Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Shin Bet Chief Ronen Bar are locked in a growing dispute over leadership and accountability within the intelligence agency, following its failure to anticipate the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack.
On Thursday, Netanyahu accused Bar of leading a media campaign aimed at preventing him from making necessary reforms within Shin Bet, Israel’s domestic security agency.
“A full-scale campaign of blackmail through media directives in recent days has been led by the current Shin Bet chief, Ronen Bar,” Netanyahu said in a statement issued by his office. “The only goal is to try and prevent me from making the decisions needed to restore Shin Bet after its abysmal failure on October 7.”
The rift deepened as former Shin Bet Chief Nadav Argaman warned that he would expose damaging information about Netanyahu if the prime minister engaged in any illegal actions.
“This evening, another dangerous red line was crossed in Israeli democracy,” Netanyahu responded. “Never, in the entire history of Israel, and the history of democracy, has the former head of a security service blackmailed a sitting prime minister on live television.”
Shin Bet Defends Chief, Criticizes Netanyahu
In response, Shin Bet issued a rare public statement condemning Netanyahu’s accusations against Bar as “serious” and “baseless.”
“These are serious accusations against the head of a national organization in the State of Israel,” the agency stated. “Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar devotes all of his time to security issues, efforts to return the hostages, and protecting democracy.”
The dispute follows the release of Shin Bet’s internal investigation into its failure to detect Hamas’s attack plans, which left over 1,200 Israelis dead and led to Israel’s ongoing war in Gaza. The report acknowledged shortcomings, stating that Shin Bet underestimated Hamas’s intentions and was focused on potential threats in the West Bank rather than Gaza.
Netanyahu has criticized the report, while opposition leaders, including Yair Lapid and Benny Gantz, have called on him to take responsibility.
Shin Bet’s findings also suggested Netanyahu’s long-term security policies contributed to Israel’s intelligence failures. The Israeli Broadcasting Authority reported that the agency blamed gaps in intelligence monitoring systems and misjudged Hamas’s priorities, which led to the failure to prevent the October 7 attack.
The political and intelligence fallout from the attack continues to shake Israel’s leadership, deepening divisions between Netanyahu’s government and Israel’s security establishment.
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