The ongoing crisis in the Foreign Ministry is causing direct harm to Israel's security, a senior diplomat told Israel Hayom on Sunday after the ministry ordered all Israeli embassies worldwide to stop work due to a budget shortfall.
"Only a few years from now will they understand the ramifications of what has happened since the start of 2019 and until the order was given last night," the diplomat said.
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"The new situation means that, for example, that 20 anti-Israeli resolutions will pass in the UN General Assembly at the end of the month because diplomats who were supposed to help fight them are grounded in Israel. There is no one to explain why Israel opposes a meeting between [US] President Trump and Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.
"The battle against BDS will come to a halt. These are only some of the immediate harm that will be caused by the new situation," the official said.
In addition, one of the senior officials at an unspecified Israeli embassy told Israel Hayom that it has been months since embassy employees had received regular paychecks.
On Sunday, the accountant general of the Foreign Ministry, Yossi Strauss, announced that all diplomatic activity was to stop immediately in light of the ministry's deficit of several hundred million shekels.
In recent months, ministry directors have been in talks with the Finance Ministry in an attempt to find a solution to the budget crisis, but the talks blew up on Sunday.
In a message sent to all Israeli embassies, consulates, and diplomatic offices, Strauss ordered a stop to any new expenditures. He also ordered the Foreign Ministry to stop courses it offers; stop funding work trips for staff at every level; and not to invite foreign representatives and/or delegations to visit Israel or attend conferences in Israel.
The decision means that the Foreign Ministry's diplomatic work will come to a near-total halt, as will the services it provides for Israelis abroad, such as replacing passports.
The orders from the accountant general left employees of the Foreign Ministry reeling. Hanan Gord, a member of the Union of Diplomatic Employees, told Israel Hayom that the move "put the final nail in the coffin that for 70 years has been called the 'Foreign Ministry.' For the first time in the history of Israel, the government has stopped the work of a key ministry."
A Foreign Ministry spokesman confirmed the reports.
"This is an unprecedented situation in which Finance Ministry functionaries shut down a government ministry without any discussion. The heavy deficit, which we warned about, is the result of underfunding by the Budget Department [of the Finance Ministry]. The foreign minister is working to solve the crisis," the spokesman said.