Netanyahu Replaces Fired Israeli Defense Minister With ‘Another Genocidal Lunatic’

Yves here. I hate to sound like a stickler regarding the Common Dreams post reproduced below. Trying to find differences among genodicers may sound like what the Japanese call a height competition among peanuts: seemingly non-existent distinctions matter to them. Nevertheless, it is not correct to depict the newly-installed Israel Defense Minister Israel Katz as on a par with Yoav Gallant, who was just ousted by Netanyahu. By Israeli standards, Gallant is a moderate and Katz is a hard-liner.

There had long been friction between Gallant and Netanyahu. Netanyahu had even fired Gallant before, in 2023, but reinstated him after a month.

Gallant seemed surprised by his removal, although there had been signs things were getting worse between the two men. Gallant seemed to see part of his job as advocating for the IDF, which by all accounts, ex the air force, is exhausted and also suffering an unheard level of deaths and casualties. Larry Wilkerson pointed out that the injuries are at least as consequential for Israel, since the level is very high due to Israel’s proximity to front lines (ie, soldiers that might die from their wounds in other theaters of combat can usually be transported quickly to very good hospitals). And these injuries are often, as the bloodless saying goes, life-altering, such as the loss of limbs.

So Gallant’s comparative moderation seemed to come at least in part from understanding the IDF’s limits and trying to get Israel to chart a more realistic course. But the hardliner see the wars as eschatological and at least some believe God will bail them out. Netanyahu needs to keep the conflicts going to remain in office and out of jail.

A recent sign that relations between Gallant and Netanyahu had deteriorated further was when Netanyahu cancelled a Gallant trip to the US to meet with Department of Defense officials to “coordinate” as in negotiate and plan, what Israel’s response to the Iran October 1 missile strikes on Israel, which were eventually admitted to have been effective in accurately hitting military targets (and worse for Israel, largely getting through Israel’s air defenses). Netanyahu insisted Biden speak to him first. The Gallant trip was not rescheduled; instead Department of Defense personnel came to Israel.

I suspect the big reason for Netanyahu cancelling the Gallant visit was he suspected Gallant would work (as in plot) with the US as to how to curb the Israel response, particularly since the Iran success exposed how vulnerable Israel would be to another, almost certainly bigger, Iran attack. Recall Iran had said it was prepared to call things a day after its October 1 demonstration, but if Israel attacked Iran again, Iran would hit much harder and would among other things, target civilian infrastructure. The Western press reported that the US keenly wanted Israel to make a limited retaliation, as opposed to hitting Iran’s nuclear program and oil infrastructure as it threatened. The Biden Administration was desperate to forestall a widening of the war before the elections, particularly since Iran is too big and well bunkered for Israel to deliver a knockout blow. Iran could easily take countermeasures that would cripple oil shipping and/or production and drive energy prices through the roof.

Now admittedly, forcing the US to come to Israel to negotiate the strike package did not seem to deliver Netanyahu the buy-in to the sort of more aggressive response he and other top officials had so loudly talked up. However, having the discussions take place in Israel would prevent Gallant and any like-minded members of his team from conversing freely.

A Times of Israel account has Netanyahu of depicting Gallant as insubordinate, as in not always executing on his and the Cabinet’s directives, and then delivering a cheap shot, by depicting Gallant as a near-traitor:

“I made many attempts to bridge these gaps, but they kept getting wider,” he [Netanyahu] said. “They also came to the knowledge of the public in an unacceptable way, and worse than that, they came to the knowledge of the enemy — our enemies enjoyed it and derived a lot of benefit from it.”

However, the televised attack gave Gallant the opportunity to tell his side of the story. Again from the Times of Israel:

Following his dismissal on Tuesday, Gallant issued a one-line statement of his own, writing on X that “the security of the State of Israel always was, and will always remain, my life’s mission.”

The statement was identical to the one he published on the night of his first firing, 18 months ago.

He elaborated at a press conference later on Tuesday night, where he appeared visibly emotional as he explained that the reason for his dismissal was threefold: the need to draft Haredi men to the IDF, the imperative to bring back the hostages from Gaza, and the need for a state commission of inquiry in the October 7 Hamas terror onslaught and ensuing war.

All three initiatives are threats to Netanyahu. The IDF has just started drafting Haredim over their fierce opposition. Their parties are part of Netanyahu’s coalition. The hostage issue is an even bigger problem for Bibi. Getting hostages returned means negotiations with Hamas. Hamas will not release them for anything less than a permanent, or at least plenty long ceasefire. A ceasefire would generate demands for new elections. An independent commission on October 7 would similarly undermine Netanyahu. Not only did the attacks take place on his watch, but a probe would also call attention to the way Netanyahu supported Hamas even before the 2006 elections that made it the leading party in Gaza out of a scheme gone pear-shaped to undermine the PLO.

The Financial Times points out that Netanyahu timed this firing (presumably also with the marked uptick of killing in Gaza) to take advantage of US election pre-occupation. From the Financial Times:

But, despite the increasingly public feuding between Gallant and Netanyahu, the timing of his sacking — which comes as Israel is in the middle of a multi-front conflict with foes including Hamas, Hizbollah and Iran — was unexpected….

Gallant has been an important interlocutor with Israel’s main ally, the US, throughout the wars, and a person familiar with the situation said announcing his sacking on the day of the American election was not a coincidence.

“Everyone knows that the Americans like Gallant,” the person added. “So [Netanyahu] chose this timing because no one [in the US] has the attention span to follow this closely [today].”

Larry Wilkerson colorfully weighed in on the Gallant sacking. He sees the shake-up as Netanyahu needing to distract attention from his military failure and domestic pressures. He also describes the number of serious injuries in Lebanon alone as 4,000, which is very high given the short duration of that campaign.

Now to the main event.

By Brett Wilkins. Originally published at Common Dreams

Palestine defenders on Tuesday accused Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of swapping one “genocidal lunatic” for another after the right-wing leader fired Defense Minister Yoav Gallant and replaced him with Israel Katz, who was serving as foreign minister.

“Israel just doubled down on prolonging its genocide of the Palestinians in Gaza,” journalist and genocide scholar Samira Mohyeddin said on social media following Netanyahu’s moves.

Netanyahu cited what he called a “crisis of trust” that “gradually deepened” as his reason for the changes, which came as Israel is waging war on Gaza and Lebanon while bracing for Iranian retaliation for recent Israeli attacks on the Middle East nation.

“In the midst of a war, more than ever, full trust is required between the prime minister and the minister of defense,” Netanyahu said Tuesday, according toThe Jerusalem Post. “This trust has cracked between myself and the defense minister.”

Katz, a member of Netanyahu’s Likud party, previously held several Cabinet posts, most recently as Israel’s top diplomat. He was the minister of energy and infrastructure on October 7, 2023, when Hamas-led militants launched a surprise attack on Israel that left more than 1,100 people dead—at least some killed by fratricidal fire—and over 240 others kidnapped and taken to Gaza.

Two days later, Katz issued an order to “immediately cut off the water supply from Israel to Gaza.”

“Electricity and fuel were cut off yesterday,” he said. “What was will not be. All the civilian population in Gaza is ordered to leave immediately. We will win. They will not receive a drop of water or a single battery until they leave.”

Katz’s directive followed Gallant’s order for a “complete siege” of Gaza.

“There will be no electricity, no food, no fuel, everything is closed,” Gallant said. “We are fighting human animals and we are acting accordingly.”

These statements by Gallant and Katz are cited in the International Court of Justice’s January 26 provisional order for Israel to prevent genocidal acts in Gaza. Israel—which is on trial for alleged genocide at the ICJ—has been accused of ignoring this and subsequent orders issued by the tribunal.

On Tuesday, Israeli state media reported that the Israel Defense Forces has completed its division of Gaza into two parts, and that “there is no intention to allow the residents of the northern Gaza Strip to return to their homes.”

Katz has also come under fire for declaring United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres “persona non grata in Israel” for criticizing the country’s war on Gaza, which has left more than 155,000 Palestinians in Gaza dead, wounded, or missing and millions more starving and sick.

While serving as Israel’s foreign minister, Katz was also condemned for threatening “severe consequences” for nations that officially recognize Palestinian statehood. Nearly 150 of the 193 United Nations member states recognizePalestine.

Katz also raised eyebrows in 2022 after he made a thinly veiled threat to ethnically cleanse Arab citizens of Israel. Responding to Israeli Arab students who displayed the Palestinian flag on college campuses, Katz said “remember ’48,” a reference to 1948, when Israel declared its independence amid an ethnic cleansing campaign in which more than 750,000 Arabs were expelled from Palestine to make way for Jewish settlement.

Palestinians call this mass dispossession and expulsion the Nakba, which means “catastrophe” in Arabic.

“Remember our independence war and your Nakba,” Katz said. “Don’t stretch the rope too much… If you don’t calm down, we’ll teach you a lesson that won’t be forgotten.”

“Ask your elders—your grandfathers, and grandmothers—and they will explain to you that in the end, the Jews awaken, they know to defend themselves and the idea of the Jewish state,” he added.

In one of his final acts as foreign minister, Katz on Monday initiated the process of annulling a 1967 agreement between Israel and the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, which Israel accuses of being “infiltrated” by Hamas. The U.N. strongly refutes Israel’s accusation.

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15 comments

  1. Sub-Boreal

    Whether intentional or not, that’s an excellent and potentially useful neologism in the 2nd sentence above: “genodicer”.

      1. JonnyJames

        The New and Improved Genodicer can slice, dice, and julienne Palestinians faster and more efficiently, or your money back! Guaranteed!

        (I couldn’t help it, sorry for the twisted, sarcastic humor)

  2. abierno

    Helpful summary. Inquiring minds wonder how long Netanyahu and his cabinet can hold back accurate information regarding the deaths and life changing casualties on the Israeli side. This is a country which not only regarded their armed services as the “most moral” in the world (laughable delusion) but also as the most powerful, seemingly invincible to injury. In a small country, censorship does not outweigh the less than six degrees of separation. Opposition view voiced by Lapid: “Act of insanity,” regarding Gallant’s sacking. Important public statement in a time of war…

    1. JonnyJames

      I recall back in 2010, Ken O’Keefe, while on board the Mavi Marmara in the Gaza flotilla, said that he personally disarmed an Israeli commando with his bare hands and helped disarm another. O’Keefe says he and the others were unarmed. The Israeli military are very successful at murdering women, children and lightly armed resistance. But when facing a formidable opponents, they seem to fall apart. .

      1. Bugs

        This is how the people win. Do not fear an enemy who has no philosophy. Take them to the ground and let them run home.

  3. Fireminer

    I’m no historian or psychologist, but even I can see how much Zionists despise people showing vulnerabilities. They use the Holocaust to justify everything they do, yet they treat Holocaust victims like asses and vow to never be in a situation like them. Israel is the most victim-blaming country on Earth. They seriously believe that if a person is crushed under the treadwheel of power, the victim is wholly at fault and does not even have the right to complain, and the victor has every right to gloat. That is the same kind of power-worshiping you see in fascism.

    (This thread goes into how Israeli culture praises sociopaths who will do anything to get ahead in life: https://x.com/BoltzmannBooty/status/1847069460470907241)

    Has anyone here heard the news about Israelis trying to dodge drafts and the IDF having problems recalling soldiers back to service? (https://x.com/MintPressNews/status/1853534665434612221)

    The more I think about it, the more I see that Israel’s culture can only produce brown shirts who are eager to rob, rape, and murder defenseless Palestinians. They can’t produce soldiers who will sit in the trench and weather the storm day in, day out. A lot of Israeli probably think that dead IDF troops are suckers who couldn’t find a comfortable post. Of course they will try to run away when the going gets tough.

    1. Duke DeGuise

      Regarding that X thread, some anecdata: a number of years ago, my daughter worked as a hostess at the restaurant at the Regency Hotel – home of the “Power Breakfast” for those of you with ‘80’s nostalgia – in NYC, and thus was perfectly positioned to observe the entitlement and misbehavior of the global .01%.

      I bet you’ll never, ever guess who she said were the nastiest of the lot, by orders of magnitude… trailed in the distance by the Brazilians.

      One consolation, she said, was that Julie Andrews came in fairly regularly and was courteous, warm and generous with the staff, so at least Mary Poppins won’t disillusion us.

  4. The Heretic

    Question to anyone interested. Given the massively disproportionate destruction of Gaza and murderous ethnic cleansing campaign… would not Hamas have to negotiate for much more from Israel than merely exchange for hostage and a permanent ceasefire? Would they not have to demand for a two state solution (as now being bandied about in some countries and intellectual circles), and repairs to their homes and infrastructure, in order to make the suffering and sacrifice of lives ‘worth it’? Would they not lose credibility and even be vilified by the Gazans and other palestinians if they accept such a paltry deal?

    1. Yves Smith Post author

      Yes. I am being charitable. Hamas has made clear so far that they require a permanent ceasefire in order to release all hostages. I can’t see them budging but I have to allow for the possibility that they might.

  5. Camelotkidd

    Great introduction. As a financial analyst, Yves has become quite proficient at dissecting complex political, military and geo-strategic events
    “genodicer” indeed

  6. Kouros

    There will be an ICJ ruling of genocide and countries around Israel will acknowledge it Maybe even Azeribadjan… Definitely EU countries on the Mediteraneean Sea. UK will not, but they will have nothing to offer… Slowly the noose will tighten around the neck of the Zionists, and Israel will be booed in any international event… The blood libel will live 1000 years more, no matter the efforst of UK London Met Police

  7. The Rev Kev

    This is one of those cases where Yves’s introduction is just as good as the article if not better. I guess that Netanyahu getting rid of Gallant is him doubling down by getting rid of any dissent in his government and by filling it with fellow fanatics. He might have gotten rid of Gallant to preclude the possibility that the US next year may do an end run on him and started to talk to Gallant more like they tried to do previously. Of course Gallant may not be the good soldier and start to criticize the government now that he is not part of it. Instead of being in the tent and peeing out, he may now be on the outside peeing in. I suspect that a lot of the IDF would back him as they can see Netanyahu squandering their lives on hopeless missions while continuing to protect the lives of the Haredim. Of course if Netanyahu is going to do something really stupid, he has the next several weeks until Inauguration day to do so and Biden will still be backing him while he can.

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