Ex-Mossad chief Tamir Pardo: Netanyahu broke policy with Iran, US

T. Belman. The X Mossad chief argues that “it was a massive strategic error for Netanyahu to be in open conflict with the Obama and Biden administrations over Iran.” Who am I to disagree with him, but I do. Obama and Biden are not our friends. They care only about their agenda to strengthen Iran and to force a two-state solution on Israel or at a minimum to force Israel keep the status quo. A friend would ask us, what do you want to do with the Palestinians and then support us.  As for Iran, they don’t care about our security as they are enabling Iran to get the bomb. What’s to talk about.

Netanyahu’s non-strategy led to 60% nuke enrichment

   JPOST      JUNE 9, 2021 20:07

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during his Iran news conference on April 30, 2018 (photo credit: REUTERS)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during his Iran news conference on April 30, 2018

Former Mossad director Tamir Pardo on Wednesday said that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has broken the country’s strategy for dealing with Iran with the support of the US.

Speaking at the Meir Dagan conference at Netanya Academic College, Pardo said it was a massive strategic error for Netanyahu to be in open conflict with the Obama and Biden administrations over Iran.

The former Mossad chief asked how Netanyahu could dare to say Jerusalem will completely ignore Washington, when it is America which provides both the aircraft and the weapons which the Jewish state uses and needs to defend itself.

Pardo said, “we must do everything to stop Iran from getting a nuclear weapon,” but that it was a mistake for Netanyahu to call it an existential threat as if, should the Islamic Republic someday get such a weapon, all of the Jews would need to flee from the Middle East.

He said that Netanyahu’s policy had helped push the Trump administration to leave the 2015 Iran nuclear deal, which now has led to Tehran passing the 60% nuclear enrichment level.

According to Pardo, “Iran never would have dreamed” they would have gotten to this unprecedented high level of uranium enrichment in prior eras, but that the lack of strategy on the part of Israel along with the Trump administration, has led to the ayatollahs being potentially only weeks away from a nuclear weapon.

In contrast, he said that the Sharon and Olmert governments made their primary principle in dealing with Iran to coordinate with the US.

He accused Israel under Netanyahu of having “top notch tactics, but zero strategy.”

Earlier at the conference, former state’s attorney Shai Nitzan said that despite statements by Netanyahu’s defense lawyers, the case against him is nowhere near crashing and that he still “has plenty to worry about.”

Nitzan was responding to a decision on Wednesday by the Jerusalem District Court presiding over Netanyahu’s trial that the prosecution had failed to turn over significant aspects of evidence relevant to the defense.

Further, Netanyahu’s defense team has succeeded in recent weeks in undermining aspects of the credibility of key prosecution witness Ilan Yeshua, the former CEO of Walla.

Yet, Nitzan said that the comments from the judges so far were still narrow criticisms which would not impact the broader verdict, which will depend on around 300 witnesses besides Yeshua.

In addition, he said that Yeshua had scored many strong points against Netanyahu during his direct testimony for the prosecution.

Nitzan also rejected the idea of splitting the powers of the attorney-general, saying that weakening his office could have negative impacts such as what has been seen in the US when former US president Donald Trump fired his attorney-generals at will.

Also at the conference, former police chief Roni Alsheich said that Public Security Minister Amir Ohana has crossed redlines interfering with non-political professional aspects of the running of the police.

Alsheich said that, “I hear lines have been crossed, I am extremely worried,” about such interference.

Asked if the impact of having a temporary police chief for two years had caused the police to lose their independence to the public security minister’s political considerations, he responded, “unambiguously yes, for sure. Someone [the police chief] waiting for an appointment [by the public security minister] cannot be independent.”

After two years, the police were “falling apart,” as a temporary chief has no long-term strategic plan, budget plans and “no independent power and cannot tell the minister, you cannot be involved on this issue.”

Alsheich added that there was no way the public security minister – which Ohana has served as for over a year – could be stopped from politicization by a temporary police chief.

The former police chief also cited the outgoing speech of Moti Cohen slamming the interference of Ohana and the political class – who had been temporary police chief – and what he has been told by current police commanders.

Ohana has been caught on tape threatening police officials regarding their handling of protests for and against Netanyahu.

Concluding the conference, former prime minister Ehud Olmert lashed out at Netanyahu for trying to scare Israelis about national security dangers so that they would feel dependent on him as prime minister as their lifelong protector.

Olmert also said that the IDF’s budget is too large and that it could be a smaller and smarter military.

Further, he said that integrating Haredim into the broader society should be through national service and not through the IDF.

Regarding the Palestinians, the former prime minister said that Israel lost the last round to Hamas because of the public relations achievements of the terror group.

He added that after the seventh day of the war, the IDF had no quality targets left and just continued aimlessly until the eleventh day to try to look tougher.

Olmert attacked Netanyahu for favoring dealing with Hamas in Gaza over empowering and negotiating with the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank.

June 10, 2021 | 2 Comments »

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  1. I think this is closer to the truth, Pardo

    In stunning, revelatory interview, ex-Mossad chief warns Iran, defends Netanyahu
    Days after stepping down, Yossi Cohen gives specific details of Mossad actions against Tehran nuke program, his role in UAE deal, his Gaza error, and his prime ministerial hopes
    By TOI staff Today, 1:49 am

    Yossi Cohen, who retired as head of the Mossad last week, provided highly specific details of recent Mossad activity against Iran, his interactions with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, his role in Israel’s normalization with the UAE, and his own undercover career in an extraordinary interview on Israeli television broadcast on Thursday night.

    Cohen intimated that his agency blew up Iran’s underground centrifuge facility at Natanz, gave a precise description of the 2018 operation in which the Mossad stole Iran’s nuclear archive from safes in a Tehran warehouse, confirmed that Iran’s assassinated top nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh had been in Mossad’s sights for years, and said the regime needs to understand that Israel means what it says when it vows to prevent Iran attaining nuclear weapons.

    In what would appear to be the most revelatory interview ever given by a Mossad chief so close to the end of his active service, Cohen, who was appointed by Netanyahu, said he did not rule out seeking to become prime minister one day, though he wasn’t contemplating such an ambition at the moment.

    The interview was presumably approved by Israel’s military censors, and Cohen was circumspect on numerous occasions, but nonetheless talked about his career and key operations with an openness and detail radically atypical of spy chiefs, especially those whose service has only recently ended.

    Early in the more than an hour of conversations for journalist Ilan Dayan’s “Uvda” (Fact) documentary show on Israel’s Channel 12, Cohen indicated that he was deeply familiar with Iran’s various nuclear sites, and said that, if given the opportunity, he would take Dayan to the underground “celler” at Natanz, where, he said, “the centrifuges used to spin.”

    “It no longer looks like it did?” Dayan asked.

    “Indeed,” said Cohen.

    “Unless they fixed it,” she said.

    “It doesn’t look like it used to look,” insisted Cohen.

    Cohen did not explicitly confirm responsibility for sabotage at Natanz in the interview, but said more generally: “We say very clearly [to Iran]: We won’t let you get nuclear weapons. What don’t you understand?”
    Former Mossad chief Yossi Cohen (R) in an interview with Channel 12’s Ilana Dayan broadcast on June 10, 2021 (Screencapture)

    Dayan noted that two major blasts at Natanz were attributed in foreign reports to the Mossad in the past year, and said “a huge quantity of explosives” were built into a marble platform used to balance the centrifuges…..

    https://www.timesofisrael.com/in-stunning-revelatory-interview-mossad-chief-warns-iran-defends-netanyahu/

  2. What I think is significant about Pardo’s statement is that he probably is speaking for the leftists and some of the “moderates” in the new government that is scheduled to be sworn in on Sunday. That would explain the timing of Pardo’s statement. If my surmise about this is accurate, the Israel government may give its approval to Biden’s deal with Iran. Some Israeli politicians, including some scheduled to be part of the new government, have always favored the Obama-Biden deal with Iran. At the very least, the Biden administration is hoping that the new government will go along with an American_Irianian agreement. And some influential people in Israel’s security establishment are pushing the new government to support a deal.