But the method is the story. Lotz seduced the wives of Egyptian generals, partied with Nazi scientists working for Cairo, and drank champagne like water. He was eventually caught—not because of bad tradecraft, but because his dog barked at the wrong moment during a radio transmission.
After digging into —often called the most authoritative journalistic account of the agency—you realize the truth is far stranger, scarier, and more fascinating than any thriller.
Instead of killing Bull (which they eventually did), they needed to stop a shipment of specialized steel pipes. So, a Mossad team—posing as a Swiss shipping company—chartered a freighter, intercepted the pipes in the middle of the Atlantic, and switched the cargo manifest.
One chapter focuses on a woman codenamed In the 1970s, after the Munich massacre, Mossad launched "Operation Wrath of God" to kill the Black September terrorists. While the men were busy with car bombs, The Hammer specialized in "wet work" (assassination) using a different weapon: psychology.
Take the case of . He wasn't a saboteur with a laser watch. He was a former German soldier turned Israeli spy who posed as a wealthy, horse-breeding playboy in Egypt. His intelligence on Soviet missiles being shipped to Nasser was invaluable.