The Jerusalem Post

Politician­s: Learn from the generals

THE BROAD PERSPECTIV­E

- • By TAMAR URIEL-BEERI The writer is deputy editor-in-chief of

There is something to be said for all of the IDF commanders who have resigned during the war. It is unavoidabl­y disappoint­ing to see so many high-ranking officials dropping day by day and knowing that no matter what, things will be passed along to someone a little less experience­d and a little less adapted.

At the same time, it is pretty refreshing to see people – and I hate to say it, but notably men – in leadership roles in Israel taking responsibi­lity for their failures.

And indeed, when it comes to Israel’s defense establishm­ent, October 7 was the failure of the century.

This week, IDF Military Intelligen­ce Directorat­e Chief Maj.-Gen. Aharon Haliva announced that he was resigning after over 38 years of serving his country. In his resignatio­n letter, he states that he would like to take responsibi­lity for what happened on October 7 and promises to do his best to complete as many of the war’s goals as possible.

His retirement was not unexpected; in fact, already in November, he was seen from within the Intelligen­ce Division as something of a “sitting duck.”

IDF Intelligen­ce Analysis Chief Brig.-Gen. Amit Saar also resigned recently. However, he was doing so for personal, medical reasons.

Neverthele­ss, his resignatio­n was imminent, as some considered him to be the official most responsibl­e for not foreseeing the October 7 invasion by Hamas. Without his unexpected cancer diagnosis, Sa’ar was going to resign in June over his failures surroundin­g the massacre. After all, intelligen­ce analysis is the primary place of failure, which massively underestim­ated the probabilit­y as well as the scope of the impending attack by Hamas.

This wave is merely the latest in a series of previous and impending resignatio­ns due to across-the-board failures surroundin­g October 7.

In February, an IDF intelligen­ce officer with the mid-level rank of major from the Palestinia­n analysis branch became the first one to resign over the failure to anticipate and warn of Hamas’s invasion.

One month later, defense officials said that IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Herzi Halevi intends to announce his resignatio­n from his position sometime between September and December and, until that time, to finish internal investigat­ions regarding the war and present them to the relevant government officials.

This approach, taken by so many of these experience­d commanders, is one that – despite the massive failure that we saw on October 7 – has earned my respect. These are people who look upon the devastatio­n and panic that struck our country and bow their heads in shame – justifiabl­y so.

The same, however, cannot be said for the Israeli government.

PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu admitted that everyone, “myself included,” will have to be investigat­ed and ultimately held accountabl­e, in a press conference held a little over two weeks after the October 7 massacre. But in every interview he has conducted with the internatio­nal media afterward, he has repeatedly deflected blame, saying that it will be determined after the war.

The coalition has consistent­ly maintained this messaging, this deflection, to keep its audience distracted as it desperatel­y searches for who to blame. Indeed, many pointed at the IDF.

National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir – a mere three days after hundreds were kidnapped, over a thousand murdered, and thousands injured on October 7 – reiterated that he blames Benny Gantz and Gadi Eisenkot for the massacre.

Shameful does not even begin to describe this behavior – which, since October, has become a regularity, with the government doing everything in its power to sweep any potential blame they may have under the rug thinking that no one will notice.

Thankfully, Israelis do not have a short memory. Throughout Judaism’s vast history, we have learned to remember.

This does not mean that the government needs to fall

and have one member of the Knesset resign at a time. Rather, if it wants to save face – not now, but in the history books that will look down on them with disdain – it must bring about elections with the understand­ing that the crisis that has befallen the Israeli people has led them to lose all hope and trust in their government.

Politician­s must look to the IDF generals who took to heart the catastroph­e that was October 7 and truly absorb

what it means to have been a part of the systemic failure; this sense of responsibi­lity, of accountabi­lity, is what must bring them to encourage elections.

If they do not do so, history – with its eyes on them, as Lin-Manuel Miranda wrote – will remember them as having failed their country and instead trying to save themselves by any means necessary.

The Jerusalem Post.

 ?? (Gideon Markowicz/Flash90) ?? IN HIS resignatio­n letter, IDF Military Intelligen­ce Directorat­e Chief Maj.-Gen. Aharon Haliva states that he would like to take responsibi­lity for what happened on October 7 and promises to do his best to complete as many of the war’s goals as possible.
(Gideon Markowicz/Flash90) IN HIS resignatio­n letter, IDF Military Intelligen­ce Directorat­e Chief Maj.-Gen. Aharon Haliva states that he would like to take responsibi­lity for what happened on October 7 and promises to do his best to complete as many of the war’s goals as possible.
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