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Lavon Affair - Political aftermath |  | Lavon Affair - Political aftermath: Encyclopedia II - Lavon Affair - Political aftermath |  | In meetings with prime minister Moshe Sharett, secretary of defense Pinhas Lavon denied any knowledge of the operation. When intelligence chief Gibli contradicted Lavon, Sharrett commissioned a board of inquiry consisting of Israeli Supreme Court Justice Isaac Olshan and the first chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces, Yaakov Dori that was unable to find conclusive evidence that Lavon had authorized the operation. Lavon tried to fix the blame on Shimon Peres, who was the secretary general of the defense ministry, and Glibi for insubord ...
See also:Lavon Affair, Lavon Affair - Operation Suzannah, Lavon Affair - Political aftermath, Lavon Affair - Legacy, Lavon Affair - Notes |  | | Lavon Affair, Lavon Affair - Legacy, Lavon Affair - Notes, Lavon Affair - Operation Suzannah, Lavon Affair - Political aftermath, History of Israel (under "Lavon affair"), Moshe Marzouk |  | |
|  |  | Lavon Affair: Encyclopedia II - Lavon Affair - Political aftermath
Lavon Affair - Political aftermath
In meetings with prime minister Moshe Sharett, secretary of defense Pinhas Lavon denied any knowledge of the operation. When intelligence chief Gibli contradicted Lavon, Sharrett commissioned a board of inquiry consisting of Israeli Supreme Court Justice Isaac Olshan and the first chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces, Yaakov Dori that was unable to find conclusive evidence that Lavon had authorized the operation. Lavon tried to fix the blame on Shimon Peres, who was the secretary general of the defense ministry, and Glibi for insubordination and criminal negligence. Sharett resolved the dilemma by siding with Peres, after which Lavon resigned. Former prime minister David Ben-Gurion succeeded Lavon as minister of defense.
In April of 1960, a review of minutes from the inquiry found inconsistencies and possibly a fraudulent document in Gilbi's original testimony that seemed to support Lavon's account of events. During this time, it also came to light that Seidenberg (the Israeli agent running Operation Suzannah in Egypt), had committed perjury during the original inquiry. Seidenberg was also suspected of betraying the group to Egyptian authorities; though the charges were never proven, he was eventually sentenced to a jail term of 10 years. Ben-Gurion scheduled closed hearings with a new board of inquiry chaired by Chaim Cohen, a supreme court justice.
This inquiry found that the perjury indeed had been committed, and that Lavon had not authorized the operation. Sharett and Levi Eshkol tried to issue a statement that would placate both Lavon and those who had opposed him. Ben-Gurion refused to accept the compromise and viewed it as a divisive play within the Mapai party. After another investigative committee sided with the Cohen inquiry, Ben-Gurion resigned from his post as defense minister. This led to the expulsion of Lavon from the Histadrut labor union and an early call for new elections which changed the political structure in Israel.
It should be noted that the specifics of Operation Suzannah were not public at the time of the political upheaval.
Other related archives1947 UN Plan, 1948 War, 1949 Armistice, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1960, 1st Intifada, 2nd Intifada, Alexandria, Aliyah, Aman, Anglo-Egyptian Treaty of 1936, Arab League, Archaeology, Attrition War, Austerity, Balfour, Barrier, British, Cairo, Cities, Companies, Convention of Constantinople, Courts, David Ben-Gurion, Dead Sea, Disengagement, Districts, Egypt, Eichmann Trial, Elections, Haifa, Hebrew, Herzl, Histadrut, History of Israel, Independence, Intl. Law, Israel, Israel Defense Forces, Israeli Arabs, Israeli Supreme Court, Israelis, Isser Harel, January 27, Jerusalem, Jerusalem Law, Jordan, Judaism, Judea, July 14, July 2, Kibbutz, Knesset, Land of Israel, Law of Return, Lebanon, Lebanon War, Levi Eshkol, Literature, Ma'abarot, Magav, Mandate, Mapai, Mediterranean, Moshe Marzouk, Moshe Sharett, Mossad, Music, Nasser, Negev, Oslo, PM, Parties, Peace camp, Peace process, Pinhas Lavon, Police, Portal:Israel, President, Red Sea, Samaria, Sayeret, Science & Tech., Sea of Galilee, Shabak, Shimon Peres, Six-Day War, Suez Canal, Suez Crisis, Suez War, Supreme Court, Tel Aviv, Timeline, Tourism, Transportation, UN, United Kingdom, United States, Universities, YAMAM, Yaakov Dori, Yom Kippur War, Zionism, agent provocateurs, covert operation, covert operations, criminal negligence, cryptically, detention camps, false flag, insubordination, nitroglycerine, political, post office, prisons, scandal
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Political aftermath", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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