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Ben Heine

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Mohammad Said Kalash, "Offering Reconciliation" exhibit (photo: Ilan Amihai)

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Punch and Judy/Pinchas and Jamila

Avi Katz

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David Grossman

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Eldrige Street shul

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Dove

Ben Heine

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Two birds

Hoda Jamal

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Israeli and Palestinian boys

from documentary, Promises

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Cat in the Hat

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Daylight through the Wall

Banksy: graffiti art on Separation Wall

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Maurice Sendak's Brundibar set

New Victory Theater (photo: Nan Melville/NYT)

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Daniel Barenboim, West-Eastern Divan Orchestra

Palestinian-Israeli musical ensemble (photo: Kerstin Joensson/AP)

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Great Day on Eldrige Street

N.Y.'s klezmer greats celebrate shul rededication (photo: Leo Sorel)

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Joint Appeal for Peace

(Avi Katz)

Joint Appeal for Peace

Ketubah, Ancona, Italy (1772)

(Jewish Theological Seminary library)

Ancona ketubah

Archive for February, 2011

Suleiman: Israel’s Pick for President

Monday, February 7th, 2011

It should help Egyptian interim strongman Omar Suleiman’s prospects of getting the nod to take over permanently for his mentor, Mubarak, after Egyptians read the glowing things Israeli defense ministry officials reported to U.S. diplomats in this Wikileaks cable, which resulted from Israeli consultations in Cairo in 2009.  Here the defense ministry’s Arab affairs staffer offers his portrait of the Egyptian leadership:

Hacham was full of praise for Soliman, however, and noted that a “hot line” set up between the MOD and Egyptian General Intelligence Service is now in daily use. Hacham said he sometimes speaks to Soliman’s deputy Mohammed Ibrahim several times a day. Hacham noted that the Israelis believe Soliman is likely to serve as at least an interim President if Mubarak dies or is incapacitated. (Note: We defer to Embassy Cairo for analysis of Egyptian succession scenarios, but there is no question that Israel is most comfortable with the prospect of Omar Soliman.)

When you hear Obama, Clinton, Merkel and Sarkozy call for Mubarak to remain and for Suleiman  to play a continuing role as leader of the country, keep in mind that this is also Israel’s preferred position.  And ask yourself whether those leaders, especially Obama, who is under constant pressure from the Israel lobby, follow this policy line because they believe it will good for Egypt, good for U.S. interests, or good for Israel.

And our friends in Egypt should know well that the new “father of the nation” is Israel’s choice.  That should certainly make him theirs as well.  This certainly also guarantees that Suleiman will be just the type of independent leader that Egypt needs in this period of transition, not beholden to any elites or powerful interests either domestic or foreign.

Kamm Agrees to Plea Bargain, Israel’s Assange Gets Nine-Year Sentence

Monday, February 7th, 2011

In a plea bargain that could serve as a precursor for what might be in store for Julian Assange should he ever be extradited to the U.S., Anat Kamm agreed to a plea deal with Israeli authorities by which she agrees to plead guilty to leaking top secret IDF documents to Haaretz journalist, Uri Blau.  Her maximum sentence could be 15 years under these charges, though the prosecution has agree to nine years.

Under the original charges of damaging national security, she could’ve received a life sentence.  Like Ameer Makhoul, who also received a nine-year sentence in a security case, Kamm clearly foresaw her own conviction and the possibility of spending decades behind bars.  The difference between justice in Israel and the U.S. is that Daniel Ellsberg fought and won against similar charges levelled against him by our government.  Kamm knew she hardly had a chance.  As I’ve written here, if you’re a security detainee your odds are 1000 to 1 (or better) for conviction.  Do you roll the dice with the conviction that you’ll be that 1 in 1,000?  Or do you play the odds and plead out?

Kamm leaked 2,000 army documents about targeted assassination operations that violated Israeli Supreme Court rulings.  She also revealed documents which pointed to the scorched earth policy followed by the IDF senior command during Operation Cast Lead.   She has said that she was motivated to do what she did because she suspected her commander, Yair Naveh, recently promoted to deputy IDF chief of staff, and other officers were guilty of war crimes.  There are numerous examples of IDF officers and politicians leaking top-secret documents to the Israeli media and facing no punishment.  In cases where IDF soldiers have done so penalties have amounted to being confined to base for 30 days.  In one case, someone received a two-year jail sentence.  So Kamm is being singled out for blowing the whistle on IDF top brass and their participation in potential war crimes.  That’s the sole reason why she now passes with her personal liberty.

This puts Kamm in the category of Julian Assange and Bradley Manning as a world-class whistleblower.  That she will spend nine years in an Israeli prison as a figure reviled by many Israelis as a traitor gives a clear indication of the skin-deep nature of Israeli democracy.  In the U.S., Daniel Ellsberg is a hero to many who champion civil liberties and freedom of the press.  In Israel, Ellsberg would’ve gone to prison.

yuval diskin

Yuval Diskin: Israel's secret police chief (7th Eye)

Anat Kamm deserves to be an Amnesty International prisoner of conscience.  And she deserves the support of all who support the principles of Ellsberg, Assange and Manning.  Israel and the Shabak deserve opprobrium for putting her behind bars for years.

Recently, in a panel discussion moderated by Israeli journalists, Yuval Diskin had this to say about Kamm, Uri Blau and the relationship between the media and the secret police:

“My organization supports press freedom and the public right to know.  The work the press does in a democratic country has existential importance and is no less important than the work done by the security service and the intelligence community.  But I expect that the press will respect the the work of the security services and act responsibly when dealing with material of this sort.”

Diskin revealed that one of the prime motivating factors in investigating Blau was because he and his editors displayed an actual top-secret IDF document in the story they published about the targeted assassinations.  He seemed to imply that this act crossed a red line.  Which accords with my own criticism of Haaretz editors at the time, since it’s widely understood that Shabak agents used the published images of the documents to trace them back to Kamm herself.

What doesn’t pass the smell test though is Diskin’s claim that pursuit of Blau was not an act of revenge.  Of course it was.  Blau is probably the best investigative reporter inside Israel.  One who consistently unearthed dirt that bloodied the noses of the IDF brass and secret police.  Getting Blau had to priority number 1 for someone like Diskin.  And Diskin’s words of warning at this press symposium were deliberately meant to lay down the law to the press and tell them they’d better be good little boys and girls or end up like Kamm and Blau.

What the Hell are They Worried About?

Sunday, February 6th, 2011
copts and muslims demonstrate in cairo

Egyptian Muslims and Copts parade through Tahrir Square together (Amel Pain/EPA)

Bibi Netanyahu is shreying about the Muslim Brotherhood in terms redolent of Al Qaeda.  Mubarak uses the Brotherhood and a combination of impending chaos and religious holy war as the reason he can’t relinquish power.  Obama seems to have drunk the Kool Aid as well.  So I want to know: what the hell are they worried about?  Look at this picture and explain to me, what the hell they’re all worried about.

NY Times report says that yesterday while Egyptian Muslims prayed in the Square, Copts stood guard protecting them.  And today it was the Copts turn to hold Mass while Muslims stood guard.

Look people, you can harbor fears of Al Qaeda on the Nile all you want, but don’t pretend it has anything to do with reality.  Of course, in the fervor of the moment many wonderful things happen that can later be undone.  But I think the spirit represented in this image will hold true if Mubarak, Suleiman, Obama, Clinton and Netanyahu just would get out of the way and let this thing happen the way it should.

Egypt is a nation in which religions have co-existed for thousands of years.  Why can’t they coexist with a change of government there?

Interestingly, we Jews were enslaved by a few Egyptian Pharaohs way back.  We won our freedom and went our separate ways.  But the Pharaohs remained and found others to enslave.  Now the Egyptian people themselves are enslaved and seek to break the yoke of a latter-day Pharoah.

Let the Egyptian people decide how to run their country.  No more backroom deals.

Obama, Suleiman: Selling Out the Revolution

Sunday, February 6th, 2011
suleimann meets with protesters

Suleiman meets with select group of opposition aiming at "consensus" favoring his elite retaining power (Soliman Oteifi/AP)

The accompanying photo reveals precisely what was wrong with Day 13 of the Egyptian Revolution.  There you see Suleiman sitting around an opulent Louis XIV-channeling table “negotiating” with his ostensible opponents, while outside the protests continue unabated and the demonstrators demand remain unmet.  Worst of all, Pres. Obama and his foreign policy brain trust say meetings like this are fine and dandy.  The U.S. has caved on the primary demand that Mubarak leave.  It’s willing to see the Egyptian élite stall, trying to let the air out of the tires of the street protests until they can resume power and get back to business as usual.

Suleiman, like Mubarak, is a survivor, a wily fellow fully capable of taking maximum advantage of an opening when it’s offered to him.  So he left the meeting pictured at left and trumpeted to Egypt and the world media that the group had arrived at a “consensus.”  Of course, the consensus was the minimum he thought he could get away with offering without causing all hell to break loose in the streets once again, which included:

…The promise to form a committee to recommend constitutional changes by early March. The other elements echoed pledges Mr. Mubarak had already made, including a limit on how many terms a president can serve.

In other words, Mubarak stays, the old order stays until the old order agrees to go (“never, how does never sound to you?”).

Frankly, I’m surprised the Muslim Brotherhood broke from its earlier refusal to negotiate till Mubarak left by participating in this meeting.  It would’ve prevented them having to quickly renounce the meeting and Suleiman’s deft skewering of the goals of the movement with his “consensus” announcement:

…Leaders of the protest movement, including both its youthful members and Brotherhood officials, immediately denounced Mr. Suleiman’s portrayal of the meeting as a political ploy designed to suggest that some of their ranks were collaborating.

As an American, the development that most distresses me is Obama’s cave to the status quo and Egypt’s elite:

The United States and leading European nations on Saturday threw their weight behind Egypt’s vice president, Omar Suleiman, backing his attempt to defuse a popular uprising without immediately removing President Hosni Mubarak from power.

American officials said Mr. Suleiman had promised them an “orderly transition” that would include constitutional reform and outreach to opposition groups.

This is stuff n’ nonsense.  Playing for time because you don’t have any better options.  You don’t trust someone like Suleiman to arrive at anything like what the demonstrators are demanding if you’re serious.  If you’re willing to be played, then you do what Obama’s doing.

Hillary Clinton echoed this nauseating retreat from Obama’s earlier steadfastness in demanding that Mubarak go:

“That takes some time,” Secretary of State Hilary Rodham Clinton said, speaking at a Munich security conference. “There are certain things that have to be done in order to prepare.”

In a separate interview, she sounded positively Polyannish:

Clinton said that she and Mr. Biden had held many conversations with Mr. Suleiman about steps toward democracy. “We hear that they are committed to this,” she said, “and when we press on concrete steps and timelines, we are given assurance that that will happen.”

And here she does a masterful job of ascribing the need for moderation and dithering (er, delay) to the Egyptians themselves, or at least some mythical Egyptian who believes the things she claims:

To explain the apparent American shift from urgent demands for change to endorsing plans for Mr. Mubarak to remain in place during a transition, Mrs. Clinton alluded to “a debate within Egypt itself, and not just in the government, but among the people of Egypt” over how to manage the timing of the transition, since the existing Egyptian Constitution would set an unrealistic deadline of two months for an election if Mr. Mubarak stepped down. That “doesn’t give anybody enough time,” she said. She has not addressed the Egyptian opposition’s suggestion for how to solve that problem: suspension of the Constitution for up to a year until a transitional unity government can organize a free election.

If the U.S. wants to sell out the demands for democracy of millions of Egyptians fine, then let ‘em do it.  But not in this fashion.  Not by dumping our own vacillation on Egyptians and blaming them for it.  The millions who’ve flooded Tahrir Square are ready for the future.  And they can handle it.  All that they ask is that America not sell them out and not deliver their birthright to their domestic enemies.

Mr. Obama and Ms. Clinton: what in anything below indicates that this man sees things as you do or will do any of the things that you’ve promised he would?

In an appearance on ABC News, Mr. Suleiman said little to suggest that he was ready to move Egypt toward democracy or that he even took its youth-led democracy movement seriously.

Insisting that a transition had already begun with his meeting with members of the opposition, he reiterated that Mr. Mubarak would stay in power. If he left, Mr. Suleiman argued, “other people who have their own agenda will make instability in our country.”

Brushing aside the secular character of the youth revolt shaking Egypt and the Arab world, Mr. Suleiman suggested conspiratorially that unspecified “other people” and “an Islamic current” were in fact pushing the young people forward. “It’s not their idea,” he said. “It comes from abroad.”

And when asked about progress toward democracy, he asserted that Egypt was not ready, and would not be until “the people here will have the culture of democracy.”

If Suleiman wins this round and puts the genie back in the bottle, several things will happen: Israel and Bibi will have won another round and put off any genuine Israeli-Arab peace for another few years or more; and the Egyptian Revolution will erupt again in a month or a year or a decade, but next time with much more severe results.  Justice denied wreaks a savage revenge when it finally takes hold of a society.  Either we will see the police and army engage in a bloodbath or we will see a frustrated people take its own revenge on its oppressors.

Barack Obama has thus far shown no ability to stay the course in any Middle Eastern foreign policy issue.  Why would he do so this time?  Why would he, or even could he compel the goals of the Revolution to be realized against the will of the wily survivors like Suleiman and his tycoon cronies?  He’s not willing to put himself or his office on the line for freedom in Egypt.  Especially not since doing so would fly in the face of the ostensible needs of Israel, at least as articulated by its current far-right government.

Israeli Settler MK to Huckabee: ‘We’re Connected to This Land No Less Than Your Indians’

Sunday, February 6th, 2011
mike huckabee at irving moskowitz yeshiva

Mike Huckabee addressing Irving Moskowitz's yeshiva in Arab-rein East Jerusalem (Gali Tibbon Getty/AFP)

Mike Huckabee and Israel’s radical settler movement are almost always fodder for a good laugh.  I thank Ofer Neiman for providing one in the form of an Arutz Sheva article, in which settler MK Nissim Zeev brags about his friendship with Mike Huckabee, who he brought to Israel and hosted last week.  Among the other things Huckabee did was tour and nod approvingly at the Judaization project in East Jerusalem’s Palestinian neighborhoods.

In this photo, he’s pictured addressing a settler yeshiva established with the lucre of Miami-based bingo magnate Irving Moskowitz.  Moskowitz is the very one who stole the Palestinian Shepherd Hotel and partially demolished it last week so he can move in some settler families.  I guess no one told Huckabee that this project flies directly in the face of current U.S. policy as does supporting settler thugs guilty of promoting violence and hooliganism against Palestinians and Jews alike.

But I reserve the biggest laugh for Zeev’s recounting of his discussions with his pal, Mike, who the reporter erroneously credits with being a U.S. senator:

I got together with him to pursue two issues: [international] recognition of Jewish refugees from Arab lands and recognition by the UN of Israel with the status of “indigenous.”  It’s unacceptable that after 2,000 years of exile, we are still characterized as “occupiers.”  Since 2007, there are peoples recognized by the UN as indigenous.  The U.S. also recognizes Indians as indigenous and if it won’t return to them their ancestral lands it will offer reparations.  We too require similar recognition.  Our connection to the land appears in the Bible and we are connected to this land no less than the Indians.

In fact, I’d suggest as a terrific photo-op that Mike bring together a settler chief and an Indian chief and they can both compare war stories.  Maybe the settlers can set up shop on a few reservations and teach tribal leaders who to expand their “settlements” by annexing land belonging to white folk, and force the U.S. government to recognize their land thefts.  I’m sure that’ll go over big in Washington.

Ya gotta hand it to Zeev though, he’s a real joker:

MK Zeev noted that Israel has many friends in the UN and Congress who have only to be asked to make the changes he’s proposing.  I visited Congress, where we have many friends, and many told me it was unfortunate that Israel didn’t make this demand [of Congress].

Zeev said that Huckabee promised to do everything in his power to bring this proposal before the UN…

Go ahead, Mike.  What’s stopping you?  You’re a U.S. senator, aren’t you?  Bring forward a ‘sense of the senate’ resolution recognizing Israeli Jews as indigenous.  Maybe one of the long-lost Indian tribes?  And while you’re at it let’s get Congress to allocate a few billions in reparation for Jews who suffered an “Arab Holocaust” and were expelled from their native lands.  A Jewish Nakba.  Of our very own.  Why should only Arabs get to have one?  Just doesn’t seem fair.  If they get to suffer, why not us as well?

Mike’s not above a little mirth as well.  Among the pithy statements he made while in the Holy Land preparing for Armageddon were that he believed in a Palestinian state, just not in Israel.  Which at first glance might appear to be a conventional endorsement of the two state solution…until you realize that Huckabee embraces the settler narrative that all of Greater Israel including Palestine is Israel.  So he’s in effect telling Palestinians and his own U.S. government to move Palestine somewhere like, say Uganda.  Where have we heard that one before?

Benny Gantz: Third IDF Chief of Staff Appointee in Last Week

Sunday, February 6th, 2011
benny gantz new idf chief of staff

Benny Gantz, third nominee to be IDF chief of staff in past week

Haaretz reported that over the weekend Bibi Netanyahu and Ehud Barak decided to appoint their third candidate to be IDF chief of staff.  He is Benny Gantz, who until now had played also-ran to Yoav Galant, the candidate originally offered the job to replace Gabi Ashkenazi, when his term ends next week.  Gantz is the third candidate for the job in the past week.  And what a week it’s been.  First, Galant’s candidacy was torpedoed when the government’s legal advisor (solicitor general) refused to represent Galant before the Supreme Court in a case brought by Yesh Gvul to disqualify him from assuming his promotion.  As payback for Galant’s role in evacuating Gush Katif settlers from Gaza, a Maariv journalist exposed a shady land deal by which the IDF senior officer had annexed state land to his own private property and then lied about it.

After Barak withdrew Galant’s name, they floated the possibility of appointing deputy chief of staff Yair Naveh to the top job.  But that option was shot down by those who noted there is no provision for an interim chief of staff and that Naveh’s name would have to be vetted by the Turkel Commission; and then the job would be his.  Scratch option number 2.

Which brings us to Benny Gantz.  While any senior IDF commander is bound to have dirty hands regarding commission of acts that would likely violated international law, Gantz’s views don’t conform to the typically politically-attuned profile of those angling for the top job.  Like, for example, Gabi Ashkenazi who appears to have engineered a hoax memo attempting to knock Galant out of the race.

Gantz was a senior northern commander responsible for preparations that led to the second Lebanon war.  As an infantry officer, Gantz advocated immediate mobilization of the reserves and a land campaign to stifle Hezbollah.  Dan Halutz along with Ehud Olmert, perhaps deluded into believing the air force could silence Hezbollah rockets on its own, rejected a ground war.  I thought the plan to turn the 2006 war into a massive campaign to occupy southern Lebanon with Israeli infantry was disastrous.  I thought the entire strategy behind the war was doomed to fail and perhaps it’s not surprising that an infantry commander would itch to get his chance to put his forces into action.  I realize it’s unrealistic to expect an army officer to oppose a war, but isn’t there a single officer who can see the disaster?

While it’s clear that many Israeli military commanders are excellent at dissembling and portraying false humility, if Gantz’s words here are sincere, then he’s a breath of fresh air in the midst of the all back-stabbing, feelings of self-entitlement, and careerism of his colleagues.  As the jockeying for position began a few months ago as to who would be named chief of staff, Gantz took an unusually serene view of the proceedings:

We’re talking about the security of the State and this trumps all our individual careers.  I’m here to serve the State and not for the State to serve me.  I did a lot and the satisfaction for me in what I did is great.  If these things happen, they’ll happen.  If not, then something else will happen [for me].

The Maariv profile also notes that his parents were central European Holocaust survivors who immigrated to Israel on the Exodus.

The pro-settler Maariv reporter who avenged Galant’s “betrayal” of Gush Katif by digging up the dirt that ended in his fall from the top perch apparently should’ve gone after Gantz as well.  The latter has had some specially harsh words against the settlers in 2005 who appealed to IDF officers to refuse to forcibly remove them:

The battle of the [Israeli] right against the IDF [in Gush Katif] is more dangerous than Hezbollah rockets.  What’s happened in the past few months in terms of the army’s ability to carry out the decisions of the government is more dangerous [to the State] than any rocket.  There are some among us who refuse to accept the authority of the State.  While the surface to surface missiles of Hezbollah and the Syrians worry me, what worries me much more is our sense of internal national cohesion [which the settlers threaten].

We must be very clear that there can be no other form of authority within the Land of Israel than the government regarding the operations of its army.  All other forms of rhetorical acrobatics [the arguments of settlers that soldiers should disobey orders] are totally unacceptable in my eyes.  Personal and human considerations must be removed from army operations.  At the fundamental level, we must not allow these things to interfere [with military orders].

But Gantz also has the capacity to be spectacularly wrong as well.  In the same 2005 article he tragically underestimated Hezbollah’s capacity and will to stir the pot in the north as they did several months later by raiding, kidnapping and killing several IDF soldiers in a bold operation that led to the second Lebanon war:

“They [Hezbollah] will do the minimum along the entire length of the norther border to justify their presence there.  They won’t endanger themselves with an escalation.  But with the stabilization of the internal situation [the Gaza evacuation] there is a possibility we will see different forms of operations in the north.”  In this, Gantz was referring to the disengagement which would lead to a a stabilization of other fronts as well.

Given that the IDF was caught flat-footed with the Hezbollah attack, Gantz’s words displayed the absolute unpreparedness of the Israeli military for what befelled them.  This in turn led to the abject failure of the military offensive against Hezbollah.  One wonders whether such an officer has what it takes to lead Israel through the thorny thickets Israel will face in the next four years of his term.  And given that he is the third candidate vetted for this job in the past week, it speaks volumes about the dysfunctionality of the Israel’s national army and the political leadership that chooses it.

One especially black mark haunts Gantz’s performance as military commander.  At the beginning of the first Intifada, a Druze Border Policeman, Madhat Yousef, died of blood loss after he was shot during at a riot at Joseph’s Tomb.  His family and others believe he was deliberately abandoned by the IDF in act that would run directly counter to the military doctrine calling for no man to be left behind.  Gantz had decided rather than to mount an IDF rescue effort that would endanger even more of his soldiers, that he would wait for a PA security unit to rescue the 12 Border Police who were besieged.  It took four hours before it arrived.  By then it was too late for Yousef.  Gantz was criticized severely at the time, but defended himself by saying his superiors prevented him from acting as he would’ve wished.  The dead soldier’s family says that then defense minister Shaul Mofaz told them that the prime minister at the time, Ehud Barak, worried that an IDF rescue operation might endanger the peace process.  Who’s to know the truth?  Yousef’s family is filing a motion for an injunction against his promotion with the Israeli Supreme Court.  So sit tight, there’s a very small chance we may yet have a fourth nominee in the coming week!

At any rate, let us hope that Gantz will bring the clarity of vision of the earlier passage I quoted of his above (and not the cluelessness of the latter) to his new job and stand firm against military adventures advocated by Israel’s political leadership like an attack on Iran.  Of course, given the circumstances we musn’t expect this, but we can hope for it.

Ashkenazi’s IDF Gravy Train

Saturday, February 5th, 2011

There are new developments in the case of IDF chief of staff, Gabi Askhenzai, who I revealed yesterday was under criminal investigation for his role in the hoax Galant memo.  Today, the chief government investigator in the case revealed (well, he didn’t exactly “reveal” this since there’s a gag order prohibiting Ashkenazi’s name being mentioned in the context of the case) that while the fraudulent memo provided the original impetus for the investigation, the criminal investigation concerns corrupt business dealings between the author of the memo, Lt. Col. Boaz Harpaz, and Lt. Gen. Ashkenazi.  During the rule of Ariel Sharon, Ashkenazi was the director general of the defense ministry and allegedly secured Harpaz arms dealing licenses which also benefited Ashkenazi’s son.  Ronen Bergman in this interview (1:14 ff.) goes so far as to say that Harpaz was Askhenazi’s “spy” while the former served in Ehud Barak’s office.

This is why, when Barak refused to extend the current chief’s term, he noted the reason was “matters of ethics.”  This sure sounds like it could be the reason.  It also explains why Harpaz might be so indebeted to Ashkenazi that the military intelligence officer might forge a memo at the behest of his ex-go-to guy.  Further, investigators have allegedly uncovered hundreds of text messages between Harpaz and Ashkenazi’s wife’s cell phone.  Which would indicate that Harpaz did not act alone, but in conspiracy with Ashkenazi.  If this is proven to be true, one wonders at how a chief of staff can have the sheer brazenness to believe he can act in such a way without getting caught.  Don’t these guys do even the most basic internal deliberation to determine whether whatever benefit they might gain from such shenanigans is worth the price they would pay if exposed???

Lest you think that such corrupt dealings are confined to this one chief of staff, the position is known as a means to enrich its holder.  Barak, himself a former chief of staff, created Ehud Barak Ltd. after his 2001 election defeat.  It earned nearly $10-million over a four and a half year period through exploitation of the web of contacts he’d made in the IDF and as prime minister.  Uri Blau delves into precisely the same types of wheeling and dealing on Ashkenazi’s part before he became director general.  The current chief of staff also violated government protocols by refusing to acknowledge the business dealings of his son which might cause a conflict of interest when he assumed his role in the defense ministry.  However, the notion that another wheeler-dealer like Barak should find Ashkenazi ethically-challenged is a bit far-fetched.  It’s a bit of the pot calling the kettle…

Finally, in a particularly notorious instance, then chief of staff Dan Halutz, after he discovered the Lebanon war would break out imminently, spent more time in those few hours contacting his stock broker than he did on prosecuting the war.

IDF Chief of Staff Ashkenazi Faces Criminal Investigation over Forged Memo

Friday, February 4th, 2011
ashkenazi with binoculars

IDF chief of staff Ashkenazi: member of the gang that couldn't see straight

The campaign over who will be the next IDF chief of staff, already odd and dysfunctional, has taken a new turn for the bizarre.  Everyone who reaches out for this rose seems to get pricked.

Several months ago, defense minister Barak began considering who would become the next chief of staff.  The two top candidates were Yoav Galant, who eventually won the job only to be thrown to the winds this week by Bibi and Barak, when it was determined that he “stole” public lands and annexed them to his private property and lied about it.  The other candidate was Benny Gantz, who ended up losing out in the competition.  A third candidate was the sitting chief of staff, Gabi Ashkenazi, who hoped Barak would extend his term.  The only problem: Barak hates Ashkenazi.  Not sure why, but this is common knowledge.

Before Barak designated Galant as his choice, a memo was released ostensibly written by Maj. Gen. Galant outlining a PR campaign to promote his candidacy and derail that of Benny Gantz.  Except that it turned out that Galant didn’t write the memo.  Instead, it was written and leaked by an Ashkenazi confidant, Lt. Col. Boaz Harpaz.  Now why would an Ashkenazi confidant attempt to torpedo the candidacy of Galant when his man, the current chief of staff, was about to step down anyway?  Did Ashkenazi favor Gantz for the job and so wish to help him?  Maybe.

But I’ve come up with a new theory bolstered by an explosive revelation from the Israeli news media today.  I’m guessing that Ashkenazi’s boy did this not in order to help Gantz, but in order to help Ashkenazi himself, who continued to harbor hopes that Barak might extend his own term.  Harpaz figured that a cat fight between Galant and Gantz would cancel each of them out and leave Ashkenazi smelling like a rose and looking like a champion.  Except it didn’t turn out that way.

The news today reveals that the government’s legal advisor has asked the Shabak to begin a criminal investigation into the Harpaz memo.  The target of the investigation is under gag order, but a veteran Israeli political insider informs me that it is none other than Ashkenazi himself.  Israeli media are unable to report Ashkenazi’s name in connection with the investigation.  But I hope that I’ll give them a dose of courage by doing so here.

I’m tellin’ you this is becoming like comic opera.  You have a sitting chief of staff under criminal investigation.  You have a defense minister whose every nominee to assume the job self-destructs practically the moment he accepts it.  I should add, on that note, that Barak had planned to promote his newly designated deputy chief of staff, Yair Naveh, to take the top job once Galant was knocked out of the running.  But there is a requirement that every chief of staff must be vetted by a special commission headed by former Justice Yaakov Turkel (yes, that Turkel).  Naveh hasn’t been vetted.  So technically he can’t assume the job until he is.  Barak had assumed he could appoint Naveh interim chief of staff on a temporary basis without going through this formality.  But yesterday Knesset members protested against this circumvention of process.  That’s when competing rumors began suggesting that Ashkenazi’s term might be extended as a face-saving way out of the mess.

I believe that the legal advisor, on hearing the proposal to extend Ashkenazi’s term and realizing it might be a credible proposal, decided he had to act on information he may have already possessed.  My guess is that Yehuda Weinstein, the advisor, may’ve known all along about Ashkenazi’s direct involvement in the fraudulent memo, but decided that the taint of charging a sitting chief of staff with a serious crime would be too much for the nation and the army to bear.  Since Ashkenazi appeared to be stepping down anyway, Weinstein might’ve decided that doing nothing would be the better course.  But now that his name is again being floated, if he allowed Ashkenazi’s term to be extended and then the allegations came out, it would be even more devastating.

At any rate, the investigation will surely knock Ashkenazi out of the running and may send Barak and Bibi back to the Turkel Commission to formally vet Naveh’s name and get its approval.  Presumably, this will take time and means that the position of chief of staff will be held by someone suspected of a major crime.  Not to mention that the person likely to take his place, Yair Naveh, has his own set of skeletons in his closet as I’ve reported here extensively.

What I wrote on this subject last August seems, if anything, even more pertinent today.  As you read this think of the challenges Israel faces with the upheaval in Egypt, and then wonder whether the IDF is up to the task of fulfilling the mission assigned to it by the nation:

What I want to know is how in hell is the IDF supposed to take on all these critical responsibilities to protect Israeli security when their generals seem more like the gang that couldn’t shoot straight??

…I think all of this proves that the IDF is no longer the invincible war machine it once appeared to be lo these many years ago.  It has instead been transformed into an army of Occupation commanded by generals who treat their personal stock portfolios as more important than commanding troops in the field; and by generals for whom personal advancement has long ago replaced any devotion to nation or principle.  Woe unto a nation that relies on such mediocrity to defend itself from harm…

Ashkenazi engages in criminal schemes to extend his reign.  Galant steals government land.  Naveh kills unarmed Palestinian militants in contravention of Supreme Court rulings, which the latter ignores in giving him the Good Housekeeping seal of approval to be deputy chief of staff.  This is more like opera buffa than running the affairs of state.

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