Israeli police issues arrest warrant against former Netanyahu aide

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses lawmakers in the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, in Jerusalem. (AP/File)
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Updated 12 January 2026
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Israeli police issues arrest warrant against former Netanyahu aide

  • The Bild affair involved the leaking of classified intelligence from the Israeli military to the German tabloid Bild in September 2024

JERUSALEM: Israeli police issued an arrest warrant for a former aide to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday, accusing him of being implicated in two affairs involving the premier’s office.
Israel Einhorn, a former campaign adviser to Netanyahu who now lives in Serbia, appeared on a list of people whom the police suspect of involvement in the so-called “Bild affair” and are prevented from communicating with the prime minister’s office.
Next to Einhorn’s name a line was added saying there is a “pending arrest warrant against him,” according to a document submitted to the court.
“We can confirm the warrant,” a police spokesman told AFP.
In a post on his personal Facebook page, Netanyahu said the arrest warrant showed he was being targeted via his former aides.
“They can’t beat me in elections, so they start a lawsuit, the lawsuit falls apart so they bring in my advisers one after the other to try to blackmail them,” he said in a video message in Hebrew.
The Bild affair involved the leaking of classified intelligence from the Israeli military to the German tabloid Bild in September 2024. Two other Netanyahu aides were arrested and indicted for the leak.
The document aimed to prove that Hamas was not interested in a ceasefire deal, and to support Netanyahu’s claim that the hostages captured by Palestinian militants in their October 7, 2023 attack on Israel could only be released through military pressure rather than negotiations.
Einhorn has not returned to Israel since the investigation was opened, but he was questioned by Israeli investigators in Serbia last year.
He is also a suspect in the so-called “Qatargate” scandal, in which he and other close associates of Netanyahu are suspected of being recruited by Qatar to promote the Gulf country’s image in Israel.
Qatar hosts senior Hamas leaders and has played a mediating role between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist movement during the war in Gaza.
It also sent millions of dollars in cash to Gaza every month between 2018 and October 2023 to pay Hamas’s civil servants and for cash handouts to Gazan families.
The news of the warrant came after the police on Sunday detained a current senior aide to Netanyahu suspected of obstructing an investigation, with local media reporting that it was the premier’s chief of staff Tzachi Braverman.
Another former Netanyahu aide, Eli Feldstein, recently said during a televised interview that Braverman offered to “shut down” an army investigation into the Bild affair.
Feldstein himself is on trial for his alleged involvement in both the Bild leak and Qatargate.
In the same interview, Feldstein said Netanyahu was aware of the leak and was in favor of using the document to drum up public support for the war.
Israeli media reported on Monday that Braverman, picked to become Israel’s next ambassador to the UK, was barred from leaving the country for 30 days, and from being in contact with the Prime Minister’s office for 15 days.
AFP contacted the police and Braverman’s lawyer to confirm the bans but did not immediately receive a response.


Israeli settler leader lauds Jewish prayer at contested West Bank tomb

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Israeli settler leader lauds Jewish prayer at contested West Bank tomb

  • The entry of Jewish pilgrims often sparks clashes with Palestinian
  • Thursday’s prayer was exceptional as worshippers performed the Jewish morning service known as the Shacharit

NABLUS, Palestinian Territories: Around 1,500 Israeli Jews prayed at a contested tomb in the occupied West Bank city of Nablus on Thursday morning, and a settler leader hailed an “important step” toward establishing Israeli sovereignty over the site.
Jews believe Joseph’s Tomb in the north of the Palestinian territory is the burial site of the Biblical patriarch Joseph. Muslims consider it the burial place of a local religious figure.
The entry of Jewish pilgrims often sparks clashes with Palestinians, who claim the visits are a provocation.
Thursday’s prayer was exceptional as worshippers performed the Jewish morning service known as the Shacharit, which is celebrated after sunrise.
For a quarter of a decade, Israeli authorities have only allowed Jews to come and pray at the site at night.
“This is a significant and important step toward... ensuring the full return of the people of Israel and the State of Israel to this holy place,” said Yossi Dagan, the head of the Shomron regional council which administers Israeli settlements in the northern West Bank.
“For the first time in 25 years, Jews prayed in broad daylight at Joseph’s Tomb,” the council said in a statement.
The tomb lies within the built up area of Nablus in the West Bank’s Area A, which under the Oslo Accords signed in the 1990s falls under the administration of the Palestinian Authority.
Since the Israeli military vacated the site in 2000, Jewish pilgrims can only visit in groups escorted by troops.
AFP footage from the site on Thursday morning showed crowds of Jewish pilgrims praying, some wearing small leather boxes called tefillin, containing religious verses, on their heads.
The Israeli army has long supervised the entry of ultra-Orthodox Jews for a nighttime prayer on the first day of each month of the Hebrew calendar.
But Israeli media reported that, in December, Defense Minister Israel Katz had issued directives to the military to allow more visits to the tomb and not only at night.
Previously, buses of visitors escorted by the army had to leave the site by 4:00 am at the latest.
An AFP journalist at the scene said around 25 full buses arrived during the night carrying ultra-nationalists from Israeli settlements in the West Bank, as well as ultra-Orthodox Jews from settlements and from inside Israel.
The buses departed at 7:00 am, escorted by military vehicles, the journalist said.
Israel has occupied the West Bank since 1967 and Israeli settlements there are considered illegal under international law.
An Israeli military spokesperson told AFP that “all was done according to the orders of the political echelon, not an army initiative.”
“The political echelon decided to extend the opening hours and (the military) is subordinate to their instructions.”