Israel Announces Recovery of 2,500 Items from Syria Linked to Executed Spy Eli Cohen
Cohen was hanged for espionage after he had infiltrated top levels of Syria's regime ©AFP

Israel announced on Sunday that it had retrieved the official Syrian archive on famed spy Eli Cohen -- a cache of 2,500 documents, photographs and personal effects linked to the Mossad agent executed in Damascus in 1965.

"In a complex covert operation by the Mossad, in cooperation with a strategic partner service, the official Syrian archive on Eli Cohen was brought to Israel," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said in a statement, referring to the country's external intelligence agency.

"The trove contains thousands of items that had been kept under tight security by Syrian intelligence for decades," the statement added.

Cohen, who developed close ties with high-level political and military figures in Syria as part of a four-year espionage operation, was eventually discovered by Syrian intelligence.

He was publicly hanged in Damascus on May 18, 1965.

"Eli Cohen is a legend. With the test of time, he emerges as the greatest intelligence agent in the state's history," Netanyahu was quoted as saying in the statement.

Cohen's story was dramatized in the Netflix miniseries "The Spy," starring the British actor Sacha Baron Cohen.

The prime minister added that retrieving the archive reflected Israel's "unwavering commitment to bringing back all our missing, prisoners, and hostages."

The statement was an apparent reference both to the 58 captives, dead and alive, being held by Palestinian militant group Hamas in Gaza, as well as the announcement last week that Israel had retrieved from Syria the body of a soldier missing for 43 years, also in a covert Mossad operation.

Sunday's statement said that the recovery of the items came after "decades of Mossad intelligence, operational, and technological effort to find every scrap of information about Eli Cohen in the quest to shed light on his fate and discover the location of his burial."

Over the years, multiple operations have been carried out to that end, the statement said, including "inside enemy states."

Mossad director David Barnea said in the statement that recovering the archive was a "significant achievement", and "another step toward locating our man in Damascus' burial place".

Among the items recovered are a handwritten will penned by Cohen hours before his execution, audio recordings and files from his interrogations and those of his sources, letters he wrote to family members in Israel and photographs from his clandestine mission in Syria.

Additionally, the cache included belongings taken from his home after his arrest, including forged passports and photographs of him with senior Syrian military and government officials, as well as notebooks and diaries listing Mossad tasks.

Also discovered was a file labelled "Nadia Cohen," detailing Syrian intelligence monitoring of Cohen's wife's campaign to free her husband.

In a special meeting on Sunday, Netanyahu and Barnea shared the trove of items with Nadia Cohen, the statement said.

AFP

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