Analysis: Israeli domestic intelligence agency in crisis as deputy director steps down
January 11, 2026 3 Comments
IN THE CONCLUDING WEEKS of 2025, the Israel Intelligence Agency (ISA), which serves as its primary internal security and counterintelligence service, experienced two rapturous events that shook the organization to its very foundations. One was the appointment of Major General (retired) David Zini as the organization’s head. The other was the sudden retirement of the its deputy, known as ‘S’ (the first letter of his first name), who had been appointed to that position just two months earlier.
Following the ISA’s failure to warn of Hamas’s attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, it was expected that the director’s position would go to someone with extensive intelligence experience to make the necessary changes in the agency. But Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu preferred personal loyalty over professionalism, as reflected in his personal decision to appoint General Zini as head of the ISA. General Zini’s appointment as head of the ISA drew public criticism for his lack of professional qualifications and his extreme right-wing political views. Several petitions were filed with the Supreme Court of Israel, all of which were rejected. It was also revealed that Zini’s son was a member of an extreme right-wing group that the ISA monitored closely.
The deputy head of the ISA, who resigned late last year, had close to 30 years of experience. He cut his teen in the ISA’s Arab Sector, where he worked in counterterrorism, prior to advancing to senior management positions. He was also involved in non-Arab Sector activities, mainly in counterespionage, and served as head of the ISA’s Research Division and as the organization’s chief of staff. Prior to being appointed as acting head of the ISA (following the resignation of Ronen Bar, who was forced to step down) he was expected to introduce General Zini to the role and brief him on the ISA and intelligence work. But that will no longer happen. Read more of this post
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IN A SERIES OF leaked recordings, the former head of Israel’s Military Intelligence Directorate, Major General Aharon Haliva, has expressed strong views about Israel’s war in Gaza. General Haliva headed Israel’s Military Intelligence Directorate (known as Aman) on October 7, 2023, when Palestinian militants took Israel by surprise in a combined arms attack, killing over 1,200 and kidnapping 250. Since resigning a year ago, Haliva has not made any public statements.
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BBC given rare access to university course designed for French intelligence staff
January 19, 2026 by Joseph Fitsanakis Leave a comment
Reporting for the BBC, Bockman said the program of studies was designed by Sciences Po in association with the Academie du renseignement (Intelligence Academy)—the classified training arm of the Communauté française du renseignement (French National Intelligence Community). The Academie du renseignement is responsible for training personnel in several French civilian and military government agencies, including the General Directorate for External Security (DGSE) and the General Directorate for Internal Security (DGSI).
Following the November 2015 Paris attacks by the Islamic State, which killed nearly 140 people, an unprecedented number of new employees joined the French National Intelligence Community as a result of a massive hiring spree. This unprecedented expansion prompted the Académie du renseignement to reach out to France’s state universities in search of training programs for new intelligence personnel, as well as for seasoned employees.
The result was the Diplôme sur le Renseignement et les Menaces Globales, a four-month program consisting of 120 hours of class contact time divided into several modules taught by academics and practitioners. The modules include Islamic radicalism, non-religious political violence, business intelligence, and the economics of organized crime. The cost is €5,000 (around $6,000) per student. Students tend to come from the French intelligence services and the private sector, including consulting, aerospace, and defense contracting, according to Bockman.
► Author: Joseph Fitsanakis | Date: 19 January 2026| Permalink
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