Combat Military Service: The Crisis in Motivation | INSS
go to header go to content go to footer go to search
INSS logo The Institute for National Security Studies, Strategic, Innovative, Policy-Oriented Research, go to the home page
INSS
Tel Aviv University logo - beyond an external website, opens on a new page
  • Contact
  • עברית
  • Support Us
  • Research
    • Topics
      • Israel and the Global Powers
        • Israel-United States Relations
        • Glazer Israel-China Policy Center
        • Russia
        • Europe
      • Iran and the Shi'ite Axis
        • Iran
        • Lebanon and Hezbollah
        • Syria
        • Yemen and the Houthi Movement
        • Iraq and the Iraqi Shiite Militias
      • Conflict to Agreements
        • Israeli-Palestinian Relations
        • Hamas and the Gaza Strip
        • Peace Agreements and Normalization in the Middle East
        • Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States
        • Turkey
        • Egypt
        • Jordan
      • Israel’s National Security Policy
        • Military and Strategic Affairs
        • Societal Resilience and the Israeli Society
        • Jewish-Arab Relations in Israel
        • Climate, Infrastructure and Energy
        • Terrorism and Low Intensity Conflict
      • Cross-Arena Research
        • Data Analytics Center
        • Law and National Security
        • Advanced Technologies and National Security
        • Cognitive Warfare
        • Economics and National Security
    • Projects
      • Preventing the Slide into a One-State Reality
      • Contemporary Antisemitism in the United States
      • Perceptions about Jews and Israel in the Arab-Muslim World and Their Impact on the West
  • Publications
    • -
      • All Publications
      • INSS Insight
      • Policy Papers
      • Special Publication
      • Strategic Assessment
      • Technology Platform
      • Memoranda
      • Posts
      • Books
      • Archive
  • Database
    • Surveys
    • Spotlight
    • Maps
    • Real-Time Tracker
  • Events
  • Team
  • About
    • Vision and Mission
    • History
    • Research Disciplines
    • Board of Directors
    • Fellowship and Prizes
    • Internships
    • Newsletter
  • Media
    • Communications
      • Articles
      • Quotes
      • Radio and TV
    • Video gallery
    • Press Releases
  • Podcast
  • Newsletter
New
Search in site
  • Research
    • Topics
    • Israel and the Global Powers
    • Israel-United States Relations
    • Glazer Israel-China Policy Center
    • Russia
    • Europe
    • Iran and the Shi'ite Axis
    • Iran
    • Lebanon and Hezbollah
    • Syria
    • Yemen and the Houthi Movement
    • Iraq and the Iraqi Shiite Militias
    • Conflict to Agreements
    • Israeli-Palestinian Relations
    • Hamas and the Gaza Strip
    • Peace Agreements and Normalization in the Middle East
    • Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States
    • Turkey
    • Egypt
    • Jordan
    • Israel’s National Security Policy
    • Military and Strategic Affairs
    • Societal Resilience and the Israeli Society
    • Jewish-Arab Relations in Israel
    • Climate, Infrastructure and Energy
    • Terrorism and Low Intensity Conflict
    • Cross-Arena Research
    • Data Analytics Center
    • Law and National Security
    • Advanced Technologies and National Security
    • Cognitive Warfare
    • Economics and National Security
    • Projects
    • Preventing the Slide into a One-State Reality
    • Contemporary Antisemitism in the United States
    • Perceptions about Jews and Israel in the Arab-Muslim World and Their Impact on the West
  • Publications
    • All Publications
    • INSS Insight
    • Policy Papers
    • Special Publication
    • Strategic Assessment
    • Technology Platform
    • Memoranda
    • Posts
    • Books
    • Archive
  • Database
    • Surveys
    • Spotlight
    • Maps
    • Real-Time Tracker
  • Events
  • Team
  • About
    • Vision and Mission
    • History
    • Research Disciplines
    • Board of Directors
    • Fellowship and Prizes
    • Internships
  • Media
    • Communications
      • Articles
      • Quotes
      • Radio and TV
    • Video gallery
    • Press Releases
  • Podcast
  • Newsletter
  • Contact
  • עברית
  • Support Us
bool(false)

Publications

Home Publications INSS Insight Combat Military Service: The Crisis in Motivation

Combat Military Service: The Crisis in Motivation

INSS Insight No. 997, December 12, 2017

עברית
Gabi Siboni
Gal Perl Finkel
Recruits of the Golani Brigade marched 70km to earn their brown colored beret. 20 June, 2017

There has reportedly been a significant decline in motivation to enlist in IDF combat units. Advances in technology and their wide ranging (and some would say excessive) use by the IDF have shifted the center of gravity in recruitment from the combat field units to the Special Forces, Flight and Naval Academies, technological units, and Military Intelligence directorate. To remedy the problem, the IDF must build a holistic perception that addresses a variety of fundamental issues, including: a balanced division of high quality recruits to meet the various IDF needs, means to reduce the Special Forces triage system, a review of the model of command development, and more. And while handling the crisis in motivation is the responsibility of the IDF, it is also a social challenge of the first order. The need to instill in the youth a world view in which giving, volunteering, and sacrifice are important values remains vital to Israel’s existence and security.


There has reportedly been a significant decline in motivation to enlist in IDF combat units. The IDF is not eager to reveal actual figures, but the published information showed a considerable decline in motivation among the November 2017 recruits, and particularly for field units, including combat intelligence, the armored corps, combat engineering, and artillery. A senior commander noted that the army attributes the drop in motivation to the calm security situation and to the fact that "young people today always ask: 'what's in it for me?' concerning their military service."

This assessment is only partly correct. The drop in motivation to serve in field units is not a localized problem that can be attributed to the calm security situation, but is the result of a long process that saw significant changes in the nature of IDF service and recruitment. Advances in technology and their wide ranging (and some would say excessive) use by the IDF have shifted the center of gravity in recruitment from the combat field units to the Special Forces and technological units.

In systematic and structured fashion, the IDF recruitment process gives priority to recruits joining the Special Forces, Flight and Naval Academies, technological units, and Military Intelligence directorate. These branches have access to the best quality recruits that the State of Israel can offer. The process of locating personnel for the prestigious intelligence units starts in high schools with a sophisticated marketing approach, including assurance that the army will provide them with a profession and skills that will be useful in civilian life, whether in hi tech or other fields. It is therefore no surprise that young people ask what benefit they will derive from their military service. Graduates of technology and cyber units assure themselves of an advantage in their future career after the army. It is enough to look at the conferences of Military Intelligence 8200 graduates to see what a considerable advantage they have over their comrades in the field units.

This is the competitive space in which the IDF field units contend, and without much success. They must be content with those who are not "intercepted" during the triage process by the special units, the prestigious courses, and the technology and intelligence systems. The field units cannot offer their recruits similar advantages. On the other hand, they have to address their recruits in terms of motivation, image, and values.

The IDF recruitment process has undergone far reaching changes in recent decades. Initially the IDF filtered recruits based on its own needs, and the recruits themselves had little influence on where they would serve. Nor was the volunteer option overly developed in those years. However, as the debate on individual rights gained traction, the IDF began to give recruits more opportunity for choice, with an attempt to satisfy their wishes (and sometimes those of their demanding parents). In light of the huge technology advances and the benefits they offered recruits, the IDF found itself facing a gradual decline in the quality of recruits for field units. Perhaps the IDF went too far – it needs quality and not just quantity in its units, including the less attractive units such as the armored corps, which has suffered from serious problems of image and soldier motivation in recent years.

The trend reached a new height in the November 2016 induction, when 86 recruits who were assigned to the armored corps refused to leave the recruitment base to join the corps. The army handled the incident with resolute determination. Half of the “protesters” were sent to detention at the base, while the others were sent to military prison for periods ranging from four to ten days. At the same time the army began to work on improving the corps image in the eyes of recruits, with considerable media coverage on the operations of the armored corps, interviews with senior commanders, early location of potential recruits and guarantees that they serve in the corps, and presentations by commanders to high school students before they enlist.

The problem of the quality and motivation of new recruits in field units likewise affects the quality of the IDF command. It is universally agreed that field units are the supplier of the army's main command backbone, and particularly in the IDF. This is due to the nature of warfare and the centrality of ground combat. A shortage of high quality personnel in these units leads to fewer high quality and professional commanders. It is already possible to identify and correct this phenomenon with the attempt to move commanders from the Special Forces to the field units in order to improve the standard of the field units and their commanders, and to give those commanders promotion prospects.

Already when he was the commander of the Galilee Division, Maj. Gen. Herzi Halevy warned of giving priority to intelligence and cyber jobs in the allocation of high quality personnel, which could mean that the IDF would one day find itself with inferior company and brigade commanders. Then-head of the Military Intelligence directorate Maj. Gen. Aviv Kochavi stated that in the future the IDF would have to develop "combined paths, for example, an infantry officer who would be trained to work in intelligence after serving as a company commander." This is similar to the way in which the army integrates officers from the ground forces into the Special Forces, or alternatively from the special forces into the infantry brigades. An example is the path Halevy himself followed, from the Paratroopers Brigade to the Military Intelligence directorate units, and back.

The IDF is based on the principle of a people’s army and therefore benefits from the fact that unlike other professional Western armies, it receives into its ranks the citizens with the best human potential. However, by referring most of them to the technology and Special Forces units, it will become unable to provide the State of Israel with the security it requires. At the hour of need, the IDF field units need the strike forces, in addition to firepower and intelligence, to defeat the enemy in the shortest time possible.

It appears that in recent years IDF commanders have begun to absorb the depth of the problem and are trying to remedy it. It was announced recently that the IDF will use a variety of means to reward soldiers serving in the field units, but this is not enough. The army must build a holistic perception of manpower to deal with a variety of fundamental issues, including: a balanced division of high quality recruits to meet the various IDF needs, means to reduce the Special Forces triage system, a review of the model of command development, and more. Developing the IDF manpower concept is not just a matter for the army's human resources professionals. It must be based on a broad vision of operational needs and led by the IDF's most senior commanders.

While handling the crisis in motivation is the responsibility of the army, it is also a social challenge of the first order. Israel will face many more security challenges. The need to instill in the youth a system of values that while not ignoring their desire for self-fulfillment provides a world view in which giving, volunteering, and sacrifice are important values, remains vital to Israel’s existence and security.

The opinions expressed in INSS publications are the authors’ alone.
Publication Series INSS Insight
TopicsMilitary and Strategic AffairsSocietal Resilience and the Israeli Society
עברית

Events

All events
The 18th Annual International Conference
25 February, 2025
08:15 - 16:00
Photo: Ronen Topelberg

Related Publications

All publications
Shutterstock (INSS modification)
In Their Death, They Commanded Us to Live: A Memorial Project for the Fallen of the Swords of Iron War
We invite you to look and learn about the fallen through this annual memorial project—to once again recognize how, in the microcosm of the people’s army, the character of its fallen reflects the society itself.
28/04/25
Israel Defense Forces/Handout via REUTERS
Three Strategic Paths to Achieve the Objectives of the War—One Is Preferable
Occupying the Gaza Strip, imposing a siege, or establishing an alternative civil administration while Hamas remains underground: Which of these three is the most preferable (or least harmful) option for achieving the goals of the war in Gaza—and how can the inherent challenges be addressed?
06/04/25
Shutterstock
“A Friend Brings a Friend” in the IDF? Similarity Bias and Its Impact on Cognitive Fixation
An examination of General Staff appointments over the past five decades reveals a frequent selection of individuals from the Paratroopers and Sayeret Matkal units for key positions. What are the implications of this—and what should the new chief of staff learn from it?
03/04/25

Stay up to date

Registration was successful! Thanks.
  • Research

    • Topics
      • Israel and the Global Powers
      • Israel-United States Relations
      • Glazer Israel-China Policy Center
      • Russia
      • Europe
      • Iran and the Shi'ite Axis
      • Iran
      • Lebanon and Hezbollah
      • Syria
      • Yemen and the Houthi Movement
      • Iraq and the Iraqi Shiite Militias
      • Conflict to Agreements
      • Israeli-Palestinian Relations
      • Hamas and the Gaza Strip
      • Peace Agreements and Normalization in the Middle East
      • Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States
      • Turkey
      • Egypt
      • Jordan
      • Israel’s National Security Policy
      • Military and Strategic Affairs
      • Societal Resilience and the Israeli Society
      • Jewish-Arab Relations in Israel
      • Climate, Infrastructure and Energy
      • Terrorism and Low Intensity Conflict
      • Cross-Arena Research
      • Data Analytics Center
      • Law and National Security
      • Advanced Technologies and National Security
      • Cognitive Warfare
      • Economics and National Secutiry
    • Projects
      • Preventing the Slide into a One-State Reality
      • Contemporary Antisemitism in the United States
      • Perceptions about Jews and Israel in the Arab-Muslim World and Their Impact on the West
  • Publications

    • All Publications
    • INSS Insight
    • Policy Papers
    • Special Publication
    • Strategic Assessment
    • Technology Platform
    • Memoranda
    • Database
    • Posts
    • Books
    • Archive
  • About

    • Vision and Mission
    • History
    • Research Disciplines
    • Board of Directors
    • Fellowship and Prizes
    • Internships
    • Support
  • Media

    • Communications
    • Articles
    • Quotes
    • Radio and TV
    • Video Gallery
    • Press Release
    • Podcast
  • Home

  • Events

  • Database

  • Team

  • Contact

  • Newsletter

  • עברית

INSS logo The Institute for National Security Studies, Strategic, Innovative, Policy-Oriented Research, go to the home page
40 Haim Levanon St. Tel Aviv, 6997556 Israel | Tel: 03-640-0400 | Fax: 03-744-7590 | Email: info@inss.org.il
Developed by Daat A Realcommerce company.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.