The existing situation, where, de facto, the vast majority of the ultra-Orthodox community does not enlist in the military, is undoubtedly illegal and severely undermines the right to equality. The Israeli Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, currently discussing how to draft ultra-Orthodox men, focuses heavily on questions of quotas and goals. The idea behind goals is to set measurable targets for ultra-Orthodox enlistment, demanding a visible rising trend in their integration into the army. Failure to meet these conscription goals would result in the imposition of sanctions on the haredi community institutions and on individuals required to enlist. The concept of quotas is the mirror image of the goals system, intended to set a numerical determination of which members of the ultra-Orthodox community will be exempt from conscription. Under either system or a hybrid of both, the state will not impose a general individual draft obligation on all haredi men but only on part of the community.

However, imposing a collective service obligation on the ultra-Orthodox community – whereby the community itself must supply conscripts or face consequences – is highly problematic. This would amount to a form of communal tax – reminiscent of the Russian Cantonists or of more recent harrowing times’ internal selection processes – where the ultra-Orthodox community determines who remains in yeshivas and who goes to the army, contrary to the right to equality. Moreover, a collective obligation privatizes the state’s coercive power, transferring it to yeshiva heads or sector leaders. Just as the privatization of prisons was prohibited by the Israeli Supreme Court, so too should the privatization of the state’s coercive power in the context of enlistment be forbidden.

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