Israel defense chief quits, warns of 'extremist' rise under Netanyahu

Moshe Yaalon resigned Friday, lamenting what he sees as "extremist and dangerous elements." His departure may pave the way for an ultra-nationalist successor.

 

In this Feb. 16, 2015 file photo, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, left, speaks with Israel's Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon during a ceremony for new Israeli Chief of Staff Gadi Eizenkot at the Prime Minister's office in Jerusalem. Yaalon announced his resignation Friday, May 20, 2016, citing a lack of 'trust' in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Sebastian Scheiner/AP/File

May 20, 2016

Israel's defense minister resigned Friday, saying the nation was being taken over by "extremist and dangerous elements" after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu moved to replace him with a far-right politician in an effort to strengthen his coalition.

Political sources say Netanyahu has offered long-time rival Avigdor Lieberman the defense portfolio, a post crucial for a country on a perennial war footing. The Defence Ministry also runs civil affairs in the occupied West Bank, where Palestinians struggling for statehood live in friction with Jewish settlers.

"To my great regret, I have recently found myself in difficult disputes over matters of principle and professionalism with the prime minister, a number of cabinet members and some lawmakers," outgoing Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon said, reading, grim-faced, from a statement at his Tel Aviv office.

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"The State of Israel is patient and tolerant toward the weak among it and minorities ... But to my great regret extremist and dangerous elements have overrun Israel as well as the Likud party, shaking up our home and threatening harm to those in it," he said, hinting he might quit the ruling party.

"In the future I will return to contend for Israel's national leadership," he said.

Netanyahu rebuffed Yaalon's criticism.

"The reshuffle in portfolios did not result from a crisis in faith between us. It resulted from the need to expand the government so as to bring stability to the State of Israel given the great challenges it faces," he said in a video statement.

Netanyahu, who doubles as foreign minister, added that he had offered the top diplomatic post to Yaalon but was refused.

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"I reckon that had (he) not been asked to leave the Defence Ministry, he would not have quit," Netanyahu said, defending the Likud as a "liberal nationalist party" and arguing that a broader government could better pursue a peace strategy.

However, Yaalon's departure could put a new dent in domestic and Western confidence in the Netanyahu government.

US committment absolute

A former chief of Israel's armed forces, Yaalon had shored up relations with the Pentagon that provided a counter-weight to Netanyahu's policy feuds with US President Barack Obama over peace talks with the Palestinians and Iran's nuclear program.

Relations between Israel and the US have been increasingly fraught in recent years, as The Christian Science Monitor reported, with diverging views between Americans and Israelis on the treatment of Palestinians becoming increasingly important, not to mention Israeli anxiety over Obama’s aspirational “pivot” away from the tangle of the Middle East to the opportunities of Asia.

In contrast to the outgoing defense chief, Lieberman - whose appointment has not yet been confirmed - is inexperienced militarily and famed for his past hawkish talk against Palestinians, Israel's Arab minority and Egypt - an important regional security partner for Israel.

An Egyptian official told Reuters on Thursday that Cairo was "shocked" at the prospect of Lieberman as Israeli defense minister.

Washington struck a more optimistic note on Friday. While praising Yaalon, US State Department spokesman John Kirby said Washington looked forward to working with his successor.

"Our bonds of friendship are unbreakable and our commitment to the security of Israel remains absolute," he added.

Netanyahu's offer of Yaalon's cabinet post to Lieberman emerged this week after talks failed on bringing center-left opposition leader Isaac Herzog into the government.

The inclusion of Lieberman's Yisrael Beitenu party in the coalition, which has also yet to be confirmed, would give Netanyahu's six-party coalition 67 of parliament's 120 seats, up from its current razor-thin majority of 61.

Additional reporting by Lesley Wroughton in Brussels.