The latest proposal by politicians to enable ultra-Orthodox Israeli men an earlier exemption from military service is likely to be struck down by Israel’s top court for being discriminatory, according to an expert in the matter.

For decades, ultra-Orthodox men have been allowed a near-blanket exemption from national service in favor of religious study (though small percentages do enlist), but in 2012, the High Court of Justice struck down the law permitting this arrangement as discriminatory. A new law was drafted to address the issue in 2014, but that too was overturned by the court three years later, with the justices demanding that the government pass fresh legislation on the matter, or else Haredi Israelis would be forced to enlist.

Since then, the government — through the defense minister — has been requesting and receiving extensions from the court, as the government failed to draft and pass legislation that would both pass muster with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Haredi coalition partners and also not fall afoul of the country’s discrimination laws. The current and 15th extension is scheduled to expire on July 31, 2023. 

 

The issue of Haredi enlistment in the military has emerged as a third rail in Israeli politics. Governments have fallen and new ones have failed to be formed because of it. Fresh protests break out by more extreme elements of Haredi society each time the matter progresses or when an ultra-Orthodox man who refuses to even request an exemption gets arrested for failing to enlist.... Read More: Times of Israel