Israel war cabinet minister Benny Gantz quits Netanyahu’s government

Israeli war cabinet minister Benny Gantz said on Sunday his party was quitting the government after threatening last month to leave over the lack of post-war strategy for Gaza.

“[Benjamin] Netanyahu is preventing us from progressing to a real victory. That is why we are leaving the emergency government today with a heavy heart,” Gantz said in a televised address.

Flanked by Israeli flags, he said Netanyahu was failing in the war against Hamas Palestinian militants in Gaza.

Gantz called for early elections, saying “there should be elections that will eventually establish a government that will win the trust of the people and be able to face challenges.”

“I call on Netanyahu: set an agreed election date.”

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Israelis banned from the Maldives as island tourist hotspot voices opposition to Gaza war

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In a post on social media platform X, formerly Twitter, Netanyahu appealed to Gantz not to “abandon the battle”.

“Benny, this is not the time to abandon the battle – this is the time to join forces,” Netanyahu wrote.

Gantz said last month he would resign from the war cabinet if Netanyahu did not approve a post-war plan for Gaza by June 8.

But Gantz’s departure is not expected to bring down the government, a coalition including religious and ultranationalist parties

Gantz’s centrist National Union Party submitted a bill last week to dissolve the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, and hold an early election.

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Ramat Gan, Israel on Saturday. Photo: AFP

A former army chief and defence minister, Gantz had little political experience when he launched the centre-right National Union Party in 2019 with the explicit goal of ousting Netanyahu from power.

Five years later, the silver-haired Gantz is looking to ride a wave of mounting public outrage over Netanyahu’s failure to return hostages held in Gaza more than eight months after the war broke out.

The war began with the Palestinian militants’ October 7 attack on southern Israel which resulted in the deaths of 1,194 people, mostly civilians, according to an Agence France-Presse tally based on Israeli official figures.

Militants also abducted 251 hostages during their attack, 116 of whom are still held in Gaza, including 41 the army says are dead.

Days later, Gantz, who turned 65 on Sunday, joined a war cabinet chaired by Netanyahu and became a minister without portfolio in his rival’s administration, labelled the “Unity Government”.

“Israel above all,” Gantz, one of the main opposition leaders at the time, said on social media.

Gantz triggered the ire of Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party in March when he made an official visit to Washington.

He continued his political manoeuvring in the following weeks, calling for early legislative elections and issuing an ultimatum to Netanyahu: agree to a plan for post-war Gaza by June 8, or Gantz would quit the government.

Last month, his party said it had submitted a bill to dissolve parliament and hold an early election – in which it would have little chance of success against Netanyahu’s coalition.

Since his entry into politics, Gantz has fought several electoral battles against Netanyahu, without ever truly defeating him.

Early on, he tried to play up his defence background, releasing campaign videos in 2019 titled “only the strong survive” that highlighted military operations in Gaza.

He formed a power sharing alliance with Netanyahu in May 2020 as part of an effort to address the Covid-19 pandemic, but Netanyahu did not honour the deal.

That led to fresh polls in 2021, after which Gantz joined a coalition led by Yair Lapid.

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Gantz in Ramat Gan, Israel on Sunday. Photo: AP

“I hope to succeed in achieving unity, bringing as many people together as possible, freeing us from the political burden of Netanyahu,” Gantz told Agence France-Presse in 2022.

But his efforts failed and Netanyahu managed to form a coalition with the support of far-right parties.

Analysts said Gantz was unlikely to succeed in ousting Netanyahu even now.

“Gantz has gone down a lot in polls recently, because he’s perceived as too soft, too hesitant, too complacent towards Netanyahu,” political scientist Ilan Greilsammer told Agence France-Presse.

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Israelis march for hostage release and against the government during a protest in Tel Aviv, Israel on June 1. Photo: Bloomberg

The son of Romanian and Hungarian immigrants who survived the Holocaust, Gantz has tried to cultivate a hawkish political image.

He has called for Israeli military control over most of the West Bank, which has been occupied by the Israeli army since 1967, as well as the annexation of the Jordan Valley.

He joined the army aged 18, rising to the rank of general in 2001 and head of the army in 2011, when he led two wars against Hamas.

“He did not leave an indelible mark on the army but maintained an image of stability and honesty,” according to Amos Harel, a defence reporter at Israeli daily Haaretz.

Even as he sought to strike Palestinian groups responsible for anti-Israeli attacks, he simultaneously engaged in discussions to address “security and economic issues” with the Palestinian Authority, which has partial administrative authority in the West Bank.

In August 2022, as defence minister, he launched a three-day air and artillery operation against Islamic Jihad militants in Gaza.

In total, 49 Palestinians were killed, including fighters.

“It is a military success … We will not hesitate in the future to carry out other such operations,” he said at the time.

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