Tzachi Hanegbi

Politician

Birthday February 26, 1957

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Jerusalem, Israel

Age 67 years old

Nationality Israel

#55663 Most Popular

1940

His mother is Geula Cohen, a prominent member of the 1940s underground group Lehi and later MK for Likud and Tehiya.

His father, Emmanuel Hanegbi, was the Operations Officer for the Lehi.

After his military service in the paratroopers corps, Hanegbi studied international relations at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

1957

Tzachi Hanegbi (צַחִי הַנֶּגְבִּי, born 26 February 1957) is an Israeli politician and national security expert serving as Israel's National Security Advisor.

A member of Likud, Hanegbi previously served as Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Minister of Regional Cooperation and Minister of Community Affairs.

He served as Minister of Justice, Minister of Internal Security, Minister of Intelligence and Nuclear Affairs, and Minister in the Prime Minister's office supervising Israel's intelligence agencies Mossad and Shin Bet.

He was also responsible for overseeing Israel's Atomic Energy Agency, and served as the minister in charge of Israel's strategic relationship and security dialogue with the United States.

He also served as Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs and as the Chairman of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee and Majority Leader of the Knesset.

1980

As president of the Hebrew University Student Union in 1980, he received a six-month suspended sentence for leading an attack on Arab students.

1982

Despite this incident, he became president of the National Union of Israeli Students later that year, holding that title until 1982.

After his undergraduate studies, he went on to study law, obtaining an LL.B.

Hanegbi lives in Mevaseret Zion, a town on the outskirts of Jerusalem.

1988

Hanegbi was on the 37th spot on the Likud list and first elected to the Knesset in the 1988 elections, and headed the Prime Minister's Bureau under Yitzhak Shamir.

1992

He retained his seat in the 1992 and 1996 elections, and was initially appointed Minister of Health in Binyamin Netanyahu's government, becoming Minister of Justice in September 1996 and dropping the health portfolio in November that year.

1999

He lost his ministerial portfolio after Ehud Barak won the 1999 elections, but returned to government when Ariel Sharon won the special election for PM in 2001.

2001

Hanegbi was appointed Minister of the Environment in March 2001, adding the Transportation portfolio to his duties later in the year.

2003

After Likud's convincing win in the 2003 elections, Hanegbi was appointed Minister of Internal Security.

In September 2003 he was appointed by Prime Minister Ariel Sharon as minister in the Prime Minister's Office in charge of Israel's intelligence agencies – the Mossad and Shin Bet, and supervised Israel's Atomic Energy Agency.

2004

The judges verdict cleared Hanegbi of any criminal wrongdoing, accepting the defense's argument that such appointments were not illegal prior to 2004, and that this was the common practice among all cabinet members in all the previous governments since Israel's independence.

The court ruled that selectively prosecuting Hanegbi for what was a widespread and common practice was wrong and unfair.

Hanegbi was urged by his legal team to appeal the perjury conviction to Israel's High court of Justice.

Following the verdict, several prominent leaders and officials publicly defended Hanegbi.

Former Knesset Speaker Avraham Burg who opposes Hanegbi politically, has called for the firing of the prosecutor by the Attorney General.

2005

When Sharon broke away to form Kadima in November 2005, Hanegbi was appointed interim chairman of Likud.

On the following day, Hanegbi announced that he was also switching to Kadima, and resigned from the Knesset on 10 December.

2006

However, he reappeared in the Knesset in April 2006 after winning a seat in the 2006 elections.

From May 2006 until December 2010 Hanegbi served as the Chairman of the Knesset's Security and Foreign Affairs Committee.

2009

Placed fourth on the party's list, he retained his seat in the 2009 elections.

2010

In July 2010, after a four-year trial for election bribery, fraud and breach of trust, Hanegbi was cleared of all charges by a Jerusalem court.

However, the three-judge panel found him guilty of perjury.

The case stems from Hanegbi's denial that he was behind an ad boosting his appointments of Likud party's political activists to positions in the Ministry of the Environmental Protection.

On 9 November 2010, the Jerusalem court fined Hanegbi 10,000 NIS, and in a 2-to-1 decision imposed moral turpitude to the offense.

Hanegbi therefore suspended himself from the Knesset and from his position as Chairman of the Foreign Affairs and Defence Committee, pending his legal appeal.

His seat was taken by Nino Abesadze.

2012

Hanegbi resigned from Kadima and returned to Likud when Kadima decided to leave the short-lived unity government in July 2012.

Hanegbi explained that he believed Kadima's decision to quit the unity government was irresponsible, and motivated by short-term political goals.

2017

Hanegbi was appointed by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to serve as acting prime minister of Israel, from 10 to 17 September 2017, while the prime minister traveled abroad.

He lost his seat in the Knesset in the 2022 Israeli legislative election.

In January of 2023, Hanegbi was appointed head of the National Security Council.

Hanegbi was born in Jerusalem, to a family of both Mizrahi Jewish (Yemeni-Jewish, Moroccan-Jewish, and Turkish-Jewish) and Ashkenazi Jewish (Polish-Jewish) descent.