Ambassador to Switzerland and official in Delhi face a hearing over posts targeting prime minister’s policies as he prepares for US visit

This article is more than 5 years old

This article is more than 5 years old

The Israeli ambassador to Switzerland and a diplomat in India have been called home over comments critical of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, the foreign ministry said on Thursday.

Among the alleged infractions was a retweet by Ambassador Yigal Caspi, citing criticism of Netanyahu’s accepting a controversial invitation to address the US Congress over Iran’s nuclear policy.

“Every time one thinks Netanyahu has taken the relationship with the White House to the lowest point ever, he manages to take it even lower,” said a tweet by Haaretz newspaper writer Barak Ravid, reposted on Caspi’s private Twitter account before it was closed.

Foreign ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nachshon told AFP that Caspi and Assaf Moran, political counsellor at the embassy in Delhi, had been called home.

“They have been summoned to a hearing in order to check the comments attributed to them on their Twitter accounts.”

Neither man’s Twitter account was functioning Thursday, but news site NRG said Moran had retweeted a comment from blogger Moshe Gaon saying Netanyahu’s policy was “to do anything rather than talk about social issues”.

Meanwhile, the Jerusalem Post said foreign ministry political researcher Yaron Bamburg, formerly spokesman at the embassy in Paris, tweeted that Jewish Home party leader Naftali Bennet was, among other things, “delusional, messianic, violent and homophobic”.

Former ministry director-general Alon Liel said that for a diplomat of any country to publicly criticise government policy was a grave offence.

“I think it’s an international norm that a diplomat representing his country doesn’t publicly contradict its foreign policy,” he told public radio, adding that senior diplomats had resigned over the past year feeling unable to support government policy.

“I think that what the ambassador to Switzerland did was [also] virtually an act of resignation; he knew exactly what the consequences would be,” said Liel, who described himself as a friend of Caspi for 40 years.

The invitation for Netanyahu to speak on Iran’s nuclear programme came from House speaker John Boehner, a Republican and prominent adversary of Barack Obama.

In a radical departure from protocol, the event was not coordinated with the White House. It also comes two weeks before Netanyahu fights to keep his job in an Israeli general election.

Haaretz reported Thursday that several Israeli consuls general in the United States had forecast fierce opposition to the speech, including from US Jewish communities and non-Jewish backers of Israel.

“The speech is seen by them as sticking a finger in the eye of the president and the administration,” the newspaper quoted Israel’s consul general in Philadelphia, Yaron Sideman, as writing in a diplomatic cable.