Role Of Women In Israel's Military Term Paper

PAGES
4
WORDS
1208
Cite

Role of Women in Israel's Military Israel is the only country in the world to have compulsory military service for women. Many often view this required service as a progressive system that places women on an equal footing with men. However, a closer examination reveals that Israel is just as terrified as every other nation regarding the participation of women in military combat. In fact, Israel's requirement for mandatory participation in a service that discriminates against women, may be just as draconian, if not more so, than discriminating against voluntary participants. This paper explores what function women really play in the Israeli military and how and why their limited role is slowly changing for the better.

The Defense Service Law of 1959 requires all citizens and permanent residents of the State of Israel to perform military service. This includes all women between the ages of 18 and 26, who are physically fit, unmarried, have not borne children, and have not objected on religious grounds or grounds of conscience. Women currently perform compulsory military service in the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) for a period of one year and nine months. In contrast males are required to serve for three years.

The disparity in service length requirements is the first clue that the Israel military views the roles of men and women in the military far differently.

Female soldiers fought alongside male colleagues in Israel's War of Liberation, which ended in 1948, but women have not since seen combat because of perceived problems during this war with claims that men protected the women members of their unit instead of carrying out the unit's mission. 1991.)

Women were pulled from the frontlines after only a few weeks of participating in the 1948 war when a group of them was ambushed and their bodies desecrated by the enemy.

According to some,...

...

Placing women in combat is believed by many to violate the Jewish concept of womanhood and women's status as mothers. Further, certain Israelis do not seem prepared to have women suffer the same consequences of war as men do. Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Dayan has stated that during Israel's War of Liberation, "we had a constant fear of what the Arabs would do to our women if they captured them." The men, commented Dayan, "could not stand the psychological stress" of watching women being killed and captured and "felt that [having women in combat units] knocked down their combat effectiveness."
In 1995, the Israeli Supreme Court ruling that struck down the "men-only" rule for combat units. However, integration of women into combat-support platoons has been slow and the legislation does not appear to be taken as seriously as it should be. IDF statistics reveal that eighty-four percent of female soldiers still serve in administrative roles with only one percent training for combat roles, and eighty-two percent of female soldiers have had no weapons training. Israeli army doctors assessing gender limitations have recommend women not serve in front-line infantry positions, artillery units or tank crews, citing lesser body strength and endurance than men.

During testimony before the U.S. Presidential Commission on the Assignment of Women in the Armed Forces, an Israeli warfare expert commented:

"Contrary to the myth, we have no women in combat [in Israel]. "On the contrary," he said, "the whole point of having women in the Israeli Defense Force is to free men for combat." Women in the IDF are actually part of a separate corps, and any weapons training they receive is "entirely symbolic." Women…

Sources Used in Documents:

Bibliography

Adler, Hillel. "Integrating Women into the Combat Force." Military Review. March-April, 2003. findarticles. 24 Nov. 2004.

"Israeli Women Won't See Combat." WorldNetDaily 20 Oct. 2003. WorldNetDaily. 24 Nov. 2004. <http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=35170>.

'Issues Tearing Our Nation's Fabric." The Center for Reclaiming America. 1997. Leadership U. 24 Nov. 2004. .

Knight, Robert H., "Women in Combat: Why Rush to Judgment?." Heritage Foundation Backgrounder #836 14 Jun 1991. Heritage Foundation. 24 Nov. 2004. <http://www.heritage.org/Research/NationalSecurity/BG836.cfm>.
"More on Women in the Israeli Defense Force." Auglink. 24 Nov. 2004. <http://userpages.aug.com/captbarb/myths2.html>.
"More on Women in the Israeli Defense Force." Auglink. 24 Nov. 2004. <http://userpages.aug.com/captbarb/myths2.html>.
Knight, Robert H., "Women in Combat: Why Rush to Judgment?." Heritage Foundation Backgrounder #836 14 Jun 1991. Heritage Foundation. 24 Nov. 2004. <http://www.heritage.org/Research/NationalSecurity/BG836.cfm>.
"Israeli Women Won't See Combat." WorldNetDaily 20 Oct. 2003. WorldNetDaily. 24 Nov. 2004. <http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=35170>.
Kinght, Robert H., "Women in Combat: Why Rush to Judgment?." Heritage Foundation Backgrounder #836 14 Jun 1991. Heritage Foundation. 24 Nov. 2004. <http://www.heritage.org/Research/NationalSecurity/BG836.cfm>.
"Israeli Women Won't See Combat." WorldNetDaily 20 Oct. 2003. WorldNetDaily. 24 Nov. 2004. <http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=35170>.
"Issues Tearing Our Nation's Fabric." The Center for Reclaiming America. 1997. Leadership U. 24 Nov. 2004. .
"More on Women in the Israeli Defense Force." Auglink. 24 Nov. 2004. <http://userpages.aug.com/captbarb/myths2.html>.


Cite this Document:

"Role Of Women In Israel's Military" (2004, November 24) Retrieved April 16, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/role-of-women-in-israel-military-59617

"Role Of Women In Israel's Military" 24 November 2004. Web.16 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/role-of-women-in-israel-military-59617>

"Role Of Women In Israel's Military", 24 November 2004, Accessed.16 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/role-of-women-in-israel-military-59617

Related Documents

Israel's Military Culture And How It Affects The Economy According to one definition of military culture, it is a distinct closed system of behavior according to which the members of the military are supposed to act. It consists of written as well as unwritten rules and regulations along with discrete beliefs and symbols (Cosmo, 2009). When we talk about military culture in Israel, we refer to the whole military situation in Israel

Women in the Book Of Judges Prof Name The Book of Judges talks about ancient Israel, and how they extended their territory by acquiring lands from the non-Israelites. The book narrates how Israelites conquered and reclaimed their lost land from non-Israelites and how they used to turn from God whenever they are satisfied. But it is written in the Bible that, the guilty are by no means cleared, as Exodus (34:7) says

Author Goldman continues, "Rather than assuming that all women are incapable of performance by virtue of the average woman's lack of capability, specific requirements should serve as the selection criteria, not gender" (Goldman 271). Gender should not matter if it does not matter to the women who want to join. The government could open up more combat jobs to women to help solve the problem, and women who were interested

What are the recognized threats Recognized threats on a national and international level include, expansion of international terrorism, as a result of universal fundamentalist Arab calls for violence against those who oppress Arabs. Israel is at the center of this conflict as the most regionally active, non-Arab state and as a result of historical actions taken by it to maintain itself and its territories, both recognized and occupied. Short contemporary history of

Role Islam Played in the
PAGES 8 WORDS 2913

According to Hiro (2001), "During the Iran-Iraq War it openly backed Baghdad, arguing that its defeat would lead to the spread of Islamic fundamentalism in the region which would hurt Western interests. It was the French corporations that were building two nuclear reactors near Baghdad which were bombed by Israel in June 1981" (75). Approximately 1,000 French companies were active in Iraq, and 6-7,000 French specialists were based there

Once the practice of Islamic worship the women of that region began to be subjected to stricter codes, from marriage to dress and the risk of honor becoming an even greater issue grew. The terrorization by the Mongols and Turks was quite different from the terror under Saddam. The Mongols and Turks utilized slavery, rape, beatings and murder. Saddam instead took on an entirely different approach. His first goal