. On 16 June 1946 the Haganah and Palmach destroyed all bridges
connecting Palestine to neighbouring countries. On the next day, the Lehi seriously damaged rail
workshops in Haifa. Finally, in the most outrageous of attacks, on the 18th of June Irgun
kidnapped six British army officers, one of whom escaped; two were released after four days and
the remainder after 12 days when the death sentence of captured Irgun fighters was commuted.78
The timing of the attacks was clearly coordinated by the JRM. They provoked Alan Cunningham
to outrage.
At 2 AM on 19 June, he reported on the events of the previous three days to the Secretary
of State. Cunningham placed most importance on recovering the kidnapped soldiers, but doubted
his ability to do so. He asked Whitehall to cease discussions on the issue of 100 000 immigrants
and requested permission to “put into effect a full plan against Jewish illegal organizations and
77 “DSO extract 23.5.46” Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/35.78 David Charters, The British Army and Jewish Insurgency in Palestine, 1945-47, Studies in Military and Strategic History (Basingstoke, England: Macmillan, 1989). 185.
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[the] Jewish Agency,”79 largely because he believed the likes of Moshe Sneh and the extremists
had won the debate within the Agency over the use of terrorism. Later that morning Chaim
Weizmann, anticipating a harsh and violent response from the British, met with Cunningham to
discuss the issue. Weizmann expressed his disgust at the publication of the original plan to close
the Jewish Agency and to arrest those responsible. The fact that even the most reasonable of
Jewish leaders opposed current British policy, probably reaffirmed Cunningham’s notions about
the Agency. A team of SHAI agents, with the help of a British officer with Zionist motivations,
had stolen the plans on the 15th of June. They were made public within a few days. Efraim Dekel,
the chief of the operation, described the British reaction as follows:
The British CID were beside themselves with rage… They blamed the army for the leakage, while the army vented their rage on the police… The most careful and painstaking work of dozens of years- the collection of thousands of names and addresses, the compilation of information, reports, and maps referring to arms caches and training fields, the offices and headquarters of the Hagana- all suddenly were worthless. Years of work by the British police and CID in Palestine had collapsed like a house of cards.80
This was an embarrassment to Cunningham. After receiving another message of
clarification, the Secretary of State denied Cunningham permission to close the Jewish Agency
building, and authorized arrests only against those individuals “against whom there is clear
evidence” of responsibility for terrorism.
This exchange reveals key points about the intelligence available to Cunningham. He had
a black list of Agency members whom he wanted to arrest, probably based mostly on public
information and less on secret intelligence. Second, military security was poor enough to allow
theft of military plans two weeks before D-day. Third, despite the existence of an MI9 escape
79 “Cunningham to S of S 19.6.46”Telegrams, 10 November 1945 - 30 July 1946. Sir Alan Cunningham Collection. GB165-0072, Middle East Centre Archives, St. Antony's College, Oxford. 1/1.80 Efraim Dekel, Shai: The Exploits of Hagana Intelligence. (New York: Thomas Yoseloff, 1956). 138.
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organization,81 British authorities had no success in recovering the remaining kidnapped
officers. MI5 placed hopes in an anonymous tip on the kidnappers which led nowhere.82 Fourth,
there was little discussion of how to pursue the terrorists, and a weighty focus on the Jewish
Agency, demonstrating that Cunningham and the GOC had no idea who to arrest or how to
destroy the terrorists. Had they known more about the JRM, they would have understood that the
Agency could provide few answers on how to destroy Irgun or Lehi, whose security was too
tight, and that the point was not to gather information on terrorists, but political: how to deal with
the united opposition of the Yishuv to British policy. On the whole, Cunningham and his staff
acted on suspicion and anger rather than intelligence, even though their grasp of events was
fairly good.
The 6th Airborne Division took the lead in Operation Agatha, which began at 0415 on 29
June 1946. The original plan, Operation Broadside, was scrapped after it was made public by the
Haganah. Planning for Agatha began on the 23rd of June. It was a broader assault on the Yishuv,
whereas Broadside was limited to the Haganah Command Headquarters. The operational
objectives of Agatha were to occupy the Jewish Agency building and capture documents there,
detain Jewish Agency politicians suspected of complicity in terrorism, occupy suspected
headquarters of illegal armed organizations and finally to arrest illegal armed forces members.
The seizure of arms, while not officially an objective, in effect became a major part of the
operation. Agatha was covered by improved security precautions. The “Bigot” security system
was used for electronic and paper communications, meetings were held secretly and in disguise,
and normal life in the Yishuv was maintained as best as possible. Planning was, however,
difficult because there were no accurate or modern town maps or plans. A Jewish guide map
81 It is described in good detail in Palestine: Escape Organisation. The National Archives at Kew, London. WO 208/3398.82 “CO to DSO 22.6.46” Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34.
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from 1942 was the main source of addresses and whereabouts of officials. The locations of
Haganah CHQ and other targets were discreetly reconnoitred before of the operation. During the
operation, reconnaissance aircraft provided air cover against any movement of Jewish columns.83
Despite all this effort, a last-minute tip-off from a pro-Zionist British police officer allowed the
Haganah to keep its most senior commanders from arrest and saved the majority of Haganah
arms from confiscation.84
This operation began with little intelligence on the Jewish Agency and virtually none on
the illegal armed organizations. It ended with three 3-ton truckloads of documents on the
Agency, 2700 individuals under arrest, and virtually no information on illegal armed
organizations. Those responsible for the kidnappings which started Agatha were still at large.
The entire Agency was in detention except Sneh, its most guilty member and David Ben-Gurion,
a close second. Cunningham requested that Ben-Gurion, who was in London, be apprehended
but this was not done. Outrage among the opposition in parliament prompted the Secretary of
State to have Cunningham forward all evidence against the Jewish Agency.85 All the armed
organizations continued to function and the detention of the Jewish Agency sparked the Yishuv
to declare a general strike in protest. In short, the only leadership of the Yishuv which was
capable of bringing the JRM to an end by cutting off support for terrorist groups, was locked up
in detention camps, while the terrorists, still at large, had provoked the overreaction they sought.
British intelligence was wrong about very important things. By 18 June MI5 believed a
CID assessment that Irgun, Lehi and Haganah soon would work together, based on
circumstantial evidence such as reactions to Bevin’s speeches, not hard intelligence. British
intelligence had no clue about the real relationship between these organizations, nor that they had 83 Operation AGATHA. The National Archives at Kew, London. WO 275/30.84 Dekel. 144-146.85 “S of S to Cunningham 2.7.46” Telegrams, 10 November 1945 - 30 July 1946. Sir Alan Cunningham Collection. GB165-0072, Middle East Centre Archives, St. Antony's College, Oxford. 1/1.
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supported each other in attacks over the previous two days, and eight months. Their assessment
was further confused by Circus, which indicated that the Irgun had threatened to break away
from their agreement, intensify its fight and declare a Jewish state.86 It seems likely that this was
bogus information. On the same date, 18 June, MI5 intercepted mail from a Lehi member in
Palestine to a friend in London which mentioned how the Yishuv was united against the
British.87 This might have been taken as contrary evidence to Circus’s report. In general MI5 was
getting mixed reports, some indicating a split between Irgun and Haganah, others suggesting that
a non-cooperation campaign would commence at the end of June and Haganah would support the
Irgun in the Kibbutzim.88 MI5 knew that Irgun and Lehi were united. The deceptive pattern of
excluding the Haganah from the JRM continued even through its final days. On the 29th the Irgun
attacked the Haganah in the media, perpetuating the myth that the organizations could no longer
work together.
Through July, neither the MI5 nor DSO had good information on any illegal armed
organizations. Lehi was initially believed to be responsible for the King David Hotel bombing on
22 July, 1946, when it actually was Irgun.89 The MI5 continued to believe that the Agency and
Irgun were negotiating on an agreement, when in fact Irgun, Lehi and Haganah were discussing
how to respond to Operation Agatha, which they considered an act of war. Three days before the
King David Hotel Bombings “a most secret source,” which usually means a form of signals
intelligence, indicated that Irgun was believed to be planning an attack against the British
officials in Beirut. This threat was taken extremely seriously and all relevant authorities were
warned. It is impossible to say for certain whether or not the threat was real but it is unlikely that
86 “DSO to Trafford-Smith 18.6.46” Haganah. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/33.87 Stern Group. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/30.88 Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34.89 Stern Group. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/30.
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the Irgun at that time would have attempted to assassinate British officials out of Palestine or the
UK proper because assassination was not its common practice in the first place.
If British intelligence was deceived, then Cunningham and his administration were
clueless. Incompetent security at the King David Hotel was a condition for the bombing yet, the
threat had been evident for at least 6 months, while on 29 June MI5 received indications that the
military and government offices would be targets of Irgun.90
Cunningham and his military staff got together yet again to plan another operation, called
“Shark.” Operation Shark, which began on the 29th of July, 1946 and lasted for several days,
sought to disrupt and destroy the Irgun and Lehi by uprooting them in Tel Aviv. The city,
divided into several cordons, was methodically searched as every individual went through a
screening process administered by the CID. This operation captured massive arms caches
including one in the basement of the Great Synagogue of Tel Aviv. Security precautions before
the operation were improved, including a ban on the use of telephones, while aerial photographs
were used as well as Tel Aviv city maps. The operation was considered successful and the Lehi
was believed to mostly be rounded-up.91 Very few important persons were actually arrested
however, and the organizations continued to function. This indicates that Britain could not break
Irgun or Lehi security.
By August 1946, British actions bore some fruit. The Jewish Agency had suffered a
tactical setback. It dropped terrorism as a policy and took up negotiations with the British. The
Agency had lost some power to the Irgun while the Yishuv was increasingly unwilling to follow
Britain’s lead as the London Conference, which was meant to settle the situation, was on the
horizon. This was a partial success for Cunningham’s policy, yet far from complete. It was a
90 Irgun Zvai Leumi. The National Archives at Kew, London. KV 5/34.91 Operation SHARK. The National Archives at Kew, London. WO 275/31.
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double-edged sword; Cunningham got the Agency to drop terrorism, but in the process failed to
crack the illegal armed organizations- indeed he strengthened them. On August 18th Cunningham
noted:
This evidence that moderate local Government and business circles are acquiring increasing influence on policy discussion in the absence of extremist political leaders is slightly encouraging. Their influence over terrorists and para-military organizations is however negligible and further demonstrations of violence by the latter are anticipated in the near future.92
The Agency dropped terrorism because it could no longer gain from it. The King David
Hotel incident hurt the Agency’s negotiating power with the British and Americans and it wanted
to avoid open war, so it jumped at the chance to negotiate. Immediately MI5 got busier and
busier, and its information suddenly became more accurate, as it was no longer in the interests of
the Agency or Haganah to deceive the British. Cunningham’s focus shifted back to politics,
illegal immigration and fighting the Irgun, which seldom came to avail.
In general, British intelligence in Palestine during the period of the Jewish Resistance
Movement in 1945-46 lacked two crucial things. First and foremost was security, and second
was good intelligence on terrorist organizations. Not until August 1946 did military intelligence
discover that military telephone conversations were routinely being tapped.
On 8 Aug direct evidence showed that a very important pair of telephone wires between NORTH PALESTINE and the SOUTH had in actual fact been tapped. The degree of technical knowledge necessary for the Jews to be able to single out this particular line, shows that the amount of information available to them must be considerable and that their intelligence organization is very active and of a high order. 93
This was only the start of British realization of the extent and complexity of the Jewish
intelligence organizations. British intelligence and policymaking clearly suffered from a specific
deception effort during much of the Jewish Resistance Movement. The involvement of the
92 “18.8.46 Cunningham to S of S” in Telegrams, 10 November 1945 - 30 July 1946. Sir Alan Cunningham Collection. GB165-0072, Middle East Centre Archives, St. Antony's College, Oxford. 1/2.93 Divisional Intelligence Summaries: Nos 1-36. The National Archives at Kew, London. WO 275/58.
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Haganah was constantly left out of any description of the JRM during its existence. Deception
led to a lack of British preparedness for major JRM operations in the early summer of 1946.
These operations led Cunningham and Gen. Barker to frustration and to political missteps. Their
policy was problematic- was the aim of Operation Agatha to stop terrorist operations, or was it
meant to force the Jewish Agency into negotiations? JRM operations were designed to hurry
immigration issues and ended up backfiring on both the Jewish Agency and the British. The
Agency was shut down temporarily, and the Irgun doubled in strength. Neither effect was
positive for the Agency or the British. Ultimately, Cunningham achieved one of the desired
results, forcing the Yishuv back to the negotiating table, but he simultaneously failed in the
greater aim by strengthening the organization most responsible for terrorism.
In the end, intelligence did not matter much to policy, as it is only useful if a decision
maker is willing to see it. Without much consultation with intelligence, and ignoring the
warnings of the Colonial Office, Cunningham pursued the disruption of the Jewish Agency. MI5,
among the best security services in the world at the time, consistently had bad intelligence on
important issues, with the DSO depending on assessments from information provided by his
liaison with a secretly hostile organization.
Cunningham, the police and the army needed operational and political intelligence on
terrorist groups, to prevent attacks, capture wanted men and destroy their organizations. This did
not exist, and the vulnerability to terrorism made it hard for Cunningham to play calm and
rational politics. While Cunningham had a decent general sense of events, MI5 did not catch up
to hidden developments until June. If Cunningham needed to know one thing during his first year
in Jerusalem, it was that his pressure on the Jewish Agency would turn the moderates within the
Yishuv away from negotiations with the British, so empowering the terrorists in numbers and
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popularity. Cunningham miscalculated how the Yishuv would react to Operation Agatha. He
hoped to send a message to the extremists, but instead enraged the Yishuv. In the end,
Cunningham based his decisions more on his reading of the political situation than on secret
intelligence about the illegal armed organizations and the Jewish Agency. Even if he had used
the information available, he would have been misled by the JRM’s deception effort. In this case
a decision maker did not use bad intelligence, and still ended up making poor decisions.
Ultimately, Cunningham achieved one of his goals- the Agency dropped terrorism and resumed
negotiations. Largely due to lack of intelligence, however, he was unable to handle the threat
posed by the Irgun.
David Charters claims that British policy failed in 1946 because it suffered from an
intelligence failure.94 In fact, the real failure was of policy, not intelligence. Intelligence really
did not affect Cunningham’s policy at all, nor is it easy to see how Britain could have changed
that policy and continued on with the Mandate under the terms it wished. The real problem lay
with power and policy. British Intelligence was mediocre, but one may doubt that even
excellence in this area would have transformed events. Once the Yishuv withdrew its consent for
a continuation of the Mandate, no means which the British had and were willing to employ could
make it change its mind.
94 David A. Charters, "British Intelligence in the Palestine Campaign, 1945-1947," Intelligence and National Security 6, no. 1 (1991).
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