Posted on 01/16/2002 2:43:03 PM PST by RCW2001
BEHIND THE HEADLINES |
Conscientious objector groups have new life as intifada drags on |
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Less than six months later, Sagi received an order to return to Tapuach. When he refused, he was jailed for 26 days at Prison 6.
Reserve duty has become so undesirable in recent years that 41 percent of Israelis believe only "suckers" show up, according to a recent poll in the Yediot Achronot newspaper. Of the total pool of some 250,000 potential reservists, just 13,000 serve the full reserve term of 26 days a year, the daily Ma´ariv reported.
The Israeli army announced in September the establishment of two new brigades, signing on conscripts for extra terms of duty to reduce pressure on the reserve system.
For the army, the reservist dilemma is less ideological than budgetary. Many reservists have careers and families and demand more of the army than do young conscripts.
The army pays reservists salaries roughly equivalent to those they receive in the private sector. Furthermore, after several reservists died in action, reserve officers and their units organized to demand expanded benefits.
If they don´t provide added benefits, higher pay and better hours, the army will continue to have problems convincing reservists that they aren´t suckers for answering the call of duty, said Tzvika Weshler, spokesman for Baltam, a reservist advocacy group.
The army has met some of Baltam´s demands, earmarking some $17 million in bonus pay for combat reservists who serve more than 26 days, renovating bases where reservists train and making scheduling more flexible.
In the long term, says Reserve Brig. Gen. Shlomo Brom, former deputy of the IDF´s planning division and currently a researcher at Tel Aviv University´s Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies, the IDF will have to restructure so it doesn´t rely on reservists, Brom said.
In the short run, however, Brom expects few changes: Fewer reservists want to serve at a time when, because of the intifada, the IDF is using five times more reserve battalions than before.
Nevertheless, Yesh Gvul continues to canvas bus and train stations to inform soldiers of a clause in the IDF´s code that allows them to disobey illegal orders.
The law stems from the ruling of a committee of inquiry charged with investigating the Kafr Qassem massacre in 1956, when soldiers killed 49 Arab civilians who weren´t aware of a curfew imposed at the beginning of the Sinai War. Ultimately, the presiding judge ruled that following an illegal order is a criminal offense.
Since then, peace activist Kidron said, the army has never court-martialed a refusenik.
If it did, the trial would bring up tough questions about the IDF´s laws, including those claiming that the IDF´s legal code incorporates all international conventions Israel has signed.
Yesh Gvul members say they support the army but as a defensive force only.
"The myth is that pressuring the Palestinians will protect us," Kidron said, "but it is the trigger to more violence, and cannot provide us with security."
LOL! Are you talking about the "conquered people" who started three wars against Israel and just finished bludgeoning, shooting, and lynching a 72 year old man?
Of course you do. You would like the Jews to lay down and die just like many did in the Holocaust trusting that their benefactors would treat them humanely. Or that they would lay down like good little Jewish dhimmi and allow the Arabs to treat them like crap like they did for 13 centuries.
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You really don't understand what the end game you advocate is. RIGHT!
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