Gantz sends AG secret dossier in push for permission to appoint new army chief


Military legal opinion claims process can continue during caretaker government, sparking Likud threat to discard attorney general if she gives defense minister green light

Minister of Defense Benny Gantz and IDF Chief of Staff Aviv Kochavi during an event for outstanding soldiers as part of Israel’s 74th Independence Day celebrations,

Defense Minister Benny Gantz on Sunday pushed ahead with his attempt to appoint the next chief of the Israel Defense Forces, dismissing concerns that widely impactful nominations be frozen until a new government is formed after elections.

Gantz is seeking to appoint a successor to IDF chief of general staff, Lt. Gen. Aviv Kohavi, whose four-year term is set to expire in January, despite the fact that new elections were called last week. Caretaker governments have traditionally avoided nominations for senior positions such as chief of police or the military.

But Gantz’s office said Sunday that a legal opinion formulated by the defense establishment’s top law expert was sent to Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara, arguing that it was possible to continue the process of appointing the next IDF chief of staff even during the election season.

Gantz’s office said the legal opinion from Military Attorney General Itai Ofir was accompanied by a classified IDF operational summary and a classified political summary “regarding the security and political challenges Israel is currently facing.”

Baharav-Miara had earlier said that Gantz would need to present an “essential need” to justify the appointment.

Likud MK Yoav Kisch threatened to replace Baharav-Miara if she allows the appointment to be made, assuming his party manages to form a new government after the November elections.

“If she does so, she will be replaced immediately when we return to power,” he said on Twitter.

Justice Minister Gideon Sa’ar called Kisch’s threat “gangsterism,” in a one-word tweet.

The candidates named by Gantz last month were Eyal Zamir, a former IDF deputy chief of staff currently serving as a research fellow at a think tank in Washington; Herzi Halevi, the current deputy chief of staff; and Yoel Strick, a former commander of the military’s Ground Forces, also serving as a research fellow at another think tank in Washington.

(Left to right) Major Generals Eyal Zamir, Herzi Halevi, and Yoel Strick are seen in official, undated photographs. (Israel Defense Forces)

By law, candidates for chief of staff, as well as other senior positions such as police commissioner and Bank of Israel governor, must be vetted by the Senior Appointments Advisory Committee. After that, a nominee is confirmed in a cabinet vote.

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