Tuesday Aug 11, 2009

Candidly Speaking: Sack Consul General Nadav Tamir

Posted by Isi Leibler
Comments: 15
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Boston Consul General Nadav Tamir may be the most talented diplomat in the foreign ministry. He should nevertheless be dismissed forthwith, or at the very least carpeted and downgraded.

Even if the policy of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu was flawed, Tamir's outburst was inexcusable. A diplomat is appointed to serve the government elected by the people. If he feels that the policies he is obliged to present are so diametrically counter to his beliefs that he must publicly express his opposition, he has the choice of resigning and launching a political campaign against the government. Unfortunately Tamir acted as though he could have his cake and eat it too.

The role of a diplomat includes conveying - through discrete, appropriate channels - evaluations of the political situation in his region. Clearly the role of a local consul general is not to distribute memoranda providing his personal assessment of the government policies at the national level. That is the province of an ambassador (to whom Tamir should report) who would ensure that if appropriate, such reviews or assessments are channeled to the appropriate authority in Jerusalem.

But Tamir bypassed the ambassador and distributed his memo to a wide distribution list.

Were the Foreign Ministry to be transformed into an arena in which individual diplomats could freely and widely promote and distribute their political views or agendas it would become totally dysfunctional.

Tamir's behavior has no bearing on his political outlook or the specific issues involved. As a civil servant, he breached the ultimate red line. No Foreign Ministry or State Department in any country would tolerate such behavior. Just imagine a United States Consul, without the approval of his Ambassador, distributing a memorandum containing wide-ranging criticisms of President Barack Obama's Middle East policies and circulating such a document throughout the State Department. He would undoubtedly be terminated.

The Boston Jewish community leaders who are defending their consul general are doing everyone, including themselves, a disservice. Tamir's abilities and track record has absolutely no bearing on this matter. What is at stake is the clear obligation of a civil servant, especially a diplomat, to recognize that his role is limited to representing his government. His irresponsibility is magnified by the fact that as he is a local diplomat, a consul general, giving national evaluations is totally beyond his area of responsibility. Even if is his evaluations were entirely correct, he was operating beyond his jurisdiction.

The call by the Israeli left-wing media to transform Tamir, an irresponsible junior diplomat, into a martyr for "daring to tell the truth" combines an ideological agenda with an extension of efforts to discredit Foreign Minister Lieberman. There is little doubt as to how the late prime minister Yitzhak Rabin and then-foreign minister Shimon Peres would have responded if a consul of Tamir's caliber had circulated such a memorandum critical of the impact of the Oslo Accords. No government would tolerate such behavior.

The Foreign Ministry has regrettably not performed as well as one would have hoped in recent years. Today, in the midst of enormously challenging times, when the war of ideas has assumed a crucial role, the Foreign Ministry cannot tolerate diplomats who breach their public service obligations and feel they are entitled to indulge in personal diplomacy and political agendas. This must apply to all governments irrespective of political orientation.

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1  |   Marsha in NJ, USA, Tuesday Aug 11, 2009
I agree wholeheartedly. I diplomat is like a soldier, and what the consul did was disobey orders as well as bite the hand that feeds him. He should be recalled.
2  |   John -London, UK, Wednesday Aug 12, 2009
Boston Consul General Nadav Tamir must go. Such unprofessional behaviour cannot be tolerated.
3  |   David Naor, Herzliya, Israel, Wednesday Aug 12, 2009
This is a ridiculous call. The last thing we want is a contingent of Israeli yes-men diplomats who are intimidated against voicing opposing views. Different views should be encouraged, not suppressed. Israel's diplomats should present the official line in public, but offer their personal opinions in private. Nadav Tamir voiced his opinion in a private memo that someone in the Foreign Ministry decided to make public (and THAT is what should be deplored). We do not need yes-men in the Foreign Ministry or in any other ministry. The call to sack Tamir is extremely ill-advised - to say the least!
4  |   Jack, Jacksonville, Florida, Wednesday Aug 12, 2009
Is is amusing to watch you right-wing Israelis rant against TAMIR as a traitor who should be punished because he supposedly leaked a classified memo he wrote to his Gov’t. Yet you are the same people who rant that Jonathan Pollard is an Israeli hero who should be a free man. “ After all, he only stole US classified documents to pass to an allied nation.” And every Israeli claims he passed only info essential for Israel’s protection. You don’t know what he passed. He passed almost one million documents . He also tried to sell US classified documents to South Africa and Pakistan. Great ally.
5  |   moron galut, Thursday Aug 13, 2009
it is weakness that he was not recalled immediately-that's what would happen in chicago!
6  |   Minuteman, Friday Aug 14, 2009
Boston Consul General Nadav Tamir is a disgrace to Israel and must go promptly. To #4, Jack-Jonathan Polard is in Jail for over 20-yrs paying for his missdeads. Since you Jack knows so well of Polard passing information to South africa and Pakistan, perhaps you were connected to Polard and youare the Link the FBI is looking for. As a leftist Spy master familiar with Polard case you are object the FBI must review.
7  |   Claudia, Tampa, FL USA, Friday Aug 14, 2009
It is not amusing or smart for Jack to compare apples and oranges. Perhaps the elected Israeli government does not have the same discretion as the US where the PM determines his or her own foreign ministry representatives reflecting the administrations policies? Tamir certainly should be recalled. A diplomat needs to learn that even private memos don't stay private, so don't write it down dummy.
8  |   Andras, London, Saturday Aug 15, 2009
I could not understand from the start, how this consul was able to survive at his post. Is Israel a country, or only a discussion forum? As for the reactions: the most important characteristic of a leftwinger is that of a person who is intellectually dishonest.
9  |   Jack, Jacksonville, Florida, Saturday Aug 15, 2009
#6, Pollard is in jail for life. The statement was he TRIED to sell to S.Africa and Pakistan. As allies, they told us.He applied for a job at CIA but was rejected for drug use. Mr X, the person who directed Pollard what docs to steal, is still unidentified. So there is still another Israeli agent out there. To # 6, I am a retired CIA officer and know something about the case To # 6 and #7, you both miss the point. It is not amusing for Israelis to consider Pollard a hero. He is a traitor and an enemy of the US, and so is everyone who thinks he deserves praise.
10  |   David Zohar, Jerusalem, Sunday Aug 16, 2009
Tamir was just doing his job. Reactions in the style of "shoot the messenger" are regrettable. Distribution of cables is NOT the job of sender but that of the Communications dept of MFA that decides who may read material. If finger-pointing is needed(doubtful) that is the address. Israel needs diplomats with integrity and Tamir passes with flying colours. From: Former Israeli diplomat.
11  |   Jose, Scotland, Monday Aug 17, 2009
This is not something Leibler should interfere with. This is a lesson he could have learnt from his failure to politicise the last organisation that threw him out. He needn't simply content himself with being the Post's resident grumbler, and he needn't address himself solely to the Likud choir. Why not use his experience of the world beyond Israel to explain to Post readers things they don't already know?
12  |   Ora, Jerusalem, Monday Aug 17, 2009
Agreed!
13  |   John Novak Galt, Ca USA, Tuesday Aug 18, 2009
I think that anyone who feels strongly on a subject SHOULD speak out. Granted, he should have followed proper channels but one mistake does not make him disposable. He no doubt was brought on the red carpet and informed of his mistake. The case should be over instead of continued brow beating let it die and return him to his job unless HE doesn't want it back. In the Army I saw good men who made a mistake, reamed when just a talking to would have been sufficent. John
14  |   Ken Besig Kiryat Arba Israel, Wednesday Sep 09, 2009
As long as Israel speaks with two, three, or more voices abroad, we will continue to confuse our supporters and satisfy our enemies. This has become a serious problem and is even worse when our own professional diplomats don't have the discipline to toe their own governments line. The British used to say a diplomat is an honest man sent abroad to lie for his country and they have a point. If Tamir cannot do his job properly, it is the responsibility of our government to fire him and replace him with someone who can.
15  |   joe new york, Thursday Nov 19, 2009
leave the guy alone...........Israelis against everything............they ok never agreement or considaration,most have no heart
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Candidly Speaking Isi Leibler, now resident in Jerusalem, is a veteran Diaspora Jewish leader and prolific commentator on Jewish and Israeli affairs.

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