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Soldiers in Israel join protest of court plan

Hundreds of reserves oppose plan to increase government control over judges, courts

- By Ronen Bergman and Patrick Kingsley

TEL AVIV, Israel — A plan by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to severely curtail the powers of Israel’s Supreme Court has prompted weeks of demonstrat­ions, rattled the country’s technology sector and raised fears of political violence.

Now, protests are emerging within the nation’s military.

Hundreds of soldiers in the reserves either have signed letters expressing a reluctance to participat­e in nonessenti­al duty or have already pulled out of training missions, officials said.

The affected units include the 8200 division that deals with signal and cyberintel­ligence and whose graduates have helped drive the country’s tech industry, as well as elite combat units.

Senior military leaders said they fear growing anger within the ranks over the government’s plans will affect the operationa­l readiness of Israel’s armed forces.

They are most concerned about unrest within the air force, with reservedut­y pilots increasing­ly upset over the government plans, the officials said. The pilots fear they may be asked to engage in illegal operations, and that restraints on Israel’s judiciary may strengthen foreign calls to prosecute them in the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, the officials said.

Reserve-duty pilots often lead Israel’s regular airstrikes on Syria and the Gaza Strip, and would be involved in any major Israeli attack on nuclear facilities in Iran.

The unrest within the military is the latest flare-up of opposition to the government’s plans to overhaul the judiciary after protests brought hundreds of thousands of Israelis to the streets. Prominent American Jews have also criticized the plans.

The plans would increase government control over how judges are chosen, limit the Supreme Court’s ability to strike down new legislatio­n and make it easier for Parliament to overrule the court.

Nearly 50 squadron leaders representi­ng hundreds of reserve pilots met Friday with the head of the Israeli air force to express their misgivings about the government’s judicial overhaul efforts, according to five Israeli military officials who either attended the meeting or were briefed on it and who insisted on anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

The pilot corps is overwhelmi­ngly staffed by reservists who usually report for duty three or four times a month.

Thirty-seven pilots from a key F-15 fighter jet squadron later wrote to the air force chief to say they would pull out of training for part of this week, while remaining available for combat missions, according to three officials briefed on the letter.

Many Israelis believe the government’s plan to overhaul the judiciary will undermine the country’s democracy.

That view is shared by many military officers, a number of whom have participat­ed in regular protests.

To the government’s supporters, the judicial changes are an essential means of giving a majority of elected lawmakers primacy over unelected judges. But to critics, the overhaul would remove one of the few checks on government overreach.

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