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Wednesday, February 02, 2011

Galant appointment withdrawn, Naveh serving 'temporarily' instead

I'm sure some of you are wondering what happened with Yoav Galant's appointment as IDF Chief of Staff.

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Netanyahu and Defense Minister Barak decided to cancel Galant's appointment. Instead, Barak is proposing to appoint Deputy Chief of General Staff Maj.-Gen. Yair Naveh (pictured) as acting chief of staff for 60 days. Naveh would be the first religious officer to hold the post, but would not receive a promotion in rank and would serve in a caretaker status.

Some of you might recall Naveh's name from a different context, which the media is mainly ignoring today. Maybe having your pocket picked is a requirement for an IDF Chief of Staff.

Here's some background on Naveh.
The son of Holocaust survivors, Naveh was born in Gedera in 1957 and went to high school at the prestigious Netiv Meir Yeshiva in the capital. He was drafted into the IDF in 1975 and climbed the ranks in the Golani Brigade until he was appointed commander of the elite infantry unit in 1991.

He later served as chief infantry and paratroopers officer, and in 1999 was appointed commander of the Gaza Division, a position he held during the first years of the second intifada. In 2003 he was appointed OC Home Front Command and in 2005 he became head of the IDF’s Central Command.

In 2007, Naveh retired from the army after 32 years of service and shortly thereafter was hired as the CEO of CityPass, the consortium that is building the light rail in Jerusalem.

He was brought back to the army in October to serve as deputy to Maj.-Gen. Yoav Galant, who had been tapped to succeed Lt.-Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi and on Tuesday lost the post.

Naveh’s career has not always been easy. As commander of the Central Command, he oversaw the evacuation in 2005 from four settlements in Samaria as part of the disengagement.

Settlement supporters did not forgive him for his participation in the pullout and right-wing activists began stalking Naveh and held weekly demonstrations outside his home in Givat Shmuel.
Netiv Meir class of 1975 would put him two years behind Avraham Burg.

Moshe (Boogie) Yaalon - a former IDF Chief of Staff and would-be defense minister - ripped Barak for the mess.
Deputy Prime Minister and former IDF chief of staff Moshe Ya'alon said Wednesday that it is the government's responsibility to appoint a new IDF chief of staff as quickly as possible. Ya'alon was referring to Defense Minister Ehud Barak and Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's decision to cancel the appointment of Maj.-Gen. Yoav Galant, following a long fought battle in the court over issues with his appointment.

Ya'alon told Israel Radio that the best possible scenario would have been to allow outgoing IDF Chief of Staff Gabi Ashkenazi to continue to serve in his role until a new candidate takes the position, rather than appointing Deputy Chief of Staff Maj.-Gen. Yair Naveh to the role.

Ya'alon claimed that Barak was was leading the IDF system into insanity, but that some of the responsibility rests on the entire government as well. In Ya'alon's opinion, it is strictly the role of the government to fill the void left by recent legal proceedings, and that "the process of the last few months hurt the IDF, the chief of staff, General Galant, Chief of Staff Ashkenazi, and the entire government's status."
Kadima's Shaul Mofaz - also a former Defense Minister and IDF Chief of Staff - also ripped Barak.
According to an official statement released by committee chair MK Shaul Mofaz (Kadima), Wednesday was a "complex and sad day for the state of Israel." Mofaz said that he "opposes the personal persecution campaign against him [Galant]." He added that the committee plans to discuss the legitimacy of the process that Galant underwent, and to examine the possibility of imposing tight parliamentary supervision on future proceedings.

According to Mofaz, the past procedures surrounding Galant's appointment presented a "fundamental constitutional problem." He added: "the decision that was accepted yesterday by the defense minister and prime minister does not reflect what is right and needed for Israel at this time."

Like Ya'alon, the negative opinions on the situation do not center around the man who will fill the temporary appointment himself: Naveh. Rather, the internal conflict resides on the decision not to simply extend Ashkenazi's term until the role is filled.

Mofaz stressed, "My criticism is not personally directed at Deputy Chief of Staff General Yair Naveh, rather the inevitable feeling that ego and personal considerations made the decision not to extend the current chief of staff's term."
Barak and Ashkenazi are allegedly not on speaking terms.

What could go wrong?

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2 Comments:

At 8:48 PM, Blogger NormanF said...

Israel is without a head of the army at a time of critical challenges and the putative chief of staff was a crook who supposedly stole public property for his own benefit!

What could could go wrong indeed

 
At 7:50 PM, Blogger Stuart said...

Let's say Galant's downfall is due to the "disengagement curse" that also struck former prime ministers Sharon and Ehud Olmert, former president Moshe Katsav, former IDF CGS Dan Halutz and former police commanders Moshe Karadi and Uri Bar-Lev.

Since Naveh, a yeshivah bochur, ran the Shomron disengagement activities, he now will find out whether there is such a curse or not. I hope, for his sake and even more for Israel's, that Naveh is a ba'al teshuvah with respect to his 2005 conduct.

 

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