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  • Arcadi's Right Hand

    ARCADI'S RIGHT HAND
    By Naama Lanski

    Ha'aretz, Israel
    June 15 2007

    On the edges of Arcadi Gaydamak's tent city last summer, far from the
    war refugees fleeing the Hezbollah rockets, the stacks of mattresses
    and the metal trays of vegetables and chicken, a VIP zone was created,
    where conditions were rather different. The sands of Nitzanim beach
    were covered with a carpet of real grass and wooden flooring, on which
    were installed - in the shade created by snow-white sheets of canvas -
    padded swings and ultra-comfortable white sofas. Against a backdrop of
    calming music, waitresses served frozen tropical fruits and alcoholic
    drinks of every imaginable kind to the privileged guests. On the
    fringes of this zone, fully equipped offices were built along with
    air-conditioned cabins including showers or baths.

    The man in charge of the VIP zone was Yossi Milstein, Gaydamak's
    personal assistant. It was he who decided who would sit on plastic
    chairs with the masses, with a can of Coke for refreshment, and who
    would be invited to sink into the huge pastel-colored cushions and sip
    watermelon-flavored Bacardi Breezers with the likes of politicians
    and businessmen such as Avigdor Lieberman and Yigal Amedi. Milstein
    plucked out the important media crews that had come from all over
    the world to cover the philanthropic project - notably the Russians
    and also the French - whom he escorted personally to ensure that they
    were pampered to the hilt.

    The tent city was not just the success story of Arcadi Gaydamak,
    the billionaire from Russia who has received the mass adoration
    for which he thirsted: It was also a coup for Milstein, the driving
    force behind the project, and it ensured his status as Gaydamak's
    most confidential confidant.

    For the past two years, Yossi Milstein, 29, has been a pivotal player
    in the Gaydamak "festival" that has been running nonstop in Israel.

    For two years he has been whispering into the oligarch's ear,
    filtering out applicants who want to see him, managing his entire
    media alignment, drawing up the guest lists for Gaydamak's closed
    events and mediating the picture of Israeli reality to the famed
    new-old immigrant. When Gaydamak steps out of his Hummer, Milstein is
    always there at his side, carving a path out for him and scrupulously
    examining every person who penetrates the space. On the way to
    his boss' police interrogations Milstein is there to repulse the
    photographers. During festive events he opens the door for him;
    at Teddy Stadium, home of the Beitar Jerusalem soccer team which
    Gaydamak owns, he makes sure the billionaire gets his cup of tea at
    the preferred temperature.

    In Gaydamak's business dealings in Israel, Milstein plays a mediation
    and logistics role. Thus, for example, he took an active part in
    Gaydamak's purchase of the controlling interest in the non-kosher
    Tiv Taam food chain for some $100 million last week, together with
    his good friend Roni Mana.

    Gaydamak and Milstein usually say that their lives became intertwined
    two years ago, when Milstein was working as a researcher for the
    Channel 10 news department. He took leave without pay and joined
    Gaydamak on a private flight to Angola. The declared aim was to make
    a film about the Jewish community in Russia, one episode of which was
    to focus on Gaydamak's various activities. By the time Milstein landed
    back in Israel, he had become the spokesman and personal assistant
    of his generous host.

    Milstein lives well these days. His home is a 10-room villa with
    four porches in the area of Yehuda Hamaccabi Street in Tel Aviv. He
    has a chauffeur, wears a Franck Muller watch, buys his elegant suits
    in Gaydamak's favorite shops in Moscow, and smokes between four and
    five packs of Marlboro Reds a day.

    Arcadi Gaydamak is considered one of the most enigmatic figures on the
    Israeli public scene, and is also known as a tough, uncompromising
    employer. Within less than two years he went through a series of
    media advisers and lawyers - not to mention six coaches of the Beitar
    Jerusalem team. Milstein survived and even tightened his embrace.

    Just like the big boss, Milstein's past, too, is shrouded in mystery.

    When he met Gaydamak he had little experience. Along the way he
    scattered among his friends and colleagues diverse and contradictory
    details about his pre-Gaydamak life. Milstein, some of them say,
    related that he was the official representative of the Kremlin in
    Israel and had close ties to billionaire Mikhail Chernoy, as well
    as to KGB operatives. On different occasions he said he had been
    a naval commando, a combat pilot and even a member of the Shin Bet
    security service.

    "Yossi created an aura of secrecy and connections around himself," says
    a journalist who worked with him, adding, "He is a person who blurs
    his life story, and maybe that is why he is so suitable for Gaydamak."

    Yossi Milstein was born in the former Soviet Union as Peter Karpatian,
    the sole child of a non-Jewish father of Armenian origin and a
    Jewish mother. At the age of 12 he moved to Israel with his mother;
    his father remained in Russia and all contact with him was lost. He
    spent his adolescence in Ma'aleh Adumim, the West Bank town to the
    east of Jerusalem, on the way to the Dead Sea. During this period he
    changed his name. The adjustment of Milstein and his mother to life
    in Israel was facilitated by the Chabad community in Ma'aleh Adumim,
    which was then as now headed by Rabbi Avraham Shamla.

    "Yossi had his bar mitzvah at Chabad House," Shamla relates. "Because
    the family had economic troubles and there was no father, I adopted
    him into my family. Most of the time Yossi ate, slept and spent his
    time in my home, like one of my children."

    He attended the Ma'aleh Adumim regional high school, apart from a
    brief period when he was at the Rubin Academy of Music in Jerusalem,
    where his instrument was the piano. To make ends meet, Milstein
    cleaned houses and worked as a waiter in the Knesset cafeteria. "It
    was at this time that he developed big dreams," Rabbi Shamla recalls.

    "He was always going on about how he dreamed of becoming rich and
    powerful, and serving the country. He said he absolutely had to
    achieve that."

    A Knesset employee from that period recalls that when he wasn't
    serving drinks, Milstein behaved as though he were a minister's
    bodyguard. Whenever he got the chance he would put on a bodyguard's
    jacket, hold something that resembled an earphone next to his ear,
    put on sunglasses and walk around among the guards as though he were
    one of them, until they shooed him away.

    After his military service, in an antiaircraft unit, he married a
    woman named Keren, who worked at the checkout counter of a Jerusalem
    supermarket, and became a father at the age of 22. Milstein worked
    at whatever job came his way: as manager of a clothing store of the
    "everything for NIS 29.99" type in the center of Jerusalem; as a
    salesman for Golden Lines, a communications company; and for Partner,
    the cellular phone carrier. His dreams of wealth and power were far
    from being realized.

    Attorney Oded Hacohen recalls that Milstein came to his office one
    evening in an effort to persuade him to switch to Partner. "I told him
    I couldn't switch phone companies because I had close to 700 numbers
    stored in the memory. He said that was no problem and the next morning
    I found out that he had sat up the whole night copying the numbers from
    the old phone into the new one for me and for the dozens of employees
    of the firm. I had a broken leg at the time, so I stood on one leg
    and saluted him. The man tried to make a living with all his might."

    Milstein's efforts weren't always so successful. For example, he set up
    a theatrical agency called Mabat Ra'anan and then contacted the Bolshoi
    Theater in Russia and offered to represent them in Israel, together
    with attorney Hacohen. At the time, two Israeli theatrical agents,
    Aryeh Vikhansky and Motti Strokovsky, were independently planning
    to bring Bolshoi artists to Israel and had reserved the country's
    largest halls for the performances. The forthcoming arrival of the
    famed dancers was widely covered in the press. Then, one morning,
    after having paid for all the permits the Bolshoi had requested,
    the two agents received a phone call from Milstein, who introduced
    himself as "the owner of the exclusive rights to bring the Bolshoi
    to Israel" and told them that the contract they had was invalid. In
    return for the performances, Milstein and Hacohen demanded - with
    the Bolshoi's authorization - another $100,000.

    "We realized that we had been set up," Strokowsky says, "but we had
    no choice other than to agree to the demand, because the performances
    were one week away. I transferred NIS 141,000 to them as an advance
    payment, without getting a receipt, and only then Milstein gave the
    Bolshoi the go-ahead to release the artists for the performances in
    Israel, which were already a lost cause, because the sale of tickets
    had been halted in the middle. Milstein issued statements to the media
    that our performances were fake and he made similar allegations to
    the ticketing agencies."

    According to official documents of the Bolshoi Theater, Milstein did
    not transfer the money he had received for the theater, but instead
    kept it for himself. Strokowsky and Vikhansky waited until the end of
    the performances in Israel and then filed a lawsuit against Milstein,
    Hacohen and the Bolshoi Theater. According to the suit, the whole
    story was "a conspiracy the defendants concocted among themselves to
    extract money that was not due them, while committing acts bordering
    on extortion."

    In their defense statement, Milstein and Hacohen (who acted as
    Milstein's lawyer) stated that the two impresarios had brought to
    Israel "artists who used the name 'Bolshoi' without permission."

    Because Milstein and his lawyer had been empowered by the Bolshoi
    to prevent the unauthorized use of its name, they stated, they had
    launched legal proceedings against Strokovsky and Vikhansky. To
    avoid the need for court hearings, they explained, they reached an
    arrangement under which the impresarios would admit to their mistake,
    write a letter of apology and agree to pay compensation, part of
    which had already been paid. The lawsuit filed by the impresarios,
    Milstein and Hacohen stated, was an attempt to evade payment of the
    rest of the amount they owed.

    In addition, Milstein and his lawyer filed a countersuit in order to
    collect the rest of the money that they said had been promised them.

    In the absence of a defense statement by the Bolshoi, the Jerusalem
    Magistrate's Court ordered the theater to compensate Strokowsky and
    Vikhansky in the amount of NIS 441,000. Vikhansky says that as part
    of a compromise struck between the sides, "the Bolshoi paid us more
    than $60,000 and offered to put on a performance in Israel free of
    charge. They said that Milstein had to pay."

    Says Hacohen in response: "The money was transferred to Yossi Milstein
    and I never received a communication from the Bolshoi stating that
    the money had not been received. I acted on my client's behalf, and
    after the incident the Bolshoi hosted us cordially in Moscow. The
    suit against me was thrown out."

    Milstein's agency was involved in four additional lawsuits. Its account
    was restricted by the Bank of Israel for a year and its activity was
    eventually stopped, with 14 claims against Milstein and his company
    being transferred to the bailiff's office, as well as court orders
    barring him from leaving the country. In addition to his financial
    woes, Milstein was diagnosed with cancer at this time. He underwent
    treatment, and when his condition permitted it, he was employed briefly
    as a stockman by the Israel Antiquities Authority, where his mother
    worked. In the meantime, he had divorced and remarried a woman named
    Marina, 23.

    Milstein reached the conclusion that his illness derived from his army
    service near installations that emitted radiation. In an interview
    to the mass-circulation newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth, he asserted that
    he was going to sue the Defense Ministry.

    "For long months we were exposed to powerful radiation," he told the
    reporter. "I and other soldiers in the unit alerted the responsible
    elements, including commanders, and we often expressed concern that
    our health was being damaged due to exposure to such large doses of
    radar radiation. But nothing was done on the ground to protect me
    and my buddies."

    This week, four years after that interview, a spokesman for the
    Defense Ministry stated: "Mr. Milstein submitted a claim to the
    Defense Ministry for his rights to be recognized under the Disabled
    Persons Law in 2003, and his file was sent to a medical expert
    for examination. Mr. Milstein was sent an invitation to appear
    for a medical examination, but the invitation was returned to the
    rehabilitation department by the post office. After his address was
    updated, three invitations for medical examinations were sent to him,
    but he did not appear for them and did not respond to invitations
    that were sent by registered mail. Accordingly, about a year and a
    half ago, the rehabilitation department informed Mr. Milstein that
    because he did not respond to the invitations, it was decided to stop
    the handling of his suit and close the file."

    The ministry added: "Measurements for electromagnetic radiation
    were carried out in the unit in which the soldier served in 1997,
    1998 and 2000. No deviations from the accepted standards were found
    in the system's regular modes of operation. It is important to note
    that there is no proven information in the medical literature linking
    electromagnetic radiation to fatal diseases of any kind. According
    to the World Health Organization, this form of radiation does not
    cause fatal changes."

    Milstein received an illness allowance for a few years from the
    National Insurance Institute. In the meantime, he found a new direction
    for his life at Koteret, a journalism school. He enrolled in the
    track for students without an academic degree, but attended classes
    infrequently. On one occasion, he approached one of the teachers and
    asked to speak to him in private about helping him get a position at
    Army Radio.

    "He told me a heartrending story," the teacher recalls, "that he
    was ill with cancer and had been in the Naval Commandos, that he was
    actually the last commando to fall ill from training in the Kishon
    [a contaminated river where naval personnel trained, many of whom
    afterward contracted cancer]. He said it wasn't clear how many weeks
    he had left to live, and he described me as his last chance for his
    media career, which he was going to fight for with his last breath. I
    almost broke into tears, and that doesn't happen to me often.

    "I called Avi Benayahu, the commander of Army Radio, and recommended
    that he check out the illness story ... In any event, he would have
    had to get security clearance at the station. I also remember asking
    Milstein where his Russian accent was from, and he said something
    about his father having been a Mossad [espionage agency] man in Nativ"
    - referring to the formerly clandestine unit that dealt with Eastern
    European Jewry.

    Zvika Goldberg, the chief of Army Radio's news department at the time,
    also received a phone call from a young man he didn't know. The young
    man, Milstein, presented himself as the last of the cancer victims
    of the Naval Commandos and added that he had also been seconded to
    an air force base. The bottom line of the conversation was that no
    physician had given him more than a year to live, and that because
    he assumed that the physicians were right, he had to try to realize
    his dreams. His dream, he said, was to work in the media, with the
    emphasis on the radio, more specifically Army Radio.

    Milstein did not want credit and did not want money; his only wish
    was to be at the station and do whatever he was told. Goldberg was
    touched by the story and invited Milstein for a meeting. At the time,
    Army Radio was looking for someone to assist the veteran broadcaster
    and actor Alex Ansky with his early-morning program, but Goldberg
    did not promise Milstein anything, saying he would get back to him
    after checking a few details.

    The first check was carried out with Ansky, who expressed an interest
    in having a volunteer join his program, Goldberg then set in motion a
    check via a security agency to ensure that Milstein was telling the
    truth. While waiting for a reply to his official request, Ansky got
    a call from Avi Benayahu, the station's chief. Benayahu related that
    MK Danny Yatom (Labor) had called him to say he head heard that an
    official check of Milstein was underway. Yatom explained to Benayahu
    that this was unnecessary: Yatom said he knew Milstein and asked that
    Benayahu consider accepting him. That was the end of the matter and
    Milstein joined the station.

    Goldberg confirmed this week: "I turned to the defense establishment
    to get confirmation that the man was telling a true story. I stopped
    the check after Benayahu informed me that Danny Yatom had told him
    the story was true."

    Coincidence or not, Yatom, a former Mossad chief who at the end of
    the 1990s was Gaydamak's partner in a defense company, is the person
    who got Milstein into Army Radio. As the head of the Knesset lobby
    for soldiers, Yatom became acquainted with Milstein's story, this
    time in connection with the unit in which he actually served.

    "After the media reports, I raised the subject in the Knesset and
    it was referred to the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee," Yatom
    said this week. "According to the information we received, Milstein's
    allegation was incorrect as far as the Israel Defense Forces was
    concerned, and according to a statistical examination there was
    no higher incidence of illness in those units. Milstein afterward
    approached me through one of my assistants. We met. I always respond
    when people seek me out. He told me he had served in an antiaircraft
    unit and was very sick. When I asked him how I could help, he said
    he was being treated well, that he was in contact with the Defense
    Ministry concerning a suit, and that he had only one request:
    to become part of Army Radio. That seemed reasonable ... Who knew
    how many years he had left to live? I approached the bureau of the
    defense minister and the Army Radio commander and, to my delight,
    later received a report that he had been found qualified."

    Sources close to Milstein deny that he ever presented himself as a
    veteran of the Naval Commando unit, and say this story was cooked up
    by people trying to settle personal accounts with Milstein.

    Milstein worked as a volunteer at Army Radio for a year in a production
    role. He arrived at the station at 4 or 5 A.M. almost every day. In the
    meantime, Ansky's staff had begun to ask questions about information
    Ansky had obtained concerning Russia and its oligarchs.

    "We felt that he was with us in order to make contacts and get ahead,"
    staff members say. "This is a place from which you can branch out:
    It allows you to be in contact with famous and important Israeli
    public figures."

    Ansky himself was fond of Milstein and tried to help him realize
    another dream: working in television. He recommended Milstein to
    personnel from Channel 10. Finally, Shilo De-Beer, then the head of
    the Channel 10 news department and now editor-in-chief of Yedioth
    Ahronoth, hired him as a researcher after interviewing him and
    became his patron at the station. Milstein disappeared from Army
    Radio without saying good-bye.

    Milstein flourished in his new job. He visited Moscow frequently. In
    the office, he walked around with an anti-bugging device conspicuously
    attached to his mobile phone. "He was dramatically close to Chernoy,"
    says a member of the Channel 10 news department.

    "He said 'Misha is my man.'"

    Milstein continues to admire Chernoy and not long ago was heard to say,
    "In terms of cash money, Chernoy is richer than Bill Gates, and all
    he has to do is ask and Roman Abramovich [the Russian tycoon] will
    get down on all fours and bark like a dog."

    Concurrently, Milstein took a deep interest in investigations being
    conducted by the Police National Unit for Serious and International
    Crimes (NUSIC) and was involved in critical research about the head
    of the Police Investigations Department at the time, Moshe Mizrahi.

    His colleagues say that his aim was to hook up with as many oligarchs
    as possible and accumulate power in this sphere, which was then just
    beginning to develop in Israel.

    "At some point I felt that his tremendous, disproportionate efforts
    went beyond journalism," laughs a reporter who worked with him. "I
    had the feeling that Milstein was looking for a job."

    For his part, Milstein often showed that he had connections in the
    Russian world - in the Kremlin, among media personnel - and also with
    private investigators. His achievements were undeniable. He helped
    obtain an interview with the newly elected president of Ukraine,
    Viktor Yushchenko, which was a source of pride for Channel 10.

    Milstein also helped set up an interview with Russian President
    Vladimir Putin, who gives few interviews.

    Gilad Adin, the interviewer in both cases and now the CEO of the
    Channel 10 News Company, has high regard for Milstein: "I met a young,
    highly motivated young guy, who despite his serious illness came to
    work between treatments and gave his soul for a minimum wage.

    He came across as very achievement-oriented. I set him difficult
    tasks and in the end he got results."

    Another of Milstein's achievements involved an expose of the Eilat
    Ashkelon Pipeline Company (EAPC). Milstein sent a photographer to
    document the company's operations with a hidden camera, and helped
    put together an impressive report. As part of the preparations for
    it, he met with attorney Amos Maimon, who represented a group that
    was interested in becoming involved in the company's activities.

    According to Maimon, even after the report was broadcast Milstein
    met with him again, and asked about the progress being made with
    regard to buying and selling the pipeline. The stated reason for
    the meeting was journalistic, but Maimon says that Milstein tried
    to find out details for oligarchic interests and claimed he could
    "arrange an investor from among the oligarchs for the deal. I told
    him at the same time that there was no need for that, and we put the
    subject aside. I can't contribute anything about the purchase."

    Maimon did not go ahead with the EAPC deal, but he and Milstein forged
    good relations. According to Milstein confidants, Maimon sought his
    services as a PR man. It was just then that Milstein flew to Angola
    with Gaydamak. Apparently on this trip, it was decided that Milstein
    would help make the oligarch a sympathetic figure, who would get
    wide media coverage. Milstein then left Channel 10 and was given
    a room in Maimon's offices, from where he worked for Gaydamak as
    well. Maimon, whether as a friend or as a buyer of media services,
    helped Milstein cover his steep debts, which then totaled more than
    NIS 200,000. Afterward, Gaydamak hired Maimon to defend him in a suit
    filed against him for NIS 98 million by businessman Yosef Troim, who
    claimed that Gaydamak had purchased a factory from him Kazakhstan,
    but had not paid for it.

    Gaydamak continued to avail himself of Maimon's services, and Maimon
    is now demanding that Milstein repay his debt, which according to
    Maimon totals $350,000, "including lawyer's fees."

    Haaretz correspondent Yossi Melman relates that two years ago, after
    he published a magazine piece about Gaydamak, "when no one here
    knew how to pronounce his name, Yossi Milstein called me and asked
    enthusiastically how he could get to Gaydamak, because he wanted to
    prepare an investigative report about him for Channel 10. Gaydamak was
    very accessible at that time; all you needed was his phone number. I
    told him a little about the man and I recommended to Gaydamak that
    he talk to him. A few weeks later I already heard that Yossi Milstein
    was responding to the media in Gaydamak's name."

    Yossi Milstein is now involved in all of Gaydamak's business affairs,
    even in soccer, which he once described, perhaps in the spirit of
    Prof. Yeshayahu Leibowitz, as "22 retards chasing a ball." As part of
    the dealings with the Beitar team, Milstein is in almost daily touch
    with "la famiglia" - a small group of fans, who have frequently been
    involved in violent altercations and disruptions of order. In an
    effort to forge a dialogue with them and bring them under control,
    Milstein has agreed to underwrite transportation and other things at
    Gaydamak's expense. In return, they promise to behave at home games
    and also carry out Milstein's instructions: during television coverage
    of games, or when Gaydamak shows up, the group shouts slogans of the
    "Gaydamak is king" type.

    It seems that one of Milstein's major accomplishments in his work,
    together with his organizational ability and the ongoing effort to
    polish his billionaire boss' image, is his sheer ability to survive
    in the job.

    "Gaydamak's behavior does not appear to be based on a systematic
    strategic plan," says a person who worked with him for a short time.

    "There is a great deal of impulsiveness and emotionality, quick
    decisions, caprices. Very special personal abilities are needed to
    work in conditions like these. It is not easy to be close to Gaydamak
    - he is a lone wolf and doesn't engage in small talk. He is usually
    cold and correct. His mentality is 180 degrees different from the
    Israeli mentality. From this point of view, the fact that Milstein
    is originally from Russia and speaks the language certainly helps."

    >From master-servant relations, the ties between Milstein and Gaydamak
    have grown into a more complex stage, in which Gaydamak listens to
    Milstein's advice and tends to rely on him. Businessman Roni Mana,
    who has been the middleman in all of Gaydamak's recent business
    transactions, positively gushes about Milstein.

    "He loves Arcadi, is loyal to him and will never do anything to hurt
    him," Mana says. "Yossi is very talented, smart, sharp, totally
    credible. He has an absolute command of the material and will not
    let Arcadi make mistakes. Arcadi, for his part, listens to him."

    What was his part in the recent transactions?

    Mana: "I made him offers and he presented the one he found acceptable
    to Gaydamak. Everything is done through him and with his endorsement.

    Yossi recognizes the potential."

    How do you explain the symbiosis between them?

    "I have never seen loyalty such as Yossi has toward Arcadi. You know
    what - I only wish for my friend Bibi [Benjamin] Netanyahu to have
    a person like Yossi Milstein at his side."

    Yossi Milstein declined to be interviewed or to respond to this
    article. W Uri Blau and Moshe Boker helped in the preparation of
    this article.

    http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/8712 37.html
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