Outgoing Mossad Chief Says Netanyahu Aides’ Qatar Ties Did Not Harm National Security
David Barnea, the outgoing head of Israel’s Mossad, said in conversations ahead of his departure that connections between aides in Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu’s office and Qatar did not compromise Israel’s security. The remarks, first reported by Haaretz, were shared in discussions he held with various figures as he prepared to leave his position.
According to reporting by Gidi Weitz, Barnea clarified in those conversations that he was not addressing potential criminal aspects of the case, which fall outside his expertise. However, based on his role, he said he did not identify any damage to negotiations for the release of hostages or any broader security harm stemming from the work carried out by Netanyahu’s associates on behalf of Qatar.
The report noted that Barnea’s position sharply conflicts with that of other senior figures in Israel’s security establishment, most notably former Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar. In an affidavit submitted to Israel’s High Court of Justice, Bar wrote that the affair “raises the gravest suspicions of serious harm to national security, particularly regarding damage to hostage negotiations, strengthening Hamas, and harming Israel-Egypt relations.”
At the center of the so-called “Qatar-gate” affair are Yonatan Urich, Eli Feldstein, and Yisrael Einhorn, a strategist who previously worked on Likud campaigns and is known to be close to Urich.
Investigators suspect that Urich and Feldstein were simultaneously working for Qatar while serving in the Prime Minister’s Office, allegedly in coordination with Einhorn. According to materials from the investigation, their objective was to distance Qatar from accusations of financing Hamas and to portray it as the preferred intermediary for a hostage deal.
To advance that effort, the suspects are believed to have circulated pro-Qatar messaging within Israeli media outlets while criticizing Egypt, presenting those narratives as originating from security and diplomatic sources.
{Matzav.com}