The Jerusalem Post

IDF struggles with rising influence of national-religious troops

- • By MAAYAN LUBELL

On a searing night in July 2014, IDF troops gathered on the border with Gaza to prepare for war. Hamas gunmen had been firing rockets into Israel for days, and Israeli warplanes had begun bombing the Palestinia­n territory.

The orders for the Givati infantry brigade, came in a typed, single-page letter.

“History has chosen us to spearhead the fight against the terrorist Gazan enemy who curses, vilifies and abominates Israel’s God,” Col. Ofer Winter, the brigade’s commanding officer, wrote in the letter to his men. He ended with a biblical quote promising divine protection for Israel’s warriors on the battlefiel­d.

The letter quickly circulated on social media and from there to the press. Secular Israelis condemned it, saying it broke a decades-old convention that kept religion out of military missions.

Two years on, the letter remains a symbol of a profound shift within Israeli society: the rising power and reach of religious nationalis­ts. The change has set up a battle for the type of country Israel should be, a battle between the country’s liberals and its more religious nationalis­t camp.

In its early years, Israel’s military and government – were dominated by the secular and mostly left-wing elite who had founded the state in 1948. But over the past decade or so a new generation of leaders that combines religion and nationalis­m has emerged.

Religious Zionism differs from secular Zionism in its historical perspectiv­e and messianic undertones. For religious Zionists, caring for places such as Jewish settlement­s in the West Bank is a way of fulfilling a religious obligation and building the Jewish state.

The national-religious community has increased its presence in both government and the civil service. This year, for the first time ever, the heads of the police, the Mossad and the Shin Bet are all religious Zionists.

Nowhere, though, has the shift been more pronounced than in the military. Most soldiers in the army are secular or observant Jews, though Druse and Beduin citizens serve as well. But over the past two decades, academic studies show, the number of religious-Zionist officers in the IDF has seen a huge increase. The military has also felt the growing influence of rabbis who have introduced matters of faith and politics to the battlefiel­d.

Some politician­s and military leaders have begun to push back.

In January, Chief of Staff Lt.Gen. Gadi Eisenkot announced he would remove a 15-yearold unit dedicated to “Jewish Awareness” from the IDF Rabbinate – the department in charge of providing religious services within the ranks. The Jewish Awareness Branch has periodical­ly drawn criticism from both inside and outside the military for pushing an ideologica­l, right-wing and religious agenda. Some secular Israelis worry that too much religion in the military may lead to soldiers questionin­g who they should obey: their officer or God.

In a letter sent to officers and published by the army, Eisenkot staked out the IDF’s position: A military divided over politics and religion will have difficulty fulfill its mission.

“The IDF is the people’s army and includes a wide spectrum of Israeli society,” he wrote. “A change is needed with the aim of keeping the IDF a statist army in a democratic country, nurturing that which unites its soldiers.”

Religious-Zionist politician­s and rabbis vowed to block the change and have appealed to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Netanyahu himself is secular, though many of his inner circle of advisers and government appointmen­ts are religious Zionists.

The army chief has signaled he does not intend to back down. On April 3, the army said it was moving the Jewish Awareness Branch to the military’s Personnel Directorat­e, even if operationa­l details were still being worked out.

‘Fighting spirit’

Religious Zionists make up just 10 percent of Israel’s population, a similar size to the ultra-Orthodox community, which is far less integrated in Israeli society and traditiona­lly shuns army service.

Rabbis have long served in Israel’s military, but historical­ly they handled logistic issues, such as adherence to Jewish dietary laws. That began to change in the early 2000s. The Military Rabbinate demanded and won a new role connecting soldiers to their Jewish roots and infusing them with fighting spirit based on faith and centuries-old tradition.

The rabbinate establishe­d the Jewish Awareness Branch, which offers soldiers tours and lectures on Judaism and lessons that weave together religious teachings with military values such as leadership, camaraderi­e and self-sacrifice.

The Israeli military does not hold figures classifyin­g its soldiers as secular or observant. But a detailed study by the Defense Ministry journal Maarachot showed that by 2008, the proportion of national-religious infantry officer cadets had increased tenfold to 26% from 2.5% in 1990.

More recent research by specialist­s such as Reuven Gal, chairman of the Israeli Associatio­n of Civil-Military Studies, shows that this trend is continuing: religious Zionists now account for between a third and half of army cadets.

“This is over-representa­tion,” Gal said. “The IDF is the Israel Defense Force, not the Jewish Defense Force. It has religious and secular soldiers. If its values come from the rabbinate [The Jewish Awareness Branch], that’s warped. It’s wrong.”

Not just patriotism?

Atop a hill in the West Bank in late January, a group of young men kicked into gear. A few hit the ground for pushups, others did pull-ups on a series of metal bars, while a dozen jogged along a path that wound down from their seminary past the red-roofed houses of the Jewish settlement of Eli.

Inside the seminary, the Bnei David Yeshiva, more young men sat in pairs studying books by Jewish scholars that lined the classroom walls.

Bnei David, Israel’s first military prep school, was establishe­d in 1988 to encourage religious-Zionist youth to take on meaningful roles in the conscript army at a time when the military had noticed a decline in recruits’ motivation.

The school boasts that nearly all its graduates volunteer for combat, half of them in elite units. About 40% of its alumni, Ofer Winter among them, become officers. The military did not respond to a Reuters request to interview Winter, who has been promoted since the 2014 Gaza war (Operation Protective Edge).

“We see military service as a great mitzva. It is a civil duty, but also a great mitzva from the Torah,” said Netanel Elyashiv, a rabbi at the seminary.

One Bnei David graduate, an officer in an elite unit, said it was right for Israel’s national religious to do their bit for the country. “It’s not just patriotism, it is part of something far more spiritual, geared toward the future,” said the officer, who has just signed on for additional 10 years of service. “It is linked to deeper roots and a sense of being an emissary.”

Bnei David is now one of 46 military academies, half of which are religious.

Critics such as Prof. Yagil Levy, who teaches civil-military relations at the Open University of Israel, see religious Zionism’s growing clout in the military as part of a wider push to keep strong Jewish settlement­s in the Palestinia­n territorie­s. Religious Zionists are now the main backers of Israel’s settler movement.

Disappoint­ment over the 2005 Gaza disengagem­ent, when Israel pulled its troops and about 9,000 settlers out of the Gaza Strip, drove the religious Zionists to seek more powerful positions in politics, media and particular­ly in the security establishm­ent, Levy said.

“The army is an important public arena in which they must fulfill a meaningful, active role... so that the shame of the 2005 disengagem­ent does not recur.”

But Rabbi Eli Sadan, one of Bnei David’s founders, rejects such criticisms. In a paper published in January, he said religious Zionists had no desire to take over the military. He also said Levy and other critics were spreading hatred toward a community deeply devoted to the people of Israel.

‘That’s very bad’

Whatever the Jewish Awareness Branch’s intent, some lawmakers and military officers have grown increasing­ly worried about it.

In 2012, the State Comptrolle­r’s Office criticized rabbinate pamphlets that circulated among troops during the 20082009 Gaza war, also known as Operation Cast Lead. The comptrolle­r was particular­ly scathing of one pamphlet, which said that “not one millimeter” of land should be relinquish­ed and that battle sometimes required cruelty to the enemy.

The growing concern of leftwing Israelis was captured in an exchange in February in a meeting of parliament’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, called by religious-Zionist lawmakers on behalf of the Jewish Awareness Branch.

Lt. Aharon Karov, a religious-Zionist commander wounded in the 2008-2009 conflict, came to the rabbis’ defense when he explained how he had been injured and its effect on his squad’s morale.

“[It] was a head wound, nose, eye, mouth, I didn’t look human and my platoon saw me at that moment,” Karov told the committee. “My company commander asked himself, ‘What do I do with this platoon? They don’t want to keep on fighting.’”

The commander called the rabbinate, Karov said, which immediatel­y dispatched a rabbi to Gaza. “He gave them the fighting spirit, reminded them why we were there, why we must go on, and at that moment my soldiers understood from within and went on fighting,” Karov said.

“That’s very bad,” replied lawmaker Omer Bar-Lev, who is the son of a former army chief and is himself a reserve colonel. “If without a rabbi your soldiers were unmotivate­d, that’s very bad.”

‘Zionist, Jewish and proud’

The influence of religious Zionism has grown in government as well as the military.

The national-religious vote goes mainly to two parties: Netanyahu’s Likud and the religious-Zionist Bayit Yehudi, which revamped itself under new young leadership ahead of the 2013 election. Bayit Yehudi more than doubled its parliament seats in that vote, to 12 in the 120-seat chamber.

In the 2015 election, Bayit Yehudi lost four seats to the Likud, falling to eight. But it won greater gains inside the coalition government, for the first time holding the Justice Ministry, two other ministries and two security cabinet seats.

Bayit Yehudi has changed considerab­ly under its 44-yearold leader, Naftali Bennett. In the past (as the National Religious Party) it mainly safeguarde­d narrow sectarian interests. Now it openly wants to shape the country and has had some success doing so.

The party opposes the creation of a Palestinia­n state and wants Israel to annex most of Judea and Samaria. It toughened a law that means land-forpeace deals with the Palestinia­ns must be put to a vote, and wrote another that limits the release of Palestinia­ns convicted of killing Israelis.

Most religious Zionists oppose handing land to the Palestinia­ns. As well as religious motivation­s, they share Netanyahu’s concerns that such a move would be a security risk.

Since the 2015 election, competitio­n over the national-religious vote has seen Netanyahu shift further right, often following Bennett’s lead.

“We want a state more connected to its roots,” Bennett told Reuters. “I am a Zionist, Jewish and proud. This is my land for the past 3,800 years. That’s the set of values.”

Bennett said after the Holocaust, religious Zionism was in “survival mode.” It began to gain more influence from the 1970s, he said. “Now we are in the third stage, in which we see religious Zionism in leadership positions in all realms in Israel.”

Yedidia Stern, vice president of research at the Israel Democracy Institute, himself a religious Zionist, remembers the traumatic years that followed the 1995 assassinat­ion of prime minister Yitzhak Rabin by a religious-Zionist law student. Rabin had promised to hand back land to the Palestinia­ns as part of the Oslo Accords, upsetting many religious Zionists.

“The entire sector was labeled a danger to rule of law, irrational, insurgent. Religious Zionism became borderline illegitima­te,” he said. “Twenty years later, we’re in the opposite position: The entire rule of law is in the hands of religious Zionism. It’s astounding.” (Reuters)

 ?? (IDF Spokesman) ?? INFANTRYME­N FROM the Netzah Yehuda Battalion, which allows soldiers to serve within a religiousl­y observant framework, listen to an officer in November 2015.
(IDF Spokesman) INFANTRYME­N FROM the Netzah Yehuda Battalion, which allows soldiers to serve within a religiousl­y observant framework, listen to an officer in November 2015.

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