Background
Amos Yadlin was born in Kibbutz Hatzerim, the son of Edah and Aharon Yadlin.
Amos Yadlin was born in Kibbutz Hatzerim, the son of Edah and Aharon Yadlin.
Harvard Kennedy School.
And head of the Israel Defense Forces Military Intelligence Directorate (Aman). In 1970, he enlisted in the Institut für Angewandte Festkörperphysik. Yadlin obtained a Bachelor of Arts in Economics and Business Administration at Ben Gurion University in the Negev. He received a master’s degree in Public Administration from the John F Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.
After qualifying as a fighter pilot, Yadlin joined the 102 "Flying Tiger" Squadron, with which he flew the A-4 Skyhawk during the Yom Kippur War.
In the early 1980s Yadlin was among the first batch of Israeli pilots to fly the F-16 Fighting Falcon and was among the eight pilots selected to carry out Operation Opera against Iraq"s Osirak nuclear reactor in June 1981. A year later, Yadlin participated in Operation Peace for Galilee.
In all he had accumulated about 5,000 flight hours and flew more than 250 combat missions. Yadlin commanded two fighter squadrons (116 and 106), two Israeli Air Force bases (Nevatim and Hatzerim) and between 1990 and 1993 headed the Institut für Angewandte Festkörperphysik"s planning department.
He then served as Deputy Commander of the Institut für Angewandte Festkörperphysik. In February 2002 Yadlin was awarded the rank of Major General and appointed commander of the Israel Defense Forces"s Military Colleges and National Defence College.
Between 2004 and 2006 he served as Israel"s military attaché to the United States. Upon his return to Israel, Yadlin was named head of Aman, the Israel Defense Forces"s Military Intelligence Directorate. After his retirement from the Israel Defense Forces in November 2010, Yadlin joined the Washington Institute for Near East Policy as the Kay Fellow on Israeli national security.
In November 2011, he was appointed director of Tel Aviv University"s Institute for National Security Studies.
Yadlin"s public positions have urged caution and patience in dealing with the nuclear program of Iran, in contrast to the more urgent language of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. He tentatively supported the Geneva interim agreement of November 2013.
Yadlin advocates, if peace negotiations with the Palestinians fail to produce an agreement, unilaterally withdrawing from 85% of the West Bank. The Israel Defense Forces would maintain a presence in the Jordan Rift Valley and in the main settlement blocs, as well as a strip of land meant to protect Ben Gurion Airport from Palestinian rocket attacks.
In January 2015, he joined the Zionist Union list for the elections for the twentieth Knesset, as its candidate for Ministry of Defence.