Israeli spy chief hands court scathing rebuke of Netanyahu bid to sack him
- Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar accused Prime Minister Netanyahu of improper demands, deepening their conflict.
- Netanyahu and Bar were on a collision course after Hamas took hostages on October 7.
- Bar's affidavit detailed Netanyahu's demands for personal loyalty and sideline moderate mediators.
- Netanyahu's office called Bar's affidavit 'full of lies,' citing failures surrounding the October 7 attacks.
- The Supreme Court froze Bar's firing, highlighting the uproar and potential conflict of interest.
62 Articles
62 Articles
The Deep State vs. Netanyahu: A Plot Unraveling Before Our Eyes
For decades, a quiet but relentless campaign has been unfolding behind the scenes—targeting one man at the heart of Israel’s political landscape: Benjamin Netanyahu. This deep dive unpacks the layers of legal, political, and media warfare that span generations, helping make sense of the storm we’re witnessing today.
Serious allegations: Did Netanyahu want to politically arrest the secret service?
Schin-Bet-Chef Bar goes into the offensive: In a statement he claims that Netanyahu has demanded that the domestic secret service spy on government critics. Public opinion is deeply divided.
Shin Bet chief accuses Netanyahu: “You refuse to cover up the investigation into his account, that's why he wants to fire me.”
It is now an open war between the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, and the head of the Israeli internal secret service Shin Bet, Ronen Bar. After the attempt to dismiss the head of 007 of the Jewish State, suspended by the Supreme Court and withdrawn by the Prime Minister himself 24 hours after the decision, the secret agent revealed the pressure suffered by the head of the Tel Aviv government who would be behind, after his refusal, t…
Scandal in Israel: The head of the domestic intelligence service reveals the reasons why he was fired by Benjamin Netanyahu
The head of Israel's internal intelligence service (Shin Bet), Ronen Bar, said on Monday that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's attempt to dismiss him was a consequence of his refusal to comply with demands that included spying on protesters...
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