Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Erdan resigns as Israel’s US ambassador, retains role as UN envoy

It is up to Israel’s new government to appoint an ambassador to represent it politically in the United States, says Gilad Erdan, vowing to continue to fight for justice in the international arena.

Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations and outgoing envoy to Washington Gilad Erdan. Source: Twitter.
Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations and outgoing envoy to Washington Gilad Erdan. Source: Twitter.

Israel’s envoy to the United Nations announced on Sunday that he would be resigning from his simultaneous post as ambassador to the United States pending the appointment of a replacement.

“It was a true honor to represent Israel to our closest ally,” Erdan said on social media.

“During my tenure, I worked to establish ties with the Biden admin, as well as to strengthen the bipartisan support [for Israel]. Those ties were proven during the Gaza operation [“Guardian of the Walls”], when the U.S. halted anti-Israel initiatives in the U.N. Security Council and approved additional funding for the Iron Dome,” he tweeted.

“I believe it is up to the current [Israeli] government to appoint an ambassador [who] will represent it politically with the [U.S.] administration. However, I will continue to defend Israel at the U.N. and fight for justice in the international arena,” he added.

Erdan, who has previously served as regional cooperation minister and public security minister, was appointed to his post as Israel’s ambassador to the United Nations in July 2020, replacing Danny Danon, who had served in the role since 2015.

His additional appointment as the country’s envoy to Washington went into effect in January, replacing Ron Dermer, who had served in the role since 2013. The only other Israeli figure to have filled both ambassadorial roles at once was the late diplomat Abba Eban, who served as a dual envoy from 1950 until 1959.

Erdan hails from former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud Party, which, following the formation of the new governing coalition, now leads the opposition in the Knesset.

Nathan Diament, of the Orthodox Union, told JNS that the statement “could not come at a more important time with bad actors weaponizing Catholicism to spread antisemitic views.”
“What happened at Berkeley is a cautionary tale,” stated Kenneth Marcus, of the Brandeis Center, after the public school settled a lawsuit alleging Jew-hatred.
Four people were wounded in a separate missile attack on Kiryat Shmona.
Belgrade condemns the U.N. official’s remarks on its military ties with Israel, calling them beyond her mandate.
Tel Aviv underground community finds resilience beneath the Dizengoff Center
Aaron Kaplowitz, president of the U.S.-Israel Business Alliance, told JNS that state elected officials should “publicly say that California is open for business to Israeli entrepreneurs.”