From direct military strikes that took down prominent Hamas founder Sheikh Ahmad Yassin and his successor Abdel Aziz al-Rantisi in 2004 to close-range shootings that killed three top Palestinian commanders in Beirut in 1973, followed by Khalil al-Wazir (Abu Jihad) in Tunis in 1988, Israel has a long, sordid history of assassinations and unorthodox ways to carry them out.
At one point, Israel sent letter bombs to its enemies, like the 1972 one that nearly killed Yasser Arafat’s confident Bassam Abu Sharif. It also used car bombs like the 1979 killing of Arafat’s security chief Ali Hasan Salameh in Beirut. But it was poisoned chocolate which took the life of Wadie Haddad of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) in 1978.
Yesterday, yet another method was introduced: death by pager, carried out on a mass scale in Lebanon, targeting thousands of Hezbollah members and killing 12 people.
Nothing new
Using phones and telecom to kill or strike down traditional enemies is not new to Israel. It actually pre-dates both pagers and mobiles, dating back to the 1978 assassination of Mahmoud Hamshari, representative of the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO) in France. Accused of involvement in the September 1972 attack on Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics, he was tracked down to his Paris residence that December and tricked into leaving it by a Mossad agent dubbed as an Italian journalist seeking an interview with Hamshari.