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In a brazen attempt to deflect from mounting scandals—including allegations of sexual harassment, financial misconduct, and misleading donors—Friends of the IDF (FIDF) published a letter signed by Lieutenant General Eyal Zamir, the Chief of the General Staff of the IDF. The letter, filled with vague praise and boilerplate language, was conveniently released only after the resignations of FIDF’s top leadership and the leak of a damning 18-page internal report. Critics argue that FIDF is now using General Zamir as a shield to dodge accountability—exploiting his authority to mask unresolved questions about donor deception, emergency fund misuse, and internal corruption. Rather than confront the truth, FIDF dragged Israel’s most senior officer into a reputational firestorm of their own making.
By Daniel MaelIn a brazen attempt to deflect from mounting scandals—including allegations of sexual harassment, financial misconduct, and misleading donors—Friends of the IDF (FIDF) published a letter signed by Lieutenant General Eyal Zamir, the Chief of the General Staff of the IDF. The letter, filled with vague praise and boilerplate language, was conveniently released only after the resignations of FIDF’s top leadership and the leak of a damning 18-page internal report. Critics argue that FIDF is now using General Zamir as a shield to dodge accountability—exploiting his authority to mask unresolved questions about donor deception, emergency fund misuse, and internal corruption. Rather than confront the truth, FIDF dragged Israel’s most senior officer into a reputational firestorm of their own making.