The Israeli Supreme Court Just Issued Two Game-Changing Rulings

June 10 2025

Part of what brought about the current impasse involving haredi conscription was a Supreme Court ruling eight years ago, which invalidated a possible legislative solution, and split the right. The court, the subject of so much political controversy before the war began, recently issued two more seminal rulings, which were easy for those following Israeli news from abroad to have missed. In one, the court invalidated the government’s decision to fire the head of the Shin Bet, essentially placing the internal security agency beyond civilian control. The second, which got little attention even from Israelis, also concerns the appointment of personnel. Yonatan Green explains the intricacies of both rulings and their implications for the future of Israeli democracy in conversation with Aylana Meisel-Diament. (Video, 51 minutes. Audio is available on podcast platforms.)

Read more at Basic Law

More about: Israeli politics, Israeli Supreme Court, Shin Bet

As the IDF Grinds Closer to Victory in Gaza, the Politicians Will Soon Have to Step In

July 16 2025

Ron Ben-Yishai, reporting from a visit to IDF forces in the Gaza Strip, analyzes the state of the fighting, and “the persistent challenge of eradicating an entrenched enemy in a complex urban terrain.”

Hamas, sensing the war’s end, is mounting a final effort to inflict casualties. The IDF now controls 65 percent of Gaza’s territory operationally, with observation, fire dominance, and relative freedom of movement, alongside systematic tunnel destruction. . . . Major P, a reserve company commander, says, “It’s frustrating to hear at home that we’re stagnating. The public doesn’t get that if we stop, Hamas will recover.”

Senior IDF officers cite two reasons for the slow progress: meticulous care to protect hostages, requiring cautious movement and constant intelligence gathering, and avoiding heavy losses, with 22 soldiers killed since June.

Two-and-a-half of Hamas’s five brigades have been dismantled, yet a new hostage deal and IDF withdrawal could allow Hamas to regroup. . . . Hamas is at its lowest military and governing point since its founding, reduced to a fragmented guerrilla force. Yet, without complete disarmament and infrastructure destruction, it could resurge as a threat in years.

At the same time, Ben-Yishai observes, not everything hangs on the IDF:

According to the Southern Command chief Major General Yaron Finkelman, the IDF is close to completing its objectives. In classical military terms, “defeat” means the enemy surrenders—but with a jihadist organization, the benchmark is its ability to operate against Israel.

Despite [the IDF’s] battlefield successes, the broader strategic outcome—especially regarding the hostages—now hinges on decisions from the political leadership. “We’ve done our part,” said a senior officer. “We’ve reached a crossroads where the government must decide where it wants to go—both on the hostage issue and on Gaza’s future.”

Read more at Ynet

More about: Gaza War 2023, IDF