Netanyahu has sidestepped accountability for Hamas attack
A growing list of Israeli officials have accepted responsibility for failing to prevent Hamas' brutal attack on Israeli communities during the Oct. 7 incursion that triggered the current Israel-Hamas war. Conspicuously absent from that roll call is Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Following the horrific assault, which saw the deadliest day for Israelis since the country was established 75 years ago, Netanyahu has repeatedly sidestepped accountability. He has instead blamed others, in what critics say shows a leader thinking more about his own political survival than soothing and steering a traumatised nation.
“Netanyahu is fighting a personal battle of survival and that takes precedence over fighting Israel's war against Hamas,” said Netanyahu biographer and journalist Anshel Pfeffer. “As part of that battle, he's prepared to malign those who are now commanding Israel's army and intelligence services.”
Israel's top security brass, including the military chief of staff, the defence minister and the head of the domestic security agency Shin Bet, came forward and accepted responsibility for the blunder in the days after the attack.
Netanyahu, however, has not taken outright responsibility for the missteps that led up the horrific attack, despite serving as prime minister for 13 of the past 14 years. He says there will be time for investigations — after the war.