Gabriel "Gabi" Ashkenazi | |
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Gabi Ashkenazi, 2007
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Native name | גבריאל "גבי" אשכנזי |
Nickname(s) | Gabi |
Born |
Hagor, Israel |
February 25, 1954
Allegiance | Israel |
Years of service | 1972–2011 |
Rank | Rav Aluf (highest rank) |
Commands held | IDF Chief of Staff Deputy Chief of Staff of the IDF Head of IDF Northern Command Head of IDF Operations Directorate Armored Division Commander Golani Brigade Commanding Officer |
Battles/wars |
Gabriel "Gabi" Ashkenazi (Hebrew: גבי אשכנזי; born February 25, 1954), was the Chief of General Staff of the Israel Defense Forces from 2007 to 2011. He was the fourth Mizrahi Jew to become Chief of Staff of the IDF.
Ashkenazi was born and grew up in Hagor, a moshav, or cooperative agricultural community in the Sharon region of central Israel, of which his parents were among the founders. His father, a Holocaust survivor, had immigrated to Israel from Bulgaria, while his mother had immigrated from Syria. Ashkenazi completed high school at a military boarding school affiliated with the prestigious Gymnasia Herzliya in Tel Aviv. His roommates included Yigal Schwartz, a major figure in Israeli literature, and Yoav Kutner, an acclaimed music editor and journalist.
Ashkenazi was conscripted into the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) in 1972, and served in the Golani Brigade. Ashkenazi first saw action in the Sinai Peninsula during the 1973 Yom Kippur War. In July 1976, Ashkenazi was a platoon commander in the force that carried out Operation Thunderbolt, a mission to rescue hostages held in Uganda, but he did not participate in the battle at Entebbe Airport. Ashkenazi's first of many experiences in Lebanon came in 1978 during Operation Litani. Ashkenazi was wounded in the fighting and left the IDF before being asked to return as a battalion commander two years later. During the 1982 Lebanon War, Ashkenazi served as Deputy Commander of the Golani Brigade and commanded the forces which captured Beaufort Castle, and the towns of Nabatieh and Jabel Baruch. Promoted to Commander of the Golani Brigade in 1987, Ashkenazi was reportedly popular with his brigade's combat soldiers during his nearly two-year tenure in that post.