Alexandra Uteev Johnson
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Alexandra Uteev "Alix" Johnson (August 9, 1946 – October 12, 2002) was a United States Foreign Service Officer from 1972 to 1979. She is notable for the controversy that arose in 1979 over two reports that she wrote alleging that Israeli authorities systematically used physical abuse to interrogate Palestinian detainees.


Early life and career

Born in Sacramento, California, Johnson graduated from the University of California, Davis with a degree in history in 1967 and received an M.A. in political science from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1970. As a Foreign Service Officer she worked as an analyst in the Department of State's Bureau of Intelligence and Research specializing in Soviet relations with Arab countries. She received Arabic language training from 1975 to 1977 in Beirut and Tunis and was assigned in February 1977 to the United States Consulate General in Jerusalem as vice-consul and post visa officer. In her work as a visa officer Johnson investigated 29 "visa security cases" involving Palestinians seeking entry into the United States who had been convicted by Israeli military courts of being members of illegal organizations, including the
Palestine Liberation Organization The Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO; ar, منظمة التحرير الفلسطينية, ') is a Palestinian nationalism, Palestinian nationalist political and militant organization founded in 1964 with the initial purpose of establ ...
(PLO).Alexandra U. Johnson, "Torture Part of Israel Policy?" ''The Ledger'', Lakeland, FL, March 16, 1979, 72:148 at 8A. (Reprinted from ''The Baltimore Sun'').
/ref> Individuals found to be terrorists would be barred by law from entering the United States. According to Johnson, all 29 individuals she interviewed gave similar accounts of being beaten or tortured by Israeli interrogators.


"Jerusalem 1500" controversy

In May 1978, Johnson's superiors at the consulate approved her draft of a cable to the Department of State describing the abusive interrogation methods that her interviewees claimed that Israeli authorities had used, including "beating with sticks and whips, prolonged immersion in cold water, hanging by the hands and sexual sadism." Classified "confidential," the cable was designated "Jerusalem 1500." It was followed in November by "Jerusalem 3239," classified "secret," in which Johnson concluded that physical mistreatment of Arab detainees in the West Bank was a "systematic practice" of Israeli authorities. Returning to Washington in January 1979, Johnson was denied promotion, which led to her automatic dismissal from the Foreign Service for not achieving promotion within her mandatory six-year "probationary" period as a junior officer. Johnson later told '' The New York Times'' that she believed her human rights reporting was what led to her dismissal, a charge that the Department of State denied.Bernard Gwertzman, "Ex-U.S. Aide Repeats Charges on Israel," ''The New York Times'', February 9, 1979 at A5. On February 7, 1979, '' The Washington Post'' published a story about Johnson's cables, indicating that they had influenced the Department of State's decision to describe Israeli abuse of Arab detainees as a "systematic practice" in its annual human rights country report on Israel sent to Congress a few days earlier.T.R. Reid and Edward Cody, "U.S. Reports Indicate Israeli Abuse of Palestinians," ''The Washington Post'', February 7, 1979, A1 at A18, col. 5. '' Time magazine'' later reported that Israel's security agency Shin Bet, with the approval of
Federal Bureau of Investigation The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is the domestic intelligence and security service of the United States and its principal federal law enforcement agency. Operating under the jurisdiction of the United States Department of Justice, t ...
attachés at the United States Embassy in Tel Aviv, had put Johnson under surveillance and wiretapped her telephone while she was still posted to Jerusalem."Middle East: A Time Bomb for Israel," ''Time'', February 19, 1979.
/ref> In a cable to the American Embassy in Tel Aviv and the American Consulate General in Jerusalem, the Department of State denied that American authorities had either received or consented to such a request. ''Time'' also reported Shin Bet's allegations that Johnson was involved with terrorists. Johnson was briefly engaged to be married to one of the alleged torture victims whom she interviewed for her reports. Explaining the relationship to ''The New York Times'', Johnson said that after the man received his visa and went to the United States, he wrote her a letter proposing marriage and that she accepted after visiting him in Chicago in 1978. Johnson said that she broke off the engagement after a few weeks and had not had any contact with her former fiancé since then. The Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C., "categorically denied" the allegations in Johnson's cables.


Post-controversy career and death

Following the controversy over her cables, Johnson became a
court reporter A court reporter, court stenographer, or shorthand reporter is a person whose occupation is to capture the live testimony in proceedings using a stenographic machine, thereby transforming the proceedings into an official certified transcript b ...
and professional genealogist. She died in Enid, Oklahoma, in 2002.


Monographs by Alexandra Uteev Johnson

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Notes and references

{{DEFAULTSORT:Johnson, Alexandra Uteev 1946 births 2002 deaths People from Sacramento, California People from Enid, Oklahoma University of California, Davis alumni University of California, Los Angeles alumni American diplomats Deaths from brain cancer in the United States Deaths from cancer in Oklahoma Neurological disease deaths in Oklahoma