Israel’s Netanyahu Obsessed with Image, Court Told

Former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is surrounded by journalists and lawyers in a courtroom before testimony by star witness Nir Hefetz, a former aide, in Netanyahu's corruption trial at the District Court in east Jerusalem, November 22, 2021. (Reuters)
Former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is surrounded by journalists and lawyers in a courtroom before testimony by star witness Nir Hefetz, a former aide, in Netanyahu's corruption trial at the District Court in east Jerusalem, November 22, 2021. (Reuters)
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Israel’s Netanyahu Obsessed with Image, Court Told

Former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is surrounded by journalists and lawyers in a courtroom before testimony by star witness Nir Hefetz, a former aide, in Netanyahu's corruption trial at the District Court in east Jerusalem, November 22, 2021. (Reuters)
Former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is surrounded by journalists and lawyers in a courtroom before testimony by star witness Nir Hefetz, a former aide, in Netanyahu's corruption trial at the District Court in east Jerusalem, November 22, 2021. (Reuters)

Israel's former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu sought "total and complete" control over his media image, his ex-spokesman told the graft trial of the veteran leader on Monday.

"If we use the term 'control freak,' he is much more than that," said Nir Hefetz. "In everything relating to the media, he demands to know everything, down to the smallest detail."

The testimony of Hefetz, seen as a key prosecution witness in Israel's highest-profile trial, had been postponed from last week at the request of Netanyahu's legal team.

Netanyahu -- who was Israel's longest serving prime minister, including a record 12-year tenure from 2009 to 2021, and now head of the opposition -- has been charged with bribery, fraud and breach of trust.

The indictments collectively accuse him of accepting improper gifts and illegally trading regulatory favor with media moguls in exchange for positive coverage.

Hefetz said in his district court testimony that Netayahu's "control over everything relating to media matters and his social media channels could not be higher".

"Netanyahu spends at least as much as his time on media as he spends on security matters, including on matters an outsider would consider nonsense."

The session focused on Netanyahu allegedly granting favors to Shaul Elovitch, then-head of Israel's largest telecom company, Bezeq, in exchange for favorable coverage by its Walla news website.

Netanyahu is accused of offering regulatory benefits that could have been worth millions to the company in return for the politically advantageous coverage.

Hefetz said that in 2015, shortly before elections, Elovitch contacted him regularly to lobby for governmental approval of his group's merger with cable TV operator Yes, and to find out who would be the next communications minister.

"I think he (Elovitch) was thinking at the time: who knows who will win; so the Yes deal had to be signed first," Hefetz said.

Netanyahu left after the first few hours of testimony Monday after receiving permission from the court.



Poland’s Prime Minister Visits Defensive Fortifications on Border with Russia

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk attends a press conference following a meeting the Nordic and Baltic countries' leaders at the Swedish Prime Minister summer residence, Harpsund, south of Stockholm, Sweden, 27 November 2024. (EPA)
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk attends a press conference following a meeting the Nordic and Baltic countries' leaders at the Swedish Prime Minister summer residence, Harpsund, south of Stockholm, Sweden, 27 November 2024. (EPA)
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Poland’s Prime Minister Visits Defensive Fortifications on Border with Russia

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk attends a press conference following a meeting the Nordic and Baltic countries' leaders at the Swedish Prime Minister summer residence, Harpsund, south of Stockholm, Sweden, 27 November 2024. (EPA)
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk attends a press conference following a meeting the Nordic and Baltic countries' leaders at the Swedish Prime Minister summer residence, Harpsund, south of Stockholm, Sweden, 27 November 2024. (EPA)

Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk traveled Saturday to his country's border with the Russian region of Kaliningrad to inspect progress in the construction of military fortifications along the eastern frontier, calling it "an investment in peace."

Tusk’s visit comes a month before Poland is to take over the rotating presidency of the 27-member European Union. Polish officials say their priority is to urge Europeans to beef up defenses at a time of Russian aggression and with change coming soon in Washington. Some European leaders are concerned that the incoming administration of Donald Trump might be less committed to Europe’s defense.

Poland's government and army began building the system dubbed East Shield this year. It will eventually include approximately 800 kilometers (500 miles) along the Polish borders with Russia and Belarus, at a time when Western officials accuse Russia of waging hybrid attacks against the West that include sabotage, the weaponization of migration, disinformation and other hostile measures.

“The better the Polish border is guarded, the more difficult it is to access for those with bad intentions,” Tusk said at a news conference near the village of Dabrowka as he stood in front of concrete anti-tank barriers.

Poland has been at the mercy of aggressive neighbors over the past centuries and has become a leading European voice for security at a time when France and Germany are weakened by internal political problems. Poland aims to spend 4.7% of its gross domestic product on defense next year, making it one of NATO's leaders in defense spending.

Tusk's government estimates that the strategic military project will cost at least 10 billion zlotys ($2.5 billion). Poland’s borders with Russia, Belarus — as well as Ukraine — are the easternmost external borders of both the European Union and NATO.

Tusk said he expected the East Shield to eventually be expanded to protect the small Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

“Everything we are doing here — and we will also be doing this on the border with Belarus and Ukraine — is to deter and discourage a potential aggressor, which is why it is truly an investment in peace," Tusk said. “We will spend billions of zlotys on this, but right now the whole of Europe is observing these investments and our actions with great satisfaction and will support them if necessary.”

He said he wants Poles "to feel safer along the entire length of the eastern border.” Tusk also said the fortifications would include Poland's border with Ukraine, a close ally, but did not elaborate.

Along the frontier, anti-tank barriers known as “hedgehogs” will be integrated with natural barriers like ditches. Tusk said parts of the project are not visible to the naked eye, but it is nonetheless the largest project of its nature in Europe since the end of World War II.

The plans also include the construction of appropriate threat reconnaissance and detection systems, forward bases, logistics hubs, warehouses and the deployment of anti-drone systems, the state news agency PAP reported.