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Ehud Yatom

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Ehud Yatom (Hebrew: אהוד יתום; born 26 September 1948) is an Israeli former Shin Bet agent and politician who served as a member of the Knesset for Likud between 2003 and 2006.

Key Information

Biography

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Yatom was born in Netanya, the brother of Mossad head and politician Danny Yatom.[1] He worked for the Shin Bet and was one of the agents who killed two terrorists in the Kav 300 extrajudicial killing in 1984, by smashing their heads with rocks. In 2001 the High Court of Justice ruled that Yatom was unfit to serve as a top government anti-terror advisor, six months after he was named for the position by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.[2]

Political career

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In the 2003 elections he was placed 23rd on the Likud list,[3] and entered the Knesset when the party won 38 seats. Whilst an MK, he served as a member of several committees; the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, the Internal Affairs and Environment Committee and the Labour, Welfare and Health Committee. He was also a member of the parliamentary inquiry committee for the Amona events.

Prior to the 2006 elections he placed 32nd on the Likud list, and lost his seat when the party won only 12 seats.[4]

References

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from Grokipedia
Ehud Yatom is an Israeli former head of the Shin Bet's operations department and politician who served as a member of the Knesset for the Likud party.[1][2] He confessed to personally executing two Palestinian hijackers immediately after their capture in the 1984 Bus 300 affair, an incident involving the hijacking of an Egged bus from Tel Aviv to Ashkelon.[3][4] Yatom's career in Israel's internal security service included leadership roles following the Bus 300 incident, which led to a cover-up by Shin Bet personnel and subsequent legal scrutiny.[1] The affair drew widespread attention when details emerged years later, prompting investigations into the executions and false reporting by security officials. In politics, Yatom entered the Knesset representing Likud, leveraging his security background, though his past involvement in Bus 300 later influenced appointments, including a blocked advisory role under Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.[5][2]

Shin Bet Career

Operational Roles

Ehud Yatom, born on 26 September 1948, entered the Shin Bet around age 24 in the early 1970s.[3] His career in the agency lasted over two decades, concluding in the mid-1990s.[3] Yatom advanced steadily within the Shin Bet, eventually heading its operational, administrative, and protection departments.[3] In counter-terrorism efforts, he played a key role as one of the commanders in the 1984 operation that thwarted a Jewish underground plot to bomb Muslim holy sites on the Temple Mount, a scheme the group was very close to executing.[6]

Bus 300 Affair

On April 12, 1984, four Palestinian militants from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine hijacked Egged Bus 300 traveling from Tel Aviv to Ashkelon with 35 passengers aboard, demanding the release of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.[4] Israeli forces, including Shin Bet agents, stormed the bus near Deir el-Balah in the Gaza Strip after a prolonged standoff, successfully rescuing the passengers but capturing two surviving hijackers alive while two others were killed during the assault.[4] [7] Ehud Yatom, then a high-ranking Shin Bet operational commander, personally battered the two captured hijackers' skulls with a rock until they were dead shortly after their apprehension, an act he later described as executing orders to eliminate them to prevent leaks about the operation.[1] [3] In a July 1996 interview with Yediot Aharonot, Yatom publicly confessed to the killings, expressing resentment that the incident had stalled his career advancement within Shin Bet despite his loyalty and the agency's initial cover-up portraying the hijackers as dying in the firefight.[3] [8] Following revelations of the executions and perjury by Shin Bet officials to conceal them, Yatom and other involved agents received a blanket presidential pardon in 1986 from President Chaim Herzog, amid a broader scandal that severely undermined public trust in Israel's internal security service.[4] [3]

Political Career

Knesset Service

Ehud Yatom entered the Knesset following the January 2003 elections as a representative of the Likud party, serving during the 16th Knesset.[9] His tenure, which lasted from 2003 to 2006, was marked by his unique position as the only Likud member with significant experience in Israel's security services, distinguishing him among party colleagues.[2] Yatom participated in Knesset committees addressing intelligence and security issues, drawing on his prior expertise.[10] In the 2006 elections, Yatom was placed 32nd on the Likud list, a position that did not secure his reelection amid the party's reduced seat count, effectively ending his parliamentary career.[2]

Later Appointments

In 2001, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon nominated Ehud Yatom as his adviser on counterterrorism, a role intended to leverage Yatom's Shin Bet experience amid heightened security concerns.[11][12] However, Israel's High Court of Justice blocked the appointment, citing Yatom's confessed role in the execution of two captured Palestinian hijackers during the 1984 Bus 300 incident as rendering him unfit for such a position of public trust.[13][12] The ruling highlighted ongoing public and legal scrutiny over Yatom's past Shin Bet actions, emphasizing concerns about accountability and ethical standards in security advisory roles.[13][5] Sharon defended the nomination, arguing Yatom's expertise was essential, but the court's decision underscored the lasting impact of the Bus 300 affair on assessments of his suitability.[11]
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