A stunned world froze as investigative journalist Whitney Webb dissected chilling claims linking Jeffrey Epstein to Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency in her explosive book One Nation Under Blackmail (2022) and subsequent interviews.

Webb’s two-volume work argues Epstein’s sexual blackmail operation was not isolated depravity but part of a decades-long nexus of organized crime, intelligence agencies (U.S. and Israeli), and elite power. She traces roots to post-WWII networks involving figures like Meyer Lansky and Roy Cohn, evolving into modern operations. Key claims:
- Epstein’s ties to former Israeli PM Ehud Barak (frequent visits, Epstein brokering deals).
- Hosting intelligence-linked aide Yoni Koren.
- Ghislaine Maxwell’s father Robert Maxwell (alleged Mossad asset).
- Epstein’s unexplained wealth and post-2008 conviction access as evidence of protection.
Webb describes it as a “joint CIA-Mossad” web using blackmail for influence, not proven formal agency employment. Sources include leaked emails, court records, and insider accounts (e.g., Ari Ben-Menashe claiming Epstein/Maxwell ran a “honeytrap”).
Criticism and counter-evidence: Israeli officials (e.g., Naftali Bennett) deny links as “false.” No 2025 files or DOJ statements confirm Mossad ties—memo states “no credible evidence” of intelligence asset status. Critics label Webb’s work speculative, blending verified proximity with unproven espionage.
Giuffre’s memoir Nobody’s Girl (2025) exposed verified abuse without spy claims. As disclosures yielded redactions and no tapes/list, Webb’s dissection—raw, provocative—ensured stunned scrutiny: Mossad link unproven, elite orbit undeniable, questions unrelenting.
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