Calgary Herald

Former top spy slams Netanyahu

Strong comments come as Israel heads to the polls

- DANIEL ESTRIN

Aprominent Israeli ex-intelligen­ce chief sought to sway Israelis against Benjamin Netanyahu in upcoming elections, saying in an interview published Friday that the prime minister has mismanaged Israel’s response to Iran’s nuclear program and missed opportunit­ies to make inroads on a peace agreement with the Palestinia­ns.

The interview by Yuval Diskin was an unusually strong and overt assault on a prime minister by a figure formerly from the security establishm­ent, coming less than three weeks before the Jan. 22 election, in which polls predict Netanyahu will be reelected. The election campaign has hardly touched on security issues such as the conflict with Iran or the stalled peace process with the Palestinia­ns, focusing almost entirely on domestic issues.

Diskin, who ran Israel’s Shin Bet intelligen­ce agency from 2005 to 2011, has been a vocal critic of Netanyahu. But his front-page interview to the daily Yediot Ahronot included his sharpest comments yet. He accused Netanyahu of acting illegally by ordering the security apparatus to prepare for an attack on Iran before gaining approval from the Cabinet of ministers. He also said Netanyahu squandered the gains made by Israel’s security forces by not using a period of relative quiet over the past few years to move toward peace with the Palestinia­ns.

“I am convinced we deserve a better leadership that’s braver and more moral, and that sets a better personal example,” Diskin said. “If I cause the Israeli voter to think twice before choosing parties and leaders that are not worthy, because they are actually not leading us where we should be going, I’ve done my part.”

He said he formed his opinion “based on dozens of discussion­s with many people more or less of my rank” who feel “a lack of security, lack of trust and lack of appreciati­on” for the current administra­tion.

Netanyahu’s office in a text-mes- saged statement called Diskin’s comments “baseless” and accused him of personal frustratio­n over not being selected to head the prestigiou­s Mossad spy agency.

Though Diskin oversaw Israel’s domestic security in his role as Shin Bet chief, he was also involved in key security decisions affecting the country, including deliberati­ons over a possible strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities.

Diskin said that in 2010 Netanyahu and Defence Minister Ehud Barak tried to convince him, the army chief and the head of Mossad to prepare the security apparatus for an attack on Iran before gaining approval from the necessary government forums, a move Diskin called “illegal.”

The army chief and Mossad chief from the time — Lt.-Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi and Meir Dagan — both spoke similarly about the meeting to Israeli television in November.

Diskin said Netanyahu acted irresponsi­bly regarding Iran’s nuclear program and accused him of prioritizi­ng personal concerns over national interests.

“I have a very strong feeling that with the Iranian issue Netanyahu is ‘haunted’ by (former Israeli prime minister) Menachem Begin, who attacked the reactor in Iraq, and by (former Israeli prime minister Ehud) Olmert, who, as it is claimed in many places, attacked the reactor in Syria,” Diskin said. Netanyahu “wants to go down in history as someone who did something of the same proportion­s.”

On the Palestinia­n issue, Diskin criticized Netanyahu’s lack of movement on peace talks and said there is a chance another Palestinia­n uprising could break out.

“The role of the security forces is to create conditions so the political echelon will know what to do with them, and the quiet which was achieved in the last few years is an opportunit­y that the political echelon should not have missed.”

 ?? The Associated Press/files ?? Yuval Diskin, above, says Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tried to convince him and his colleagues to approve what he called an “illegal” decision to attack Iran to create a legacy for himself.
The Associated Press/files Yuval Diskin, above, says Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tried to convince him and his colleagues to approve what he called an “illegal” decision to attack Iran to create a legacy for himself.

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