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d-20268House OversightOther

Former Israeli officer recounts Yitzhak Rabin’s 1987 chief‑of‑staff selection and his own resignation

The passage provides a personal recollection of internal military appointments involving Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, but it contains no allegations of misconduct, financial transactions, or illegal The author was a candidate for chief of staff (ramatkal) in 1987. Yitzhak Rabin chose Dan Shomron for the role and offered the author a deputy position. The author declined and decided to leave the m

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #028071
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage provides a personal recollection of internal military appointments involving Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, but it contains no allegations of misconduct, financial transactions, or illegal The author was a candidate for chief of staff (ramatkal) in 1987. Yitzhak Rabin chose Dan Shomron for the role and offered the author a deputy position. The author declined and decided to leave the m

Tags

chief-of-staffcareer-decisionyitzhak-rabindefense-leadershippolitical-appointmentisraeli-militarypolitical-appointmentshouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
There was another, slightly less noble, reason I wanted to set the record straight with Rabin. Though only gradually did I admit this even to myself, I realized that my experience in a regional command had ticked the one missing box in the CV of our top generals, meaning that I might indeed be a candidate to succeed Moshe Vechetzi as chief of staff. At first, I resisted taking the prospect too seriously. The job of ramatkal not only carried responsibility for overall command of the armed forces. Since our country still faced multiple security threats, the chief of staff was, along with Prime Minister and Defence Minister, among the most important, influential and visible positions in Israeli public life. Yet as the April 1987 date for the changeover drew nearer, it was difficult not to think about it. Not only was I apparently under consideration. To judge from media reports, and officers’ smalltalk, it appeared that Rabin had whittled down the possibilities to two. One was Dan Shomron, and I was the other. Still, it was only when Rabin phoned me early in 1987 that I knew it was true — and that I would not be getting the top job. “Ehud,” he said, “I wanted you to know I’ve decided on Dan to be the next ramatkal. I want you to be his deputy.” I can’t say I was surprised he’d chosen Dan. It wasn’t just that he was more experienced, or even that, since he was older, missing out on the top job this time would probably mean missing out for good. Yitzhak had always valued Dan’s directness and honesty, his courage and record of service. Above all, ’'d long sensed that he felt a special debt to Dan: for Entebbe. At a time when so much could have gone wrong, it was Dan who had taken a firm, confident, successful hold on the operation. Still, I was now 45. For me no less than for Dan, I knew that if I was passed over as chief of staff, there was no guarantee I’d be chosen the next time. “I respect your decision,” I told Rabin. “And I have no doubt Dan will be a good — a very good — chief-of-staff.” But I had to consider my own future. “Even though I’m grateful for the offer of deputy,” I said. “I think it’s better for me to leave. To open up a new chapter, and do something else in life.” Rabin said he couldn’t accept that. “Come see me,” he said. “Now.” When I got to Jerusalem, I emphasized again that I had no doubt Dan would lead the armed forces well. But I said my decision to leave the military wasn’t a mere whim. I had been thinking about my own future and my family’s. We had three young daughters. A few months earlier, we had moved home again, into a wide, one-story rambler with a big yard out back. It was in a new town called Kochav Yair, just inside Israel’s pre-1967 border with the West Bank, and it struck me 223

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