Juval Aviv, also written as Yuval Aviv (born February 24, 1947) is a writer and security consultant who has Israeli American dual-citizenship. He is best known for his claim that he is the source of the 1984 book The True Story of an Israeli Counter-Terrorist Team by George Jonas, on which Steven Spielberg's 2005 film Munich was based. He has claimed to have worked for Mossad but there has been some debate as to whether or not this is the case. He is currently the president of Interfor, a corporate investigations firm in New York.
According to Israeli journalist Yossi Melman writing in Ha'aretz, Aviv was born in kibbutz Kfar Menachem in 1947 as Yuval Aviof. The Australian Herald Sun reported that prior to establishing his company Interfor, Inc., he was a Major in the Israeli Defense Force.
Juval Aviv is president and CEO of Interfor, an international investigative and intelligence firm according to the ABA Banking Journal. He has investigated cases such as the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 for clients US Aviation and Pan American World Airways. As a counter terrorism expert, he has been used as a source by publications such as the NY Times and by news networks FOX News and ABC News.
In 1981, Canadian writer George Jonas was approached by Collins Canada about meeting with Juval Aviv, a former Mossad officer who said that he had led Operation Wrath of God, an operation to assassinate the Palestinian terrorists who planned the 1972 Munich massacre, in which 11 Israeli athletes were taken hostage and murdered.
In a joint deal, two Toronto-based publishing houses, Lester & Orpen Dennys and Collins Canada Ltd, commissioned him to write Aviv's story.
Jonas told Maclean's that he spent two years and $30,000 of the publishers' money conducting research with Aviv in Europe and Israel. The result, in 1984, was Jonas's Vengeance: The True Story of an Israeli Counter-Terrorist Team, which depicted Aviv's character as "Avner". According to Maclean's, which put together an 11-person investigative team to find out whether Aviv's story was true, the book generated $500,000 in advance foreign sales, as well as "worldwide debate in intelligence and publishing communities," and denial and skepticism in Israel. Senior Israeli intelligence sources, including Zvi Zamir who headed the Mossad from 1968—74, told Yossi Melman that they do not know anyone named Yuval Aviof or Aviv. Both Israeli and U.S. intelligence sources, including former CIA officers Vince Cannistraro and Larry Johnson, have described Aviv as a liar and con-artist who never worked for Mossad.
However, American RadioWorks, the national documentary unit of American Public Media, looked into the allegations as well and noted several court documents including a memo from the FBI from 1982 and an informant agreement between Aviv and the US Justice Department, neither of which confirm any past association with Israeli intelligence .
Jonas, Louise Dennys, and the president of Collins Canada, Nicholas Harris, told Macleans that they are satisfied that the story is genuine. Jonas told Maclean's: "To my mind, if he is not legit, then he can only be a disgruntled ex-employee of Mossad with sufficient knowledge of what has gone down in this area. As far as I am concerned, if he is not who he says he is, then that is what he is."
In 1986, the book was turned into a made-for-television movie, Sword of Gideon, starring Michael York, and in 2005, it formed the basis of Steven Spielberg's Munich.
Jonas has never admitted that Aviv was in fact "Avner", and dismissed the theory in the Maclean's article.
Aviv was employed by Pan Am in 1989 to investigate who had bombed Pan Am Flight 103. He says that he "got the information from the horse's mouth, from people who were involved directly and indirectly in the information" when investigating the bombing. In his report he claimed that US agents had been monitoring a heroin-smuggling route operating from the Middle East to the United States which was run by a Syrian criminal. Aviv claimed that the Syrian had ties to Hizbollah terrorists who were holding Westerners hostages in Beirut. Aviv alleged that US agents agreed to allow the heroin smuggling continue in return for the Syrian helping to free the hostages. At some point Turkish extremists who worked at Frankfurt airport as baggage handlers swapped a suitcase of heroin for a bomb. However, the President's Commission on Aviation Security and Terrorism examined the same allegations in 1989 and found "no foundation for speculation in press accounts that U.S. government officials had participated tacitly or otherwise in any supposed operation at Frankurt Airport having anything to do with the sabotage of Flight 103."
After the Interfor report was released, Aviv was called "a fabricator who had lied about his entire background" by diplomatic and intelligence officials. Later, Aviv stated "I was never told directly that [my report] was wrong, I was always attacked as the messenger, as somebody who was a fabricator, a lunatic, whatever." American RadioWorks, the national documentary unit of American Public Media, looked into the allegations that Aviv had never been employed by the FBI or Mossad. They found that several documents existed, including a memo from the FBI from 1982 and an informant agreement between Aviv and the US Justice Department, neither of which confirm any past association with Israeli intelligence.