RELATED:Analysis: So did the Mossad do it? Analysis: Dubai hit was not a botched jobBritish papers insist Israel owes UK an explanationAnalysis: Assassins may regret taking on Dubai’s copsTongue In Cheek: Profile of an assassin The Daily Mail report came several hours after a 20-minute meeting inLondon between Israeli ambassador Ron Prosor and a senior Britishdiplomat on Thursday, over the fake British passports apparently usedin the assassination of Hamas military commander Mahmoud al-Mabhouh inDubai.The report hintedthat Israeli intelligence chiefs understood British authorities wouldhave to 'slap them on the wrist' and reportedly added: "The Britishgovernment has to be seen to be going through the motions." After Prosor left the Foreign Office, however, British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said he hoped and expected that Israel would cooperate fully with the investigation that had been launched in Britain, and that this “is not going through the motions, that is the rightful business of government.”Dubai Police chief Dahi Khalfan Tamim said on Thursday he was 99-percent certain that the Mossad was behind the assassination, and that if that were the case, he would ask Interpol to issue an international arrest warrant against Mossad head Meir Dagan, and perhaps also against Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.While the Prime Minister’s Office would not comment on the matter, one government official said Dubai would become “the laughingstock of the Interpol community” if it requested international arrest warrants, since “there is not one single piece of evidence that even remotely connects this incident to Israel.” The official added that the media frenzy over the issue, especially inBritain, was being fueled by Dubai, which was carefully leaking selectpieces of information to promote its own investigation. “We don’t knowanything,” the official said. “We know only what Dubai wants us toknow, and they definitely have their own interests.”Herb Keinon contributed to this report.
'Britain knew about Mossad hit'
UK denies report MI6 was told about use of UK passports before Mabhouh's death.
RELATED:Analysis: So did the Mossad do it? Analysis: Dubai hit was not a botched jobBritish papers insist Israel owes UK an explanationAnalysis: Assassins may regret taking on Dubai’s copsTongue In Cheek: Profile of an assassin The Daily Mail report came several hours after a 20-minute meeting inLondon between Israeli ambassador Ron Prosor and a senior Britishdiplomat on Thursday, over the fake British passports apparently usedin the assassination of Hamas military commander Mahmoud al-Mabhouh inDubai.The report hintedthat Israeli intelligence chiefs understood British authorities wouldhave to 'slap them on the wrist' and reportedly added: "The Britishgovernment has to be seen to be going through the motions." After Prosor left the Foreign Office, however, British Foreign Secretary David Miliband said he hoped and expected that Israel would cooperate fully with the investigation that had been launched in Britain, and that this “is not going through the motions, that is the rightful business of government.”Dubai Police chief Dahi Khalfan Tamim said on Thursday he was 99-percent certain that the Mossad was behind the assassination, and that if that were the case, he would ask Interpol to issue an international arrest warrant against Mossad head Meir Dagan, and perhaps also against Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu.While the Prime Minister’s Office would not comment on the matter, one government official said Dubai would become “the laughingstock of the Interpol community” if it requested international arrest warrants, since “there is not one single piece of evidence that even remotely connects this incident to Israel.” The official added that the media frenzy over the issue, especially inBritain, was being fueled by Dubai, which was carefully leaking selectpieces of information to promote its own investigation. “We don’t knowanything,” the official said. “We know only what Dubai wants us toknow, and they definitely have their own interests.”Herb Keinon contributed to this report.