The Anat Kamm-Uri Blau affair refers to a leak of thousands of classified Israel Defense Forces (IDF) documents by the former Israeli soldier Anat Kamm.
During her military service as an assistant in the Central Command bureau Kamm secretly copied thousands of classified documents, including many confidential documents. After she finished her military service Kamm copied the documents to a CD and leaked it to the Israeli Haaretz journalist Uri Blau. On these acts Kamm was later on convicted of espionage and providing confidential information without authorization.
Information from the leak suggested that the military had defied a court ruling against assassinating wanted militants in the West Bank who could potentially be arrested safely.[1][2][3][4][5][6]
Facts in this the case were subjected to an Israeli gag order. Given that Kamm worked as a gossip journalist dealing with media affairs, the case became well known to journalists, who started reporting on it using indirect descriptions.[7] The gag order was ultimately circumvented and broken from abroad, notably through blogsite Tikun Olam. According to the indictment, Kamm illegally copied over 2,000 classified documents during her military service at the IDF.[8][9][10][11][12] Israeli law enforcement sources said the documents include “operational military information, security and situation assessments, meetings’ minutes and protocols, highly sensitive intelligence information, orders of deployment and battle, drill briefings, and warfare doctrines for the West Bank“.[13] Shin Bet chief Yuval Diskin said that the case “had the potential to cause grave damage to state security“, and defined the documents as “the kind that any intelligence agency would be delighted to get its hands on“
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