Israelis are questioning the use of women in combat after the killings of two female sergeants by Palestinians and a study suggesting women are too weak for deployment.
The debate comes at a critical time as the military is stretched thin by three years of fighting against the Palestinians and the government tries to fill the gaps by calling up reserves. More women in combat could ease the burden.
It also strikes at the heart of Israeli society, since army service is compulsory for nearly all able 18-year-olds, and the military is often a launching pad for careers.
Concern over deployment of women was fueled by the Oct. 24 ambush of sergeants Sarit Shneor-Senior and Adi Osman at a remote army outpost that guards the Jewish settlement of Netzarim in the Gaza Strip.
One of the attackers walked to the soldiers' sleeping quarters, opened the door to one of the trailers and killed Osman, 19, in her sleep. A few moments later, Shneor-Senior, 20, opened the door to her trailer and was killed by the attacker. A male soldier also was killed.
Some caution against pushing women too far in the army.
Initial findings of the study commissioned by the commander of ground forces found, for instance, that most women are not able to lift the minimum amount required of combat soldiers, 110 pounds (49.5kg). It also said most women could not complete military treks, which typically involve carrying heavy gear, of more than 19km. Male soldiers can be required to march more than twice that distance.
The study has not yet been debated in the upper echelons of the army, but could prevent the eventual entrance of women into elite commando units.
Housing Minister Effie Eitam, a former general, called for female soldiers to be removed from conflict areas.
"The ability of women to participate in intense combat ... is more limited," Eitam told the Yediot Ahronot newspaper.
Others warned that if women are kept out of combat, they will never achieve equality in the military, nor later in life, since the service shapes their motivation and expectations for future careers.
Recent call-ups of reserve units wouldn't have been necessary if women were used to their full potential, said Brigadier General Yehudit Ben-Notan, a former commander in the women's corps.
"I think a small nation needs to make use of everyone and to look at them not according to their sex, but according to the army's needs, and their talents," Ben-Notan told Israel Radio.
A few countries allow women into some combat roles, including Germany, Canada, Denmark and Norway. In the US military, women can serve on combat ships but are not allowed on submarines and are barred from serving in units whose main purpose is ground combat.
Today, Israeli women are the only ones in the world required to serve in their country's army.
Even before Israel's creation in 1948, women fought in militias to defend Jewish communities. They were recruited alongside men when the army was formed. In the early years, women were largely given jobs as secretaries and clerks in the army. The door to combat units was opened by Supreme Court rulings in 1995 and 2000, though most elite units remain off-limits.
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