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Israel set up an entire fake luxury resort in the 1980s as a front for Mossad to evacuate Jews from Sudan

Apr 19, 2018, 17:07 IST

A brochure for Arous tourist village, which was distributed across travel agents in Europe.-

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  • Israel's secret service ran an entire beach resort in Sudan in the 1980s as a front for its operations, a BBC investigation has found.
  • The Mossad agents were actually in Arous, Sudan to help smuggle Ethiopian Jews to Israel.
  • They posed as diving instructors, hotel managers, and staff while carrying out the mission.
  • The ruse made the operation possible - Sudan is an ally of Israel's regional rivals, and would not have let the operation go ahead had they known.


Israeli secret service agents ran an entire fake luxury beach resort in Sudan as a front for its operations in the 1980s, according to a BBC investigation.

A group of Mossad agents were tasked with smuggling thousands of Jewish refugees in Ethiopia, known as Beta Israelis, from Ethiopia to Israel in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

Because Ethiopia landlocked, the only route out was via Sudan, a Muslim-majority nation which was hostile to Israel. From there, the refugees either had to be sailed across the Red Sea or airlifted to Israel.

An unidentified senior agent involved in the mission told the BBC:

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"A couple of Mossad guys went down to Sudan looking for possible landing beaches. They just stumbled across this deserted village on the coast, in the middle of nowhere.

"For us it was a godsend. If we could get hold of this place and do it up, we could say we're running a diving village, which would give us a reason for being in Sudan and furthermore for roaming around near the beach."

A rough sketch of the sea journey from Ethiopia from Israel.Google Maps/Business Insider

Arous tourist village, located on the Sudan's east coast, consisted of 15 bungalows, a kitchen, and dining room that opened out to a beach and the Red Sea.

The Sudanese International Tourist Corporation built the site in 1972 but never opened it because there no electricity, water supply, or a road nearby.

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Satellite imagery of a plot of land roughly where the Arous resort used to be.Google Maps

Posing as employees of a Swiss company, Mossad agents rented the site for $320,000 (£225,000) in the late 1970s. They secured deals for water and fuel, and smuggled air-conditioning units and water sports gear into Sudan to build the diving resort.

An undated brochure of the resort boasted of "attractive, air-conditioned bungalows with fully-equipped bathrooms," "fine meals," and a variety of water sports gear available to rent.

A brochure for Arous tourist village, which was distributed across travel agents in Europe.-

Mossad agents posed as the resort's managers, and female agents were put in charge of day-to-day operations to make the hotel look less suspicious. They also hired 15 local staff - none of whom knew the true identities of their managers and colleagues.

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Hotel guests included Egyptian soldiers, British SAS troops, foreign diplomats, and Sudanese government officials - none of whom, too, knew of the true identity of their hosts.

Gad Shimron, a Mossad agent who worked at the resort, told the BBC: "We introduced windsurfing to Sudan. The first board was brought in - I knew how to windsurf, so I taught the guests. Other Mossad agents posed as professional diving instructors."

He added: "By comparison to the rest of Sudan, we offered Hilton-like standards, and it was such a beautiful place, it really looked like something out of the Arabian Nights. It was unbelievable."

The diving storeroom, which was out of bounds, contained hidden radios that the agents used to keep in contact with their headquarters in Tel Aviv.

ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA - MARCH 14: An Ethiopian woman waits to attend a Hebrew lesson at the Beta Israel School March 14, 2003 in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. After airlifting more than 22,000 Ethiopian Jews in 1984, and 1991, and satisfied that all qualified Jews had left Ethiopia in the airlifts, the Israeli government closed down its offices in Addis Ababa. However, in recent years, those Jews who were left behind have moved from their villages to Addis Ababa and are waiting for the Israeli government to accept them under the 'Law of Return.' Nearly 17,000 Ethiopian Jews awaiting aliyah, or emigration to Israel, live in Addis Ababa and the northern city of Gondar. For reasons that include a limited paper trail authenticating their Jewish identity, conversions to Christianity by grandparents, or a reluctance on the part of Israel to accept more Ethiopian refugees, the Ethiopian Jews have lingered around in compounds waiting indefinitely. (Photo by Natalie Behring-Chisholm/Getty Images)Natalie Behring-Chisholm/Getty

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The Mossad agents would leave at night for their rescue operations from time to time, telling local staff that they'd be out of town for a few days.

They would then drive to a refugee camp hundreds of miles away where Beta Israelis were waiting, and bring them back to a beach near Arous. They then transferred the refugees to Israeli SEAL teams, who took them to a waiting navy ship, and on to Israeli territory.

After one of the operations almost got busted, Israel decided to send jets to covertly airlift the Ethiopians to Israel instead.

Ethiopian children, whose roots trace back to Judaism, walk at Beta Israel school while awaiting immigration to Israel, in Gondar March 8, 2007. More than 5000 Ethiopian are waiting to migrate to Israel to reunite with their families, according to Israel's Jewish Agency. REUTERS/Eliana Aponte (Ethiopia)Eliana Aponte/Reuters

The agents abandoned the resort in 1985 after years of running it. The military junta in charge of country at the time started scouring the country for Israeli spies, and Mossad's head in Israel ordered the agents to leave.

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The Mossad agents evacuated the resort in a hurry, while guests were still staying at the hotel, an unidentified agent told the BBC.

"They would have woken up and found themselves alone in the desert," they said. "The local staff were there, but no-one else - the diving instructor, the lady manager and so on, all the Caucasians had disappeared."

The agents transferred at least 7,000 Ethiopians to Israel over the course of their operations at Arous.

Travel writer Paul Clammer wrote in his 2005 guide to Sudan: "Arous Resort was closed when I visited... Though the colourful, relatively fresh paint gave them a cheerful look, the whole place was in disarray: Beach bungalows had toppled roofs, quads were rusty and jet skis left unattended, all suggesting the place was abandoned in a hurry."

Arous' website, referenced in some travel guides, is now defunct. Business Insider tried calling two phone numbers linked to the resort on Thursday, but the lines were dead.

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Read the BBC's story here.

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