Bibi, if you don’t or can’t stop the rot, it will consume all – is this what you want as your legacy?
By David E. Kaplan
If the ‘reason’ Israel’s Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu presents for the firing of the country’s Shin Bet chief, Ronen Bar is “a lack of trust”, then he should take cognizance that more than half the country feels the same way about him. A majority of Israelis, many of whom who voted for him, feel today of their prime minister – “a lack of trust”
By the same token as the fate befalling the internal security chief, should the prime minister not follow suit and exit office so that another can – not only lead – but restore a trust with the people of Israel, especially during a time of war that requires of its people unity not division and discord. This is not a right or left issue – it is a right and wrong issue!

Like a lighthouse with its beam of light and loud foghorn warning of the danger to ships, Israel’s former esteemed Supreme Court justice, Aharon Barak, warns of the danger to the ship of state – Israel.
He fears his country is heading “to civil war.”
Who cannot fail to see and understand what is happening. The issues behind the groundswell of people out on the streets protesting during an existential war is being ignored by this government with a dismissive Marie-Antonette arrogance.
‘Lighthouse’ Barak asserts that “…the rift in the people is immense, with no effort made to heal it,” adding that if he were still chief justice, he would block the PM’s moves to fire the Shin Bet chief and attorney general which are pushing the country “toward civil war.”
The move by the prime minister by the way, marks the first time in Israeli history that the government has fired the head of the domestic security agency. His reasons for doing so are immersed not in the nation’s security but in this government’s insecurity. They are trying to avert an embarrassing enquiry called “Qatargate”, where it is alleged that close political advisors of the PM and a lieutenant colonel in the reserves, were involved in paid jobs for promoting the interests of the government of Qatar, an ally and financial supporter of Hamas. Irking the PM is that the Shin Bet chief, Ronen Bar, is investigating the affair, which he described as “complex and multi-faceted.” No doubt; and what is also ‘no doubt’ is that these allegations – if proven to be true – reflects on the porous nature of the country’s national security. Have ‘fences’ of a different kind been breached, not the variety on the Gaza border but from within the very inner sanctums of Israel’s highest political echelon?
No less irksome to Bibi has been Bar pushing for a state commission of inquiry into October 7, a powerhouse probe to be led by a retired Supreme Court justice. This Bibi, unsurprisingly, has rejected. The urgent national need for such an investigation, “cannot be subordinated,” says Bar “to the personal considerations of those involved in the matter, as it is the only way to ensure that such a multi-system failure will not occur again.”
Again, this is not a right or left issue – it is a right and wrong issue!
Speaking to Ynet news shortly before Netanyahu convened the cabinet to vote on firing Bar, Aharon Barak, who served as a Supreme Court justice from 1978 to 1995 and then elected as the court’s president retiring in 2006, said:
“…the main problem in Israeli society is… the severe rift between Israelis.”
This rift now has momentum and is accelerating “and in the end,” said Barak, “I fear, it will be like a train that goes off the tracks and plunges into a chasm, causing a civil war.”

Instead of toning down the temperature, the PM and his cabinet ministers – notably the high-profilers and moral defilers of the likes of Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich – are by their conduct and rhetoric, inflaming tensions. Not only do they ignore the most respected and revered justice in Israel’s history but they dismiss him with such comments like from fellow MK and coalition partner, Almog Cohen of the far-right Otzma Yehudit party who said that Barak is “a reckless and irresponsible man,” who was “sent to issue a Sicilian mafia-style threat of blood in the streets and civil war.”
With mounting protests, who are in the words of Almog Cohen being “reckless” and “irresponsible”?
With the constant concern and trauma of our remaining hostages in captivity, where is the responsible leadership to stop this downward spiral into the abyss?
Even President Trump’s Special Envoy for the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, says Netanyahu’s methods in Gaza are against Israeli public opinion:
“I think Bibi believes that he’s doing the right thing. [However],I think he goes up against public opinion ’cause the public opinion [in Israel] wants those hostages home.”
Bibi looks for false support of the “will of the People” though the last election in 2022. Hardly persuasive when this supposed “will” is a result of a deviously concocted coalition, where his religious coalition partners that so enable him with vital votes, do not believe in the state of Israel nor serve in its defense and extort sizable chunks of the national budget for their causes that are at odds with the country’s national interest. Some “will of the People” the PM relies on to support his increasingly unpopular positions! Clutching at straws, he usurps Trump rhetoric of a “deep state” but there is no “deep state” only deep trouble this government is finding itself emersed in. As the former chief justice says:
“We’re not the United States; we don’t have a deep state here. We have loyal public servants here, and they do things according to the law.”

According to a Channel 12 opinion poll, 51% of Israelis oppose the firing of Bar, compared to 32% who back his dismissal, while 46% say they trust Bar more than they trust the prime minister.
These polls are hardly surprising and may explain why “Today there are demonstrations,” continues Barak, who warns of the societal fragility in the current climate and unforeseen incidents that can spark matters out of control. He refers to the car that drove into an anti-Netanyahu protest in Jerusalem when a driver rammed into a protester, injuring him. If this trajectory continues, Barak cautions:
“… tomorrow there will be shootings, and the day after that there will be bloodshed… ”
If warnings about October 7 were ignored, what is the excuse of this government to warnings of a people’s growing discontent to bulldozing policies that are anathema to this country’s DNA? With turmoil on our streets amidst an existential war on multiple fronts, editor Zvika Klein of The Jerusalem Post writes:
“With a war on seven fronts that appears to have no end in sight, a growing social split of historic proportions, and a rising cost of living, it can feel now as if it will never get any better, that we will never get past this point.”
It must and it will.
Israel needs now – more than ever – is a responsible leadership that is ready to run and not ruin the country!
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