GEDOLIM CRACKPOTS SHOULD BE MOVED TO IRAN - TELLING HAREDIM "NOT TO GO TO THE "ZIONIST" DRAFT CENTERS WHEN SUMMONS RECEIVED"


Haredi draft is no longer a mere political issue: The IDF’s readiness depends on it

 

Over the past year, the outgoing head of the Personnel Directorate devoted most of his time to quiet diplomacy with rabbis in the ultra-Orthodox community. It didn’t work!

 


Thousands of ultra-Orthodox -- photographed here through a metal fence -- attend a rally against the conscription of Haredi yeshiva students to the military, in Jerusalem's Mea Shearim neighborhood on June 30, 2024. (Chaim Goldberg/Flash90)
Thousands of ultra-Orthodox -- photographed here through a metal fence -- attend a rally against the conscription of Haredi yeshiva students to the military, in Jerusalem's Mea Shearim neighborhood
 
 

After nearly five years as head of the IDF’s Personnel Directorate, Maj. Gen. Yaniv Asor will soon step down from the role and await the next round of appointments in the General Staff. Asor holds a significant advantage over many other generals: While he has been part of the General Staff for several years, he was not directly involved in operational decisions prior to the October 7 Hamas invasion and massacre.

Asor, who went up the army ladder in the Golani Brigade, had long been on the operational front lines, however, commanding the 51st Battalion, the Egoz Unit, Golani Brigade and the Golan Heights Division. Stories abound from his days as a young company commander during the 1990s in the South Lebanon security zone, where he reportedly knew every valley and hill better than many of the intelligence officers in the command.

He commanded the 51st Battalion during the fierce 2006 battle in the town of Bint Jbeil in South Lebanon, where his deputy, Major Roi Klein, famously jumped on a grenade to save his soldiers and was killed.

That battle, one of the most grueling in the Second Lebanon War, with eight soldiers killed and dozens wounded, remains etched in Asor’s memory. Hezbollah was well-prepared in the town, and Golani forces found themselves caught in a planned ambush and at a severe disadvantage. Under those conditions, evacuation of the wounded was impossible, and some succumbed to their injuries. Asor has carried that with him ever since.

His tenure as head of the Personnel Directorate has been the longest he has spent in a single role and his first outside the operational sphere. Not that this is a bad thing; it appears to have given him a different perspective on the army — or more precisely, on what it should look like after the current war ends.