http://www.timesofisrael.com/former-mossad-chief-defends-decision-to-defy-netanyahu-on-iran/


Former Mossad chief defends decision to defy Netanyahu on Iran
The political echelon must listen to its security chiefs, says Meir Dagan, 
asserting that Tehran’s nuclear drive ‘can always be stopped’
By Aaron Kalman April 28, 2013, 11:07 pm 3 

 
Former Mossad chief Meir Dagan (photo credit: Kobi Gideon/Flash90)
Related Topics
  a.. Mossad 
  b.. Meir Dagan 
  c.. Benjamin Netanyahu

A former chief of Israel’s Mossad spy agency has come out against Prime 
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s policy of setting “red lines” for Iran’s nuclear 
program, saying that the Islamic Republic’s alleged effort to develop nuclear 
weapons can be countered at any time. 

In an interview with Channel 2′s investigative news program “Uvda,” Meir Dagan 
warned that by beating the drums of war, Netanyahu was putting Israel at risk 
of provoking Iran to strike preemptively. 

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Dagan alluded to a fateful meeting during which he, then-Shin Bet head Yuval 
Diskin, and then-chief of the General Staff Gabi Ashkenazi met with Prime 
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, then-defense minister Ehud Barak and other members 
of the cabinet in a Mossad club room to discuss the prospect of attacking Iran.

During the meeting, all three of the security chiefs reportedly defied 
Netanyahu and Barak’s order that the military prepare for a solo strike on 
Iran, and eventually swayed several key ministers to their side.

“I think that when a serious group from the security establishment shows up, 
and everyone has a similar opinion, the political echelon should listen,” Dagan 
said in the “Uvda” interview, which is slated to be aired in full on Monday. 
“I’m not sure that, in our history, there was ever a situation where the 
political echelon thought something and the entire professional echelon thought 
otherwise.”

But though there were big gaps in the approaches of various officials, “no one 
doubted the political echelon’s authority to make decisions,” he said. 

“As opposed to the stance of the prime minister, I think Iran’s [nuclear] 
armament can always be delayed,” added Dagan, who headed the Mossad for almost 
a decade. 

The very act of preparing the army for the possibility of launching a strike 
could cause the Iranians to ready their troops, he said, and “as a result you 
can enter an impossible reality in which everyone is preparing for war, while 
it’s possible no one wants it.”

During the 2010 meeting with their security chiefs, Dagan reportedly called the 
order to ready for war “illegal,” while Ashkenazi declared that an attack on 
Iran would be “a strategic mistake.”

 
Benjamin Netanyahu, right, and Ehud Barak at the Defense Ministry in 2012 
(photo credit: Ariel Hermoni/Defense Ministry/Flash90)

“This isn’t the sort of thing that you do unless you’re certain that you’ll end 
up launching an operation,” Ashkenazi was quoted as saying. “It’s like an 
accordion that makes music even if it is merely handled.”

Dagan, the report said, was even more ardent than the chief of staff in his 
dissent.

“You may end up going to war based on an illegal decision,” the former 
intelligence chief was quoted as saying. “Only the security cabinet is 
authorized to make such a decision.”

Later, Dagan would say that “the prime minister and the defense minister tried 
to steal a war — it was as simple as that.”


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