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Israel set to appoint first-ever Bedouin ambassador to head Eritrea mission

Ishmael Khaldi, who has held several Foreign Ministry positions since becoming Israel’s first Bedouin diplomat more than a decade ago, is known as a staunch defender of the Jewish state.

Israeli diplomat Ishmael Khaldi, Nov. 25, 2019. Source: Facebook.
Israeli diplomat Ishmael Khaldi, Nov. 25, 2019. Source: Facebook.

Israel’s Foreign Ministry tapped Ishmael Khaldi on Sunday to head the country’s Eritrea mission in a move that, if approved, will make him the country’s first-ever Bedouin ambassador.

Khaldi, who hails from Khawaled, a Bedouin village in Israel’s north, has held several positions in the Foreign Ministry since becoming Israel’s first Bedouin diplomat more than a decade ago, including adviser to the foreign minister, Israel’s point person against BDS in the United Kingdom, deputy consul general on the West Coast and acting consul general in Miami.

He is considered one of Israel’s greatest defenders against the campaign of delegitimization. He has been boycotted, heckled and threatened when he speaks out in support of the Jewish state.

Khaldi’s appointment, along with the appointments of 10 other diplomats to new positions, now requires final government approval.

Former Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman hailed the announcement on social media on Sunday, saying that Khaldi had served as a trusted adviser when he led the Foreign Ministry.

“He is well-known as an Israeli patriot who defends the state resolutely around the world,” wrote Lieberman.

With air supremacy and the use of bunker-busting bombs on underground facilities in the Strait of Hormuz, the CENTCOM chief laid out the scale of the battering inflicted on the Islamic Republic.
“If necessary, we will strike with even greater force,” said Israel’s defense minister.
Fragments from intercepted projectiles hit across the metropolis as rescue crews and police secured impact sites.
Fighter jets hit multiple military targets in Tehran and across the country to weaken the regime’s ability to produce and launch ballistic missiles.
“The Iranian terrorist regime poses a global threat. Now, with missiles that can reach London, Paris or Berlin,” the military said.
IAEA Director-General Rafael Grossi says “maximum military restraint should be observed, in particular in the vicinity of nuclear facilities.”