Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu criticized his nation’s media for downplaying a journalist’s “incitement” against him in a post on his Facebook page.

Netanyahu’s comments on social media followed his filing of a police complaint against Gilad Halpern, an editor of the English-language edition of Ynet, who uploaded a photoshopped image of Netanyahu in a Waffen SS uniform to his Facebook page on Oct. 21. The image was swiftly deleted, but not before the prime minister was able to alert Israeli authorities.

Ynet responded to Halpern’s actions by summoning him to a disciplinary hearing the following day. He was released from his post over the weekend, Arutz Sheva reported.

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Despite the disciplinary action, Netanyahu on Facebook criticized the Israeli media for failing to appropriately condemn Halpern’s Facebook post.

מעניין מאוד שהתקשורת הישראלית שתמיד מזדעזעת מהסתה נגד מנהיגי ישראל, בחרה להצניע השבוע את ההסתה הפרועה שמתנהלת נגדי ברשת…. Posted by ‎Benjamin Netanyahu – בנימין נתניהו‎ on Saturday, 24 October 2015

“It’s interesting that the media in Israel, which always appears to be ‘shocked’ by incitement against Israeli leaders, chose to downplay the incitement against me in this post,” he wrote on his Facebook page.

Netanyahu went on to slam Israel’s Channel 2 news commentator Ammon Abramovich for choosing not to address the situation after having spoken out against a similar post that depicted Israeli President Reuven Rivlin in a Waffen SS uniform.

“[Abamovich] was right to cry out about that post, but he could not spare a single word to talk about what Gilad Halpern did. What would have happened had it been a picture of a different leader? We already know the answer,” Netanyahu wrote.

The caption on Halpern’s doctored photo of Netanyahu referenced the prime minister’s comments last week that the late Palestinian leader Hajj Amin al-Husseini, the mufti of Jerusalem during World War II, was partly responsible for Hitler’s decision to implement the Final Solution, Arutz Sheva reported.

Ynet has since released a statement addressing the situation and Halpern’s firing.

“We condemn all attempts of incitement and take them very seriously,” the statement read, according to Israel Hayom. “After learning of the photo’s publication on the employee’s personal Facebook page, he was summoned for a hearing, following which he was terminated from his position at the website.”

Halpern said in response: “I uploaded the photo, which I didn’t create, to my personal Facebook page as part of a satirical comment on the prime minister’s revisionist take on the Holocaust which I, the grandson of two sole survivors of their respective families, found repugnant. I soon realized that my admittedly distasteful post was misunderstood, and deleted it. I never meant to incite against the prime minister or hurt his feelings, and am very sorry if I did.”