New Shin Bet head Ronen Bar flies to Egypt to meet intel. chief

The meeting comes amid reports of extensive efforts by Egypt to reach agreements on an extended ceasefire and prisoner exchange deal between Israel and Hamas.

 Incoming Shin Bet head Ronen Bar and Prime Minister Naftali Bennett (photo credit: KOBY GIDEON/GPO)
Incoming Shin Bet head Ronen Bar and Prime Minister Naftali Bennett
(photo credit: KOBY GIDEON/GPO)

New Shin Bet Director Ronen Bar visited Egypt for the first time on Sunday morning in a meeting with Egyptian Intelligence Chief Abbas Kamel.

Bar was due to return to Israel Sunday night.

The meeting comes amid a flurry of reports in recent weeks of extensive efforts by Egypt to reach agreements concerning an extended ceasefire and prisoner exchange deal between Israel and Hamas in Gaza.

Though there has been an uneasy reduction in conflict between the sides since the May 10-21 war, a low simmering conflict has continued and periodically threatened to revert into a full-scale war.

Nadav Argaman, Bar’s predecessor, was sometimes the only Israeli official who all Egyptian, Jordanian and Palestinian officials were willing to speak to as someone who would be objective, fair and focused on mutual security.

 Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi (R) shakes hands after the swearing in of Major General Abbas Kamel (credit: VIA REUTERS)
Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi (R) shakes hands after the swearing in of Major General Abbas Kamel (credit: VIA REUTERS)

Appointed on October 13, Bar is still establishing his bona fides as he has to contend with the agency controversially helping the police with reducing the Israeli-Arab murder wave.

Also, recently Israeli intelligence was tied to NSO Group spying on Palestinian human rights groups that Israel, led by the Shin Bet, has said double as terror financing money-laundering networks.

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, who nominated Bar on September 1, said upon his appointment: “We must drive forward to the goal in which there is no room for doubt and in which we remove from the enemy any desire to challenge us” with terror or other security threats.

Bar is 55, married and has three children.

He holds a degree in political science and philosophy from Tel Aviv University and a master’s degree in public management from Harvard University.

Bennett served in the same special forces unit as Bar during his IDF service – though he is younger than Bar – and some believe this influenced the final decision.

In 2011, Bar was appointed head of the Shin Bet’s operations.

Then in 2016, he was promoted to be the head of Shin Bet headquarters, the number three post responsible for force buildup.

In 2018, he became deputy chief of the agency.

The units under Bar’s purview have been given numerous security awards over the years.