Israel defense minister quits, says Netanyahu fanning extremism
02:41PM Sat 21 May, 2016
Jerusalem: Israel’s defense minister resigned Friday, saying extremists had taken over the country, after he clashed with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over the army’s handling of a wave of Palestinian violence.
Moshe Yaalon said he no longer had any trust in Netanyahu after the hawkish premier offered his post to a hard-liner loathed by the Palestinians, in a bid to expand the governing coalition’s majority.
The surprise move by the respected former armed forces chief follows a series of disputes over the military’s values and role in society between ministers in Netanyahu’s government and top generals backed by Yaalon.
“I told the prime minister this morning that due to his conduct in recent developments, and in light of my lack of trust in him, I am resigning from the government and Knesset (parliament) and taking a break from political life,” Yaalon said on Twitter.
Netanyahu said that he had wanted Yaalon to remain in government and take the foreign affairs portfolio but he “insisted” on retaining the defense post.
“I think that he should have continued to be a full partner in the governance of the state, in the post of foreign minister,” Netanyahu said on Twitter.
“The change in distribution of portfolios was not a result of a crisis of trust between us. It was a result of the need to broaden the government in order to bring stability to the state of Israel in the face of the great challenges ahead of us,” he added.
Yaalon’s resignation came two days after former foreign minister Avigdor Lieberman said he could bring his far-right Yisrael Beitenu party into Netanyahu’s governing coalition if a number of conditions were met, including his being named defense minister.
Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party pressed talks with Yisrael Beitenu on Friday on the terms of a deal to boost the coalition’s wafer-thin majority in parliament.
Yaalon’s resignation does not take effect for two days and, hours after it was announced, he warned in a broadcast address of a rising tide of extremism in the ruling Likud party and the country as a whole.
“Extremist and dangerous elements have taken over Israel and the Likud and are threatening (society),” he said in Hebrew.
He urged the “sane majority” of Likud voters as well as the rest of the nation “to realize the severe implications of the extremist takeover of the center, and fight this phenomenon.”
Yaalon said he had recently “found himself in serious dispute over professional and moral issues with the prime minister, a number of ministers and lawmakers.”
Yaalon had been an outspoken defender of the army’s handling of an upsurge of Palestinian violence since last October in the face of criticism from hard-line ministers and lawmakers.
He had also insisted on senior officers’ right to “speak their mind” after deputy armed forces chief Major General Yair Golan enraged Netanyahu by comparing contemporary Israeli society to Nazi Germany.
AFP