Review: Spies of No Country by Matti Friedman

Matti Friedman has built a reputation as one of the most compelling interpreters of Israel’s early history. A Canadian‑Israeli journalist and former AP correspondent, he writes with a reporter’s precision and a storyteller’s instinct for the human detail that reveals a larger truth. In Spies of No Country, he turns his attention to the Palmach’s Arab Section—the tiny, improvised precursor to Israel’s modern intelligence services—and uncovers a story that is both humbler and more astonishing than the sleek mythology that later grew around the Mossad.

The first surprise is how primitive it all was. Today’s popular imagination, shaped by the James Bond franchise and decades of Mossad legend, assumes espionage is synonymous with gadgets, global reach, and surgical precision. Friedman dismantles that assumption from the opening pages. The men he profiles—Gamliel Cohen, Isaac Shoshan, Havakuk Cohen, and others—were not trained in high‑tech tradecraft. They were barely trained at all. They operated with forged papers that could fall apart in the rain, radios that barely worked, and cover stories held together by nerve and improvisation. Their missions were improvised, their support minimal, and their survival far from guaranteed.

What made them uniquely suited to this work was not sophistication but identity. These were young Mizrahi Jews—men from Aleppo, Damascus, and other Arab cities—who had grown up speaking Arabic and absorbing the rhythms of Middle Eastern life. Yet in the Yishuv of the 1940s, dominated culturally and institutionally by Ashkenazi Jews from Europe, they often felt like outsiders. Friedman shows how the Arab Section gave them something they had not previously been offered: purpose, belonging, and a chance to turn the very thing that marginalized them—their Mizrahi background—into a strategic superpower.

Their success, as Friedman presents it, was a blend of audacity, instinct, and perhaps good fortune. Some readers will see providence in their survival; others will see the improbable luck that often accompanies the bold. Whatever the interpretation, the results were remarkable. These young men infiltrated Arab cities, gathered intelligence that shaped the 1948 war, and helped lay the foundations of a state that did not yet formally exist.

But Friedman refuses to romanticize them. The book is as much about failure as triumph. The Arab Section’s work was riddled with danger, and the margin for error was razor thin. Being a Mizrahi Jew raised in a Muslim environment did not guarantee mastery of every dialect, custom, or social nuance. A misplaced word, a gesture slightly out of place, or a moment of hesitation could—and sometimes did—lead to exposure and death. Friedman treats these losses with gravity, showing how the same qualities that made these men invaluable also placed them in situations where the risks were almost unbearable.

What emerges is a portrait of espionage stripped of glamour and restored to its human scale. These were not super‑agents but teenagers and twenty‑somethings improvising their way through history. Their achievements were extraordinary precisely because they were so fragile, so dependent on courage rather than machinery, and so deeply intertwined with questions of identity, belonging, and sacrifice.

One of the most poignant threads Friedman draws out is the dislocation these young agents experienced when they finally returned from their long stretches undercover in Beirut, Damascus, and other Arab cities. Some had slipped across borders when Israel wasn’t yet a state at all—when the Yishuv was fighting simply to survive—and they came home to a country that had been transformed in their absence. Israel was now sovereign, a member of the United Nations, already building institutions and a national identity. Yet for all their service, they still didn’t quite fit in. The very skills that had made them indispensable in the shadows—Arabic fluency, Middle Eastern mannerisms, the ability to disappear into Muslim-majority societies—were not traits the new, largely Ashkenazi state celebrated or understood. They returned as heroes who were not fully recognized, men who had risked everything for a homeland that had changed without them and still struggled to find a place for them.

Spies of No Country is ultimately a story about the birth of Israeli intelligence, but it is also a story about the birth of Israeli society—messy, diverse, improvised, and shaped by people whose contributions were long overlooked. Friedman gives these men the recognition they deserve, and in doing so, he reminds readers that the foundations of modern Israel were laid not only by generals and politicians but by young Mizrahi Jews who risked everything in the shadows.

 

Review: The Sword of Freedom – Israel, Mossad, and the Secret War by Yossi Cohen

Yossi Cohen’s The Sword of Freedom is marketed as an inside look at Israel’s Mossad: high-stakes operations, secret wars, and the shadow struggle against Iran. On that level, it delivers. Cohen recounts, in vivid and sometimes cinematic detail, operations such as the remote-controlled assassination of an Iranian nuclear scientist and the daring theft of the Iranian nuclear archive. These episodes are gripping, polished, and clearly designed to showcase the reach and precision of Israel’s intelligence services.

But to read this book only as a Mossad memoir is to miss its deeper purpose. Beneath the operational anecdotes and cloak-and-dagger atmosphere, The Sword of Freedom functions as a kind of political “stretch application” – or perhaps more accurately, a “reach application” – for the office of Prime Minister of Israel. The Mossad stories are the vehicle; the leadership narrative is the destination.

Cohen consistently presents himself not merely as a former intelligence chief, but as a statesman-in-waiting: articulate, globally connected, morally certain, and strategically far-sighted. Each chapter is structured so that the operation described becomes a parable of leadership. A covert action against Iran becomes a lesson in resolve; a diplomatic back-channel becomes a lesson in statecraft; a high-risk decision becomes a lesson in moral clarity. The message is subtle but unmistakable: these are not just stories about what he did, but arguments for what he could be trusted to do in a higher office.

Several reviewers have picked up on this dual character of the book. One reviewer remarked that it “reads less like a conventional intelligence memoir and more like a carefully crafted leadership profile,” noting how often Cohen shifts from operational detail to broad reflections on Israel’s destiny and the qualities required of its leaders. Another observed that the book “feels at times like a campaign biography in disguise,” pointing out how frequently Cohen places himself at the centre of pivotal moments, framed as the decisive, steady hand in times of crisis. A third review commented that Cohen “seems to be auditioning for a larger role on the national stage,” highlighting the way he moves from Mossad operations to sweeping political and moral conclusions.

None of this makes the book less interesting; in many ways, it makes it more revealing. As a pure institutional history of the Mossad, The Sword of Freedom is selective and highly curated. Cohen avoids the internal frictions, bureaucratic struggles, and strategic missteps that would complicate the heroic narrative. What he offers instead is a streamlined version of events that consistently reinforces a particular image of himself: bold but measured, ruthless when necessary yet guided by a strong moral compass, deeply rooted in Jewish identity yet comfortable on the global stage.

Where the book is most striking is in its treatment of Iran. Cohen frames the Islamic Republic not only as a strategic adversary, but as a civilisational threat that demands exceptional clarity and resolve from Israel’s leadership. The implication is clear: the kind of leader who successfully orchestrated these covert operations is the kind of leader Israel will need in the years ahead. The past operations become, in effect, a résumé for a future role.

Readers who come to The Sword of Freedom expecting a comprehensive, warts-and-all history of the Mossad may feel that the institutional story is thinner than the marketing suggests. But readers interested in the future of Israeli politics will find something else: a carefully constructed self-portrait of a man who plainly sees himself as a contender for national leadership. The book is less about the Mossad as an organisation and more about Yossi Cohen as a brand.

In that sense, the cover is only half right. Yes, this is a book about the Mossad and its secret war. But more than that, it is a public, polished, and deliberate reach application for the highest office in the country. The operations are the backdrop; the real subject is the man who wants to be seen as Israel’s next sword of freedom.

Israel’s Mossad spy agency shrouded in mystery and mystique | NZ Herald

Israel’s seizure of Iran’s purported nuclear programme archive and the dramatic display of the documents taken from a facility in the heart of Tehran marked a rare case of Israel going public about the operations of its top-secret Mossad spy agency.

Mossad, long shrouded in mystery and mythology, is legendary in international intelligence circles for being behind what are believed to be some of the most daring covert operations of the past century. Only a few have come to light and often only years later. Israel is typically wary of exposing the exploits of the global arm of its vaunted intelligence community out of fear of revealing its well-cultivated sources or undermining its mystique.

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