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Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, 1949

The Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee ( Hebrew: ועדת חוץ וביטחון) is a permanent Knesset committee which oversees key Foreign and Defense issues of the State of Israel, including the drafting of legislation, supervision over related government ministries and the approval of their budgets. It is regarded as one of two most important Knesset committees (the other being the Finance Committee).

Activity

The majority of the committee's activity takes place in its subcommittees, while the committee as a whole largely serves as a media stage for top defense decision makers. The committee approves extensive subcommittee-drafted delegated legislation in areas of defense, emergency preparedness, emergency recruitment of human resources, Shabak special operations, allocation of emergency equipment, the deployment of the Home Front, and other security and intelligence related tasks. The committee is presented with summaries by the top decision makers in areas of foreign affairs, defense, and intelligence, including by the Prime Minister, the Foreign Affairs Minister, the Minister of Defense, and the heads of Mossad, Shabak, and Aman. The committee's chair, who reports on much of the country's defense activities, is considered one of the most senior figures in the Security Forces and subsequently, it is one of the most sought after positions in the Knesset. The committee's plenary sessions are secret and the meetings of some of its subcommittees are top secret. Consequently, its protocols remain largely unpublished. After repeated instances in which the contents of meetings were leaked, its members became obliged to sign a secrecy affidavit. The media has limited access to committee meetings (at selected occasions) and no access to that of its subcommittees. The government is obligated to bring to the approval of the committee various emergency activities, including ones related to or that are likely to result in war. The committee also undertakes personal hearings for key defense and State decision makers as well as hearings for appreciable defense projects.

During 2020, the Committee took an active role in shaping the legal framework authorizing Shabak to engage in location tracking of coronavirus carriers. [1] Eventually, the committee drafted "the Law on Authorization to Assist in the National Effort to Reduce the Spread of the Novel Coronavirus and to Promote the Use of Civilian Technology to Trace Those Who Have Been in Close Contact with Patients (Temporary Order), 5780-2020", which was enacted by the Knesset on July 21, 2020. [2] Under its provisions, the committee may veto a government declaration to use Shabak for coronavirus contact tracing. [3]

Chairmen

Portrait Chairman Took office Left office Party Ref.
Meir Argov
Argov, Meir Meir Argov
(1905–1963)
19491963  Mapai
David Hacohen
Hacohen, David David Hacohen
(1898–1984)
19631969  Alignment
Haim Yosef Zadok
Zadok, Haim Yosef Haim Yosef Zadok
(1913–2002)
19691974  Alignment
Yitzhak Navon
Navon, Yitzhak Yitzhak Navon
(1921–2015)
19741977  Alignment
Moshe Arens
Arens, Moshe Moshe Arens
(1925–2019)
19771982  Likud
Eliyahu Ben-Elissar
Ben-Elissar, Eliyahu Eliyahu Ben-Elissar
(1932–2000)
19821984  Likud
Abba Eban
Eban, Abba Abba Eban
(1915–2002)
19841988  Alignment
Eliyahu Ben-Elissar
Ben-Elissar, EliyahuEliyahu Ben-Elissar
(1932–2000)
19891992  Likud
Ori Orr
Orr, Ori Ori Orr
(born 1939)
19921995  Labor
Hagai Meirom
Merom, Hagai Hagai Meirom
(born 1946)
19951996  Labor
Uzi Landau
Landau, Uzi Uzi Landau
(born 1943)
19961999  Likud
Dan Meridor
Meridor, Dan Dan Meridor
(born 1947)
19992001  Center Party (Israel)
David Magen
Magen, David David Magen
(born 1945)
20012002  Likud
Haim Ramon
Ramon, Haim Haim Ramon
(born 1950)
20022003  Labor
Yuval Steinitz
Steinitz, Yuval Yuval Steinitz
(born 1958)
20032006  Likud
Tzachi Hanegbi
Hanegbi, Tzachi Tzachi Hanegbi
(born 1957)
20062010  Kadima
Shaul Mofaz
Mofaz, Shaul Shaul Mofaz
(born 1948)
20102012  Kadima
Roni Bar-On
Bar-On, ROni Roni Bar-On
(born 1948)
20122013  Kadima
Avigdor Lieberman
Lieberman, Avigdor Avigdor Lieberman
(born 1958)
20132013  Yisrael Beiteinu
Yuli Edelstein
Edelstein, Yuli Yuli Edelstein
(born 1958)
20132014  Likud
Ze'ev Elkin
Elkin, Ze'ev Ze'ev Elkin
(born 1971)
20142015  Likud
Yariv Levin
Levin, Yariv Yariv Levin
(born 1969)
20152015  Likud
Tzachi Hanegbi
Hanegbi, Tzachi Tzachi Hanegbi
(born 1957)
20152016  Likud
Avi Dichter
Dichter, Avi Avi Dichter
(born 1952)
20162019  Likud
Gabi Ashkenazi
Ashkenazi, Gabi Gabi Ashkenazi
(born 1954)
20192020  Blue and White
Zvi Hauser
Hauser, Zvi Zvi Hauser
(born 1968)
20202021  Derekh Eretz (political faction)
Orna Barbivai
Barbivai, Orna Orna Barbivai
(born 1962)
20212021  Yesh Atid
Ram Ben-Barak
Ben-Barak, Ram Ram Ben-Barak
(born 1958)
20212022  Yesh Atid
Yoav Gallant
Gallant, Yoav Yoav Gallant
(born 1958)
20222022  Likud [4]
Yuli Edelstein
Edelstein, YuliYuli Edelstein
(born 1958)
2023Incumbent  Likud [5]

Subcommittees

Overseen bodies

References

  1. ^ Cahane, Amir (30 November 2020). "Israel's SIGINT Oversight Ecosystem: COVID-19 Secret Service Location Tracking as a Test Case". University of New Hampshire Law Review – via SSRN.
  2. ^ " Knesset passes bill authorizing Shin Bet to assist Health Ministry in epidemiological investigations until January 20, 2021" Knesset News (July 21,2020)
  3. ^ Law on Authorization to Assist in the National Effort to Reduce the Spread of the Novel Coronavirus and to Promote the Use of Civilian Technology to Trace Those Who Have Been in Close Contact with Patients (Temporary Order), 5780-2020, Section 3A (July 1, 2020)
  4. ^ "Yoav Gallant appointed new Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee chief". The Jerusalem Post. 21 November 2022. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  5. ^ Ravid, Barak (21 March 2023). "U.S. slams new West Bank law, says it's a violation of Israeli commitments". Axios. Retrieved 28 March 2023.

External links