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Kadima quit the government last week after the sides failed to reach a compromise. Yaalon, meanwhile, has presented a plan that would allow deferrals to continue till age 26
-- when most ultra-Orthodox men already have several children. It also rejects personal sanctions against those who shirk service and includes a plan to draft Arabs into the military or alternative community service. Netanyahu said the proposal will "gradually increase the number of those who serve, among the ultra-Orthodox and the Arabs, without setting public against public." "This will be a realistic change that will be possible to implement, and not an empty move the goal of which is to grab headlines. We will give more to those who serve and less to those who evade," he added. But the new proposal almost immediately drew a cascade of criticism from opposition and social activists alike. Kadima leader Shaul Mofaz, now head of the opposition after leaving the government, charged Netanyahu with cowardice and "choosing those who evade over those who serve." Officially, ultra-Orthodox leaders insist on maintaining the sweeping exemptions, for fear of assimilation in a largely secular military. But parliamentary officials say that in private meetings they have shown some willingness to compromise. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the meetings were closed to the public. For his part, Netanyahu has pledged to "enact a historic change," but at the same time appears reluctant to alienate the ultra-Orthodox community that has traditionally supported him. "The Netanyahu government has decided to prefer its ultra-Orthodox, anti-Zionist partners over the vast majority of the public," said Uri Regev, a rabbi who heads the religious equality group Hiddush. "It is determined to miss the historic opportunity to share the national burden and deal a catastrophe to the national economy and national security."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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