Netanyahu Shows Dramatic Change in Stance in Favor of Ukraine

Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel's former prime minister and current leader of the Likud party, speaks before supporters during a campaign rally in the northern city of Migdal HaEmek on October 23, 2022, ahead of the November general elections. (AFP)
Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel's former prime minister and current leader of the Likud party, speaks before supporters during a campaign rally in the northern city of Migdal HaEmek on October 23, 2022, ahead of the November general elections. (AFP)
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Netanyahu Shows Dramatic Change in Stance in Favor of Ukraine

Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel's former prime minister and current leader of the Likud party, speaks before supporters during a campaign rally in the northern city of Migdal HaEmek on October 23, 2022, ahead of the November general elections. (AFP)
Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel's former prime minister and current leader of the Likud party, speaks before supporters during a campaign rally in the northern city of Migdal HaEmek on October 23, 2022, ahead of the November general elections. (AFP)

Israeli opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu has expressed readiness to look into supplying Kyiv with defense weapons, marking a shift from his previous support for Russia.

If Netanyahu returns to power in next month’s elections, he will “look into” whether Israel will supply weapons to Ukraine and expects he may be asked to mediate negotiations between Ukraine and Russia, he told USA TODAY in an exclusive interview.

“If I become prime minister, that question (of mediation) presumably will come up again,” he said.

Netanhayu said Russian President Vladimir Putin is “guided by his vision of reconstituting a great Russian realm.”

“And I hope he's having second thoughts about it,” he said. “But I don't want to play psychologist. I want to be in the position of being prime minister, getting all the information, then making decisions on what and if we do anything in this conflict beyond what has been done so far.”

Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Yair Lapid warned that military collaboration between Russia and Iran in Ukraine poses a global danger.

“We naturally think that relations between Russia and Iran are a serious problem not only for Israel, but also for Ukraine, Europe and the whole world.”

“Iran is a dangerous terrorist state, and the fact that Russia does business with it puts the whole world in danger,” he added in an interview with Russian-language RTVI.

Lapid said it is “absolutely unacceptable” that Tehran has handed Moscow drones used in its attacks.

Senior advisor to the Ukrainian president Mikhail Podolyak slammed on Thursday Israel’s decision not to supply Ukraine with air defense systems.

Podolyak noted his disappointment, and with-it Ukraine's disappointment, in the decision as he told reporters that “Israel chose to be on the wrong side of history.”



Israeli Spy Chief Hands Court Scathing Rebuke of Netanyahu Bid to Sack Him

Israeli Security Agency director Ronen Bar attends a memorial ceremony of the Hamas attack on October 7 last year -. GIL COHEN-MAGEN/Pool via REUTERS/File
Israeli Security Agency director Ronen Bar attends a memorial ceremony of the Hamas attack on October 7 last year -. GIL COHEN-MAGEN/Pool via REUTERS/File
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Israeli Spy Chief Hands Court Scathing Rebuke of Netanyahu Bid to Sack Him

Israeli Security Agency director Ronen Bar attends a memorial ceremony of the Hamas attack on October 7 last year -. GIL COHEN-MAGEN/Pool via REUTERS/File
Israeli Security Agency director Ronen Bar attends a memorial ceremony of the Hamas attack on October 7 last year -. GIL COHEN-MAGEN/Pool via REUTERS/File

The head of Israel's domestic intelligence service said on Monday that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's bid to sack him followed his refusal to fulfil requests that included spying on Israeli protesters and disrupting the leader's corruption trial.

In an affidavit submitted to the Supreme Court, the head of Shin Bet, Ronen Bar, said that Netanyahu's March move to dismiss him was not based on professional grounds but was prompted by unmet expectations of personal loyalty to the prime minister.

In response, Netanyahu's office said it would soon deliver a detailed refute of Bar's affidavit, which it called "false". Netanyahu's move to sack Bar fuelled protests in Israel and was suspended by the Supreme Court, after political watchdogs and opposition lawmakers argued the dismissal was unlawful. Critics say that the government is undermining key state institutions and endangering the foundations of Israeli democracy. Netanyahu's Likud party has accused Bar of acting against the prime minister and turning parts of the Shin Bet service into "a private militia of the Deep State." Israel's government has backed Netanyahu, who said that he had lost confidence in Bar over the agency's failure to prevent the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack on Israel, a security failure that had led to the country's deadliest day, Reuters reported.

But in the unclassified part of his affidavit, Bar argued that the quest to oust him began more than a year after the attack. He cited a series of events between November 2024 and February 2025, which he said appeared to prompt the prime minister's moves against him.

Bar also said he refused to sign off on a security request aimed at preventing continuous testimony by Netanyahu at his corruption trial. Netanyahu, who denies any wrongdoing, began testifying in his long-running court case in December.