1. Bar claims he activated the system on the night of October 7, but he failed to alert the Prime Minister and Defense Minister. Had he done so, “the massacre could have been prevented.”
He states he ordered the PM’s Military Secretary to be alerted at 05:15, but records show the call was only made at 06:13—minutes before the Hamas attack—despite having intelligence for over 3 hours. This alone, the statement says, is a disgraceful failure warranting dismissal.
2. Bar’s affidavit confirms that talks of his dismissal began as early as November 2024—contradicting the Attorney General’s claim that it came only in February after the Qatar investigation began.
“The dismissal wasn’t meant to prevent the investigation; rather, the investigation was launched to stop the dismissal.”
4. Bar failed to address incitement against senior officials, including death threats against the Prime Minister and ministers. He also failed to prevent violent protesters from launching flares at the PM’s residence in Caesarea, nearly killing a security guard and setting the home on fire.
The government repeatedly demanded equal law enforcement against such incitement—not illegal actions. Despite this, Bar only reported Shin Bet activity without actual results.
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