My name is Shimri Zameret and I am RSN’s board chairman. These are crucial times in Israel/Palestine and the Israeli refuser movement needs your help as thousands of soldiers have announced their refusal to serve in the Israeli army over the last two weeks. During the Second Intifada, as the Israeli army was killing thousands of Palestinians in its effort to suppress the uprising, I was part of a movement of Israeli youth and soldiers who refused to serve in the army. From the age of 18 to 20, during 2002-2004, I spent 21 months in prison in protest of the occupation and its brutal policies. It was one of the largest campaigns of conscientious objection seen in Israel. What we are seeing in the past 14 days is a far larger wave of refusal.
You can help us support the new wave of refusers by committing to a monthly donation here or by making a large single donation here.
Over the past two weeks, and for the first time in two decades, a new movement of army refusers has emerged in opposition to the plans of the far-right government, led by Benjamin Netanyahu, to pass a slew of anti-democratic legislation. The proposed laws, described as a “judicial coup” by opponents, will severely weaken the country’s courts, giving the ruling coalition almost unlimited power. While impacting the rights of women, LGBTQ people, secular people, and other minorities, it is Palestinians on both sides of the Green Line who will face the heaviest brunt of the legislation.
Against this imminent threat, thousands of Israeli soldiers and reservists have made public statements announcing their intent to refuse army service should the government’s legislation pass. One such statement had over 250 signatures of reserve soldiers, all from the army’s special ops unit, stating the legislation is intent on “making the judicial branch a political and non-independent branch, in other words an end for Israeli democracy.” A second, similar statement of refusal garnered over 500 signatures of reserve soldiers, all from “Unit 8200”, an intelligence unit often compared to the U.S. National Security Agency.
Meanwhile, according to media reports, almost every Israeli army unit — including the Sayeret Matkal commandos and other elite forces — is facing a revolt from within. Internal army chat groups are reportedly flooded with rank-and-file soldiers stating they either refuse or will refuse to serve if the judicial coup succeeds.
Dissent in the air force — one of the Israeli army’s most revered divisions — has been of particular concern for the military leadership, according to reports in the press. In a message on an internal air force WhatsApp group quoted in Haaretz, one pilot announced that instead of serving one day a week as a reserve soldier, he will now use that day to demonstrate against the government. Another new refuser said that if the legislation is approved, the army’s ability to address security threats “will be damaged, without a doubt,” emphasizing that “There are whole units, especially in the intelligence area but also in the technology area, that are dependent on reserve service year-round.” On Sunday, almost all the reserve pilots of Squadron 69, one of the air force’s most elite teams, declared to their commanders that they, too, would refuse service should the judicial plans go ahead.
Or Heler, a military correspondent for Channel 13 news who has been closely covering the current developments, warned that this historic revolt risks putting the Israeli army in an “unprecedented crisis.” He is right. And for us, the movement struggling to end Israeli rule over the Palestinian people, this crisis presents a moment of unprecedented opportunity.
Almost all Jewish Israelis are conscripted into the army at the age of 18, with men typically serving for 32 months and women for 24 months. Notably, though, almost all the Israelis taking part in the current wave of refusals are reserve soldiers — older Israelis who continue to serve in the army for either one month every year, or one day a week for many years, typically until the age of 40.
These reserve soldiers are called for regular training and are recruited in great numbers in times of war. But the army also relies on these soldiers for its day-to-day functions, especially in fields that require longer training and technical knowledge, such as intelligence gathering and the air force. Without them, the army cannot operate.
This wave of refusal is unfolding amid a larger campaign of mass demonstrations and civil resistance actions across Israel. Protesters have blockaded major highways and train stations in Israel's biggest cities; surrounded and tried to nonviolently break into the Knesset, the Israeli Parliament, during debates on the legislation; staged a national general strike; and organized weekly marches that have brought hundreds of thousands out onto the streets every Saturday.
Just as important are the economic actions taken under the banner of this movement: Israeli citizens and individuals and Israeli companies have publicly divested from the Israeli economy, selling their Israeli currency and stocks and buying foreign ones. The ripple effect has been effective: during February, the Israeli shekel plunged 10 percent against the dollar, and many observers are warning of further economic damage and capital flight.
As a researcher on the use of civil resistance — the use of strikes, boycotts, mass protests, and other nonviolent actions to withdraw cooperation from oppressive regimes — in global justice campaigns, I can safely say that this level of involvement in civil resistance campaigns is unparalleled in Israeli history. According to media estimates, 2 to 4 percent of Israel’s population (between 200,000 and 400,000 people) have participated in at least three of the peak protests and strike days across the country. Never before has an Israeli movement included such a scale of participation, and at the same time used civil resistance as its primary tactic. With levels of active participation by citizens widely seen as key in predicting the chances of success in civil resistance campaigns, this is important news.
Such campaigns of civil resistance can have a transformative impact, as examples from recent history show. They include the ousting of President Slobodan Milošević by Serbian citizens in 2000; the revolt that led to the restoration of democracy in Nepal in 2006; the overthrow of authoritarian rulers in Tunisia and Egypt in 2011; the blockades of the World Trade Organization, International Monetary Fund, and G8/G20 summits; by the global justice movement over the past two decades, and the strategies employed by climate justice movements such as Extinction Rebellion, Just Stop Oil, and the Sunrise Movement.
Yet as successful as the Israeli protests have been in mobilizing people, some are also wary that they are missing a key underlying issue. Critics rightly point out that many of the individuals and groups leading the current opposition movement — including the army refusal campaigns — are primarily focusing their messaging on the impact that the far-right government’s legislation will have on Jews in Israel and the diaspora, while largely ignoring decades of anti-democratic and apartheid policies advanced by all prior governments against Palestinians on both sides of the Green Line.
These critiques are important and legitimate. However, both strategists and experts on historical civil resistance movements stress that such campaigns were in fact often focused on “minor” or “symbolic” demands that helped make the greater injustice visible to larger parts of the general population. For example, the Indian anti-colonial movement's most widespread campaign was centered on fighting a tax on the production of salt, not on demanding an end to British rule. The U.S. civil rights movement also made national headlines through a campaign focusing not on voting rights first, but on segregation on public transportation.
Moreover, for hundreds of thousands of Israelis, young and old, participation in this protest movement will be a formative experience for the rest of their lives. And as we have seen with previous waves of army refusal, for many Israelis, the act of defying the military — one of the most central institutions in Israeli society and national identity — is often the first step toward abandoning the hegemonic norms in which they were raised, eventually leading to a total reshaping of their worldview. It is telling that many in the small community of Israeli activists that today devote their lives to campaigning against occupation and apartheid started as young army refusers or reserve soldier refusers in previous waves.
So yes, it is troubling that millions of Israeli Jews are only now seeing for the first time that the country’s ultra-nationalist and ultra-religious forces are an existential threat to society, including to the millions of Palestinians subjected to Israeli rule. That said, later is better than never, and this wave of refusal and protest may yet create a deep change in Israeli society. While it will likely take years to reach the surface and shape long-term policies, this period of mass refusal and civil resistance could be as transformative as the Israeli movements that emerged during the Second Intifada, the 1982 Lebanon war, and the 1973 Yom Kippur War.
Faced with this wave of refusal and resistance, I believe the role of the Refuser Solidarity Network and our supporters is to publicly endorse this wave of refusal and resistance, stand in solidarity with it, and especially support those refusers and protesters who see their actions as part of a bigger struggle for justice for Palestinians. The path ahead is neither safe nor certain, but for the first time in decades, I can honestly say that I see a realistic path toward ending the occupation in our generation.
Refuser Solidarity Network and our partners in Israel are going to support these new groups of refusers in any way we can. You can help us get the resources we need to do this. One great way is to create a plan to donate monthly to our work - if you do not have one already, please consider setting up a monthly donation plan here so you can help us plan for growing resistance in the months and years of struggle ahead.
If you are already a monthly donor, please consider making a large single donation today here to help us in this period – as you can imagine this period will require hiring new people, a lot of legal aid, press and social media work to make sure the struggle ends in victory. Every donation can help in this period.
In solidarity,
Shimri Zameret
Board chairman
Refuser Solidarity Network