Strategic affairs minister accuses military of
"resorting to shifty manipulation" over budget • Defense official: My
condolences to anyone who is forced to listen to Steinitz's drivel •
Meanwhile, Israeli Air Force grounds all nonessential flights.
Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon
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Photo credit: Dudi Vaaknin |
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The ongoing dispute about the defense
establishment's demand for additional budgets turned into a somewhat
personal row between Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon and International
Relations, Intelligence and Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz,
who exchanged strongly worded statements Saturday, against the backdrop
of the Israeli Air Force's decision to suspend all nonessential flights
starting Sunday.
Speaking at a cultural event in Beersheba on
Saturday, Steinitz accused the defense establishment of "sometimes
resorting to shifty manipulation to sway public opinion. There seems to
be some deliberate misleading of the government, the Knesset and the
public."
The former chairman of the Knesset's Foreign
Affairs and Defense Committee went on to say that "in a democracy the
military shouldn't manipulate the government. There are times when the
military chooses to schedule a certain number of training sessions
across a limited period of time, and immediately afterwards it announced
its intentions to cancel training because the budget is insufficient --
that's manipulation."
Steinitz further warned that "it's not always
in Israel's best interest to let the enemy know, via the media, that
it's canceling military training."
Israel Defense Forces Chief of Staff Lt. Gen.
Benny Gantz has already ordered the suspension of training sessions for
the reserve forces, and last week he and Ya'alon -- citing severe budget
constraints -- ordered the IAF to ground all nonessential and training
flights, starting June 1. The IAF was also ordered to prioritize and
pare down some of its operational flights.
The measure will exclude the IAF's flight
school, but stands to affect training flights involving cargo planes and
Sikorsky CH-53 Sea Stallion and Apache helicopters.
The defense establishment has been warning for
weeks that the military's funds were dwindling rapidly and that come
June, various nonessential and essential configurations would have to be
temporarily decommissioned.
The Defense Ministry said that the IDF needs
an addition of 750 million shekels ($216 million) to its budget to
minimally sustain the armed forces' competence, on top of funds detailed
in previous agreements the Finance Ministry has defaulted on, amounting
to NIS 2.15 billion ($619 million).
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is expected to rule on the defense establishment's budget demands in the next few days.
Meanwhile, a senior defense official dismissed
Steinitz's comments, saying, "A weekend without Steinitz appearing in
some cultural event somewhere isn't really a weekend. My condolences to
anyone who was forced to listen to his drivel.
"If memory serves, Yuval Steinitz was very
eager to be the defense minister, but enough is enough. It's more than
likely that if he was the defense minister he would be saying the
complete opposite. He would be better off reviewing the ridiculous
number of overseas trips he has taken, before preaching frugality to
others."
An associate of Steinitz's retorted, "The defense
minister should serve as an example and not use a military helicopter to
arrive at family functions."
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