Now Gal Hirsch is the problem for all of us
Even though he failed in Lebanon, was denounced by the top of the police and stood trial, he was appointed to lead the issue of the abductees due to his legal partnership with Netanyahu.
From the beginning , the appointment of Brigadier General (Ret.) Gal Hirsch to the position in charge of the POWs and Missing Persons issue did not have the simple and comforting logic, the one that we all always look for, but especially in these difficult days. In fact, Hirsch is even less suitable for the important and sensitive position than it would have been correct to drop him as an accomplice To the police.
The fiasco then marked his re-creation: from the officer who failed in the Second Lebanon War to the victim of the system, first of the top police who threw him out and then also of the prosecutor's office . That's why when the Prime Minister looks at Hirsch, he doesn't see the harsh conclusions of General (ret.) Doron Almog, nor even absurd questions like "is Gal Hirsch the most suitable person for the job." Benjamin Netanyahu looked at Hirsh and saw the shared fate of the fighters against the prosecutor's office; his sweaty attempts to integrate into Likud (including discussions about armor in the list, when he lost the race to another avenger of the genre, Moshe Saada); and the successful auditions on the panel of Ayala Hasson in Khan 11, the propagandist komzitz who was burned courtesy of CEO Golan Yochpaz. Now it turns out that Hirsch sat there, kept the fire going and warmed his hands with it, until the long-awaited .