Ex-Army Chief Yaalon Named Israel's New Defense Minister
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية
Former chief of staff Moshe Yaalon was named Israel's new defense minister on Sunday to succeed Ehud Barak, a statement from the ruling rightwing Likud party said.
"In a period so critical to the security of the state of Israel, with all the region around us in turmoil, it is important that this position be filled by a man so rich in experience as Moshe Yaalon," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a statement released by the party.
"In the name of all the citizens of Israel, I wish him success."
The bespectacled 62-year-old has made a name for himself as a strong supporter of Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank, but has shown himself to be more moderate regarding Iran, whose nuclear program Israel sees as a bid to build a weapons capability.
On Saturday evening, Netanyahu formally notified President Shimon Peres that after 40 days of tortuous negotiations he had formed a new government, just as a legal deadline for him to do so expired.
The new government will be sworn in on Monday, just two days before the arrival of U.S. President Barack Obama on his first visit to Israel and the Palestinian territories since being elected more than four years ago.
The rightwing coalition will control 68 of the 120 seats in parliament and comprise Netanyahu's Likud-Beitenu list (31 seats), the centrist Yesh Atid (19 seats), the far-right national-religious Jewish Home (12 seats) and the centrist HaTnuah (six seats).

"Coalition pact calls for bill making Israel Jewish first, democratic second"
Haaretz today.
In Rome for the installation of Francis I as Pope, Lebanese Maronite Patriarch al Rahi welcomed the news, saying, "Now Lebanon and Israel are truly kindred spirits in the spirit of Abraham. If God had intended for us to live democratically, He would have created us all equal." At hearing this, Pope Francis slapped Patriarch al Rahi across the room and then broke down in tears of contrition.