The Guardian reveals Western intelligence agencies involved in killing Palestinians
According to the English section of webangah News Agency, citing Mehr News Agency and al-Mayadeen, the UK’s The Guardian published a special report on classified documents showing that Western and European intelligence services provided critical data to Mossad in the early 1970s, enabling the regime to track and kill Palestinian fighters.
The British newspaper added that this support occurred without oversight from parliaments or elected political figures in these countries.
The report states that assassinations carried out by Mossad in paris, Rome, Athens, Nicosia, and other global locations during the 1970s were executed under this framework.
These killings followed armed attacks by Palestinian fighters against zionist athletes participating in the Munich Olympics—a response to the Zionist regime’s genocide in Palestine—resulting in the deaths of 11 individuals.
The collaboration between European intelligence services and Mossad led to the assassination of at least 10 Palestinians across various regions worldwide.
The documents revealing Western intelligence agencies’ support for Israeli operations include encrypted telegrams stored in Swiss intelligence archives. Thousands of these telegrams were classified; the archive was established in 1971 and facilitated information exchange among 18 Western spy agencies, including those of Israel, the U.S., UK, France, Switzerland, Italy, and Germany.
The intel contained critical details about hidden locations and movements of key Palestinian figures—along with tactical insights into their resistance efforts—compiled under codename “Kilowatt.”