On August 27, 2004,
CBS News first reported about a
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) investigation into a possible spy in the U.S. Department of Defense working for Israel. The story said that the FBI had uncovered a spy working as a policy analyst under
Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Douglas Feith and then-
deputy secretary of defense Paul Wolfowitz. He was later identified as Lawrence Franklin, who had previously served as an attaché at the U.S. embassy in Israel and was one of two mid-level
Pentagon officials in the
Office of the Secretary of Defense responsible for
Iran policy in the office's Northern Gulf directorate. Franklin has pleaded guilty to providing information about a classified
presidential directive, and other sensitive information pertaining to U.S. deliberations on
foreign policy regarding Iran to AIPAC, who in turn provided the information to Israel. FBI sources have indicated that the year-long investigation was actively underway when the CBS News story broke. Franklin never passed any documents to AIPAC, only information shared verbally. According to
The New York Times, Lawrence Franklin was one of two U.S. officials who held meetings with Iranian dissidents, including Paris-based arms dealer
Manucher Ghorbanifar, a key figure in the
Iran–Contra affair. These Pentagon-approved meetings were brokered by
neoconservative Michael Ledeen of the
American Enterprise Institute, who had also played a part in Iran-Contra, and is said to have taken place in Paris in June 2003. Franklin had previously been assigned to a unit tasked with the Pentagon's Iraq policy, raising concern that he might have been used to influence the
war on Iraq, although Pentagon officials have maintained that he was in no position to influence policy. (See also
Office of Special Plans.) On August 30, 2004, Israeli officials admitted that Franklin had met repeatedly with
Naor Gilon, head of the political department at the Israeli Embassy in Washington and a specialist on
Iran's nuclear programs, but point out that this was completely appropriate activity for the two Iran specialists. A
Newsweek report indicates that Gilon was under FBI surveillance and that Franklin only became a target after these meetings. It has been suggested that Franklin's motivations may have been ideological or personal, rather than financial. An unnamed U.S. intelligence official told
Newsweek: "for whatever reason, the guy hates Iran [the Iranian government] passionately." Franklin's security clearance was revoked, although he was not fired, merely demoted. The FBI investigation continued until May 5 when he was arrested and charged with giving away top-secret information. ==Criminal charges==