By Emily Rose
JERUSALEM (Reuters) – Hundreds of Israeli reservists marched in Tel Aviv on Wednesday threatening to refuse their volunteer service if the government presses ahead with its controversial plan to curb the power of the Supreme Court.
The drive by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s nationalist-religious coalition to strip the court of some of its review powers has triggered mass protests across Israel and stirred deep concern among allies including the United States.
With one amendment slated for ratification next Sunday and Monday, protests have intensified. The government could rethink its polarising drive to overhaul the judiciary if there is a major escalation in protests, a cabinet minister said.
Protests by reservists from some of the military’s most elite formations including combat pilots and Special Forces units have attracted particular attention, stirring alarm from defence chiefs worried that the protests risk compromising national security.
The Israeli military declined to comment on the protest.
The government and its supporters say the proposed changes are needed to rein in what they see as activist judges encroaching into the political sphere.
But for the protestors, the proposals undermine Israel’s democratic values and break the “unwritten contract” it has with its armed forces, said Ron Scherf, 51, a lieutenant colonel in the General Staff Reconnaissance Unit, who has been in the reserves for 23 years.
“Every soldier who endangers his life and goes on missions does that for a state that is defined as Jewish and democratic,” he told Reuters. “But if you take one of those out, if the country stops being Jewish or democratic, it’s not longer a country that can be protected,” he said.
Protest organizers shared with Reuters 300 letters from military doctors who have said they will not serve and shared a letter signed by 750 reservists in special operations saying they won’t report for duty if the legislation passes.
While Reuters could not independently verify the signatures, the organizers say they have verified each name signed.
The conscript military draws on reserves in wartime and requires that they undergo regular training.
Soldiers who refuse to report for volunteer service are not in violation of military or civil law and, thus cannot be punished. Some reservists have made clear that if Israel entered a state of emergency, they would report for emergency call-ups.
Captain M, a 30-year-old researcher at the Weizman Institute, who declined to give his full name, said he had compiled a list of more than one thousand signatures of reservists who pledged to suspend their volunteer service.
(Reporting by Emily Rose; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)