Israel's Netanyahu dismisses his defense minister as wars rage. Protests
erupt across country
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[November 06, 2024]
By JOSEF FEDERMAN
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday
dismissed his popular defense minister, Yoav Gallant, in a surprise
announcement that came as the country is embroiled in wars on multiple
fronts across the region. The move sparked protests across the country,
including a mass gathering that paralyzed central Tel Aviv.
Netanyahu and Gallant have repeatedly been at odds over the war in Gaza.
But Netanyahu had avoided firing his rival before taking the step as the
world's attention was focused on the U.S. presidential election.
Netanyahu cited “significant gaps” and a “crisis of trust" in his
Tuesday evening announcement as he replaced Gallant with a longtime
loyalist.
“In the midst of a war, more than ever, full trust is required between
the prime minister and defense minister,” Netanyahu said.
“Unfortunately, although in the first months of the campaign there was
such trust and there was very fruitful work, during the last months this
trust cracked between me and the defense minister.”
In the early days of the war, Israel's leadership presented a unified
front as it responded to Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attack. But as the war has
dragged on and spread to Lebanon, key policy differences have emerged.
While Netanyahu has called for continued military pressure on Hamas,
Gallant had taken a more pragmatic approach, saying that military force
has created the necessary conditions for at least a temporary diplomatic
deal that could bring home hostages held by the militant group.
In a late-night news conference broadcast on national TV, Gallant said
that he had disagreed with Netanyahu over three main issues: the need to
end controversial exemptions from the military draft for ultra-Orthodox
men, the urgent need for a hostage deal and the need to establish an
official commission of inquiry into the political and security failures
of Oct. 7, when Hamas militants stormed into Israel and killed 1,200
people and took 250 others hostage. Israel estimates that about 100
hostages remain in captivity, only about 65 of them still alive.
With military service compulsory for most Jews, Gallant said that
drafting the ultra-Orthodox was both an issue of fairness and security
at a time when Israel faces so many challenges.
He said a hostage deal was needed “as quickly as possible, when they are
still alive” and said there will be “no forgiveness” for neglecting
them. And he said a full investigation into the events of Oct. 7 was the
only way to ensure the government would learn the proper lessons.
Netanyahu has rejected calls for an inquiry, saying it should only take
place when the war is over.
Gallant ended his statement by honoring the soldiers serving in the army
and those who have died in the wars. He held up his hand and saluted as
he walked away from the podium.
Many of the families of the hostages, along with tens of thousands of
people who have joined anti-government protests, accuse Netanyahu of
scuttling a deal in order to maintain his hold on power.
Netanyahu's hard-line partners have threatened to bring down the
government if he makes concessions to Hamas, raising the risk of early
elections at a time when the prime minister's popularity is low. This
week, authorities announced the arrest of a Netanyahu aide on suspicion
of leaking classified information to foreign media that gave the prime
minister political cover as hostage talks fell apart.
“Firing Gallant in the middle of a war is an act of madness,” opposition
leader Yair Lapid said on X. “Netanyahu is selling Israel’s security and
the Israeli army soldiers for a disgraceful political survival.”
Israel's president, Isaac Herzog, whose largely ceremonial office is
meant to help unify the country, called the dismissal “the last thing
Israel needs.”
The grassroots forum representing hostage families said Gallant’s
dismissal is “a direct continuation of the ‘efforts’ to torpedo the
abductee deal.”
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Israel's Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, left, and Chief of the
General Staff Lieutenant-General Herzi Halevi, attend a ceremony
marking the Hebrew calendar anniversary of the Hamas attack on
October 7 last year that sparked the ongoing war in Gaza, at the
Mount Herzl military cemetery in Jerusalem, Israel Sunday Oct. 27,
2024. (Gil Cohen-Magen/Pool Photo via AP)
Within hours, thousands of protesters gathered in central Tel Aviv,
blocking the city's main highway and crippling traffic. The crowd,
many holding blue and white Israeli flags and others blowing
whistles and pounding drums, gathered around multiple bonfires.
Several thousand people demonstrated outside Netanyahu's home in
Jerusalem and elsewhere in the city. Protesters gathered and blocked
roads in several other spots across the country, and Israeli TV
stations showed images of police scuffling with protesters.
The dismissal comes at a delicate time. Israeli troops remain bogged
down in Gaza, over a year after invading the territory in a war that
has killed over 43,000 Palestinians, including tens of thousands of
civilians, and caused widespread destruction, while Israeli ground
troops are pressing ahead with a month-old ground invasion against
Hezbollah militants in Lebanon. Hundreds of Israeli soldiers have
been killed in the fighting.
Israel also has clashed with Iranian-backed groups in Iraq, Syria
and Yemen, and is facing the possibility of another strike by Iran.
Iran has vowed to avenge an Israeli strike that came in response to
an Oct. 1 Iranian missile attack, itself a reprisal for earlier
Israeli attacks on Iranian-linked targets.
On Monday, Gallant announced he had sent out thousands of draft
notices to young ultra-Orthodox men. The system of exemptions for
religious men has bred widespread resentment among the secular
majority, and Israel's Supreme Court has ordered the government to
scrap the system. Netanyahu, whose governing coalition depends on
ultra-Orthodox parties, has not yet implemented the order.
Channel 13 TV said Netanyahu had also taken advantage of the U.S.
election, when American attention is focused elsewhere, to dismiss
his rival.
The White House on Tuesday declined to comment on the firing but
called Gallant “an important partner on all matters related to the
defense of Israel.”
“As close partners, we will continue to work collaboratively with
Israel’s next minister of defense," the White House National
Security Council said.
Gallant, a former general with a gruff, no-nonsense demeanor, has
emerged as the most popular figure with the public in Israel's
wartime government. Gallant has worn a simple, black buttoned shirt
throughout the war in a sign of sorrow over the Oct. 7 attack and
developed a strong relationship with his U.S. counterpart, Defense
Secretary Lloyd Austin.
A previous attempt by Netanyahu to fire Gallant in March 2023
sparked widespread street protests against Netanyahu. He also
flirted with the idea of dismissing Gallant over the summer but held
off until Tuesday's announcement.
Israel Katz, his replacement, currently serves as foreign minister
and is a longtime Netanyahu loyalist and veteran Cabinet minister.
Katz thanked Netanyahu and pledged to lead the security
establishment to victory in the wars against Israel’s enemies.
Katz, 69, was a junior officer in the military decades ago and has
little military experience, though he has been a key member of
Netanyahu's Security Cabinet over the years. Gideon Saar, a former
Netanyahu rival who rejoined the government in September, will take
the foreign affairs post.
Netanyahu has a long history of neutralizing his rivals. In his
statement, he claimed he had made “many attempts” to bridge the gaps
with Gallant.
“But they kept getting wider," he said. “Our enemies enjoyed it and
derived a lot of benefit from it.”
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Associated Press writers Eleanor H. Reich in New York and Aamer
Madhani in Washington contributed reporting.
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