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It is an adaptation of the non-fiction book The Angel: The Egyptian Spy Who Saved Israel written by Uri Bar-Joseph. It is a fictional account of Ashraf Marwan, a high-ranking Egyptian official who became a double agent for both countries and helped achieve peace between the two.
Mohammed Asraf Abu al-Wafa-Marwan, [1] known as Ashraf Marwan (Arabic: أشرف مروان 2 February 1944 – 27 June 2007), was an Egyptian official who worked as a spy for the Israeli Mossad. From 1969 on, Marwan worked at the Presidential Office, first under Gamal Abdel Nasser and then as a close aide to his successor, Anwar Sadat .
The Angel (2018) – Egyptian-Israeli-British spy thriller film based on Ashraf Marwan, a high-ranking Egyptian official who became a double agent for both countries and helped achieve peace between the two [18]
In 2004, former Mossad Director-General Zvi Zamir accused Zeira of leaking the identity of Ashraf Marwan, an Egyptian billionaire who served as a Mossad informant. [4] The State Prosecutor's Office opened a criminal investigation, which proved inconclusive and was closed in 2012.
[19] [20] Following his removal from office in 1971 Ashraf Marwan who was the son-in-law of Nasser and an intelligence officer working under Sharaf, was given the task of coordinating the intelligence affairs. [20] As of 2011 Sharaf was part of the Egyptian Committee at the Afro-Asian Peoples' Solidarity Organization. [21]
CBS News producer Marwan al-Ghoul, left, speaks with Palestinian women and children displaced from their homes in the northern part of the territory at a tent camp in the south. / Credit: CBS News
Prominent Egyptian director Marwan Hamed, best known internationally for groundbreaking epic “The Yacoubian Building,” more recently shot “El Set,” a biopic of Egyptian icon Umm Kulthum ...
A Question of Loyalty: Ashraf Marwan and Israel’s Intelligence Fiasco in the Yom Kippur War, Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 30, 5 2014, pp. 667–685; Uri Bar-Joseph, Rose McDermott, Pearl Harbor and Midway: The Decisive Influence of Two Men on the Outcomes, Intelligence and National Security 2016, Vol 31, pp. 949–962