‎1,000 ultra-Orthodox men enlisted in combat ‎units this year , IDF official says

Some 1,000 of the 3,000 ultra-Orthodox men who ‎enlisted in the Israel Defense Forces over the past ‎year were assigned to combat units and hundreds more ‎joined combat auxiliary units, a military official ‎revealed Wednesday.‎

Speaking at a meeting of the special ministerial ‎committee debating the haredi conscription bill, ‎Brig.-Gen. Eran Shani, head of the Human Resource ‎Planning and Management Division at the IDF's ‎Personnel Directorate, said that ultra-Orthodox ‎recruits "are smart and talented individuals who do ‎amazing work. Their contribution to the IDF cannot ‎be disputed."‎

The issue of mandatory military service for the ‎‎ultra-Orthodox sector has dogged Israeli politics ‎‎for years. Many in the ultra-Orthodox community ‎‎believe military service should be secondary to ‎‎Torah study. However, secular Israelis oppose being ‎‎expected to shoulder the burden without any ‎‎contribution by a substantial sector of the ‎‎population.‎

Most recently the United Torah Judaism party ‎‎demanded that the current conscription exemption afforded ‎‎to haredi men be extended, threatening to exit the ‎‎coalition unless the measure was approved. ‎

A coalition-sponsored amendment ‏to the bill passed ‎its first parliamentary reading on Tuesday, but ‎United Torah Judaism said it still falls short of ‎meeting its demands. The special ministerial ‎committee debating the bill was tasked with ‎preparing it for its second and third readings, in ‎hopes of appeasing the Ashkenazi ultra-Orthodox ‎party.‎

Shani‎ further explained that the IDF objects to an ‎article in the current draft of the bill that ‎recommends lowering the age in which enlistment ‎exemptions are given. ‎

‎"In the previous amendment to the law, the exemption ‎age was lowered to 24, and we lost several hundred ‎potential recruits. If the exemption age is lowered ‎to 21, I'm afraid we will lose a few hundred more. ‎Even though these are older, married men, they are ‎excellent people the IDF wants to recruit."‎

Attorney Dror Granit, who represents the Justice ‎Ministry on the committee, said the current draft of ‎the bill was constitutional and therefore defendable ‎in the event of a High Court of Justice appeal. ‎
He noted that several key issues still needed ‎clarification, such as recruitment goals and the ‎exact definition of who is haredi and eligible for ‎the exemption.‎

Uri Sheinin, of the Employment Division in the ‎Finance Ministry's Budgets Department, said that ‎‎"the contribution of the haredi sector in the ‎workforce to the state budget in 2050 may near the ‎current defense budget – 30 to 50 billion shekels ‎‎($22-37 billion) a year, which is about 6-10% of ‎gross domestic product." ‎

Sheinin stressed that integrating the haredim in the ‎workforce "is one of the most important and dramatic ‎things the government can to in favor of Israel's ‎economy." ‎