gur ieng = Interest in army service is declining among young recruits. LARRY DERFNER ISRAEL CORRESPONDENT A P/CANTIAIWI I V1I N These young highly motivated men had no fighting force. This trouble joining reasoning — that the Israeli army. Israeli youth were But what does losing their heart the future hold? n early August, Defense Minister Yitzhak Mordechai paid a visit to the Tel Hashomer army induction center outside of Tel Aviv. He wanted to see how the new recruits were far- ing. Some 100 of them sat in a room as Mordechai, surrounded by reporters and cam- eramen, asked for a show of hands from those who wanted to go into combat units. Three went up. One recruit told the defense minister, "Most of my friends want to be in units in the rear." `The rear? Why the rear?" Mr. Mordechai demanded. "We don't have the strength," the recruit replied. "At this age you don't have the strength? No strength to serve your country for three years? What's the matter, do you have per- sonal problems?" 'We don't want to go through all the strain, we don't have the strength," the re- cruit said. This embarrassing visit let the cat out of the bag: The problem of declining motivation among 18-year-old army recruits became an admitted problem in Israeli society. In recent years, it has become accepted that older reserve soldiers were at best drag- ging themselves to annual duty, and fre- quently ducking it. That such a problem existed among 18-year-olds was only hint- ed at, and the army had always denied it. But the coverage of Mordechai's visit made it bla- tantly clear that even among Israeli youth, army service was losing its shine. "They talk about it without a bit of em- barrassment or shame," remarked one senior army officer accompanying the defense min- ister. In his pep talk to the boys, Mr. Mordechai explained that Israel had not yet reached the era of peace, and that it still required a strong, for the army be- cause they be- lieved that peace was already upon them, and that preparing for war was no longer necessary — was a popular explanation for this new, troubling phenomenon. But at Tel Aviv's Dizengoff Cen- ter mall, a group of 16- and 17- year-olds gave different explanations. "Young people walk around with their cellular phones, their McDonald's and their Cokes and they only care about themselves," one boy said. "Kids today have complete free- dom. Their parents can't control them — the youth have become stronger, more independent. No- body wants to stop what he's do- ing and have some army officer start pushing him around, telling him what to do," said another. One girl said that if she were al- lowed into a combat unit, she would readily volunteer. "It's im- portant; we have to defend the country," she said. She hopes to serve in the intelligence unit, one of the most demanding for women recruits. "My parents are completely be- hind me," she said, noting that her father served in the Yom Kippur and Lebanon wars. One of the boys in the group, however, said, "I'm going to dodge the draft just like [rock star] Aviv Geffen. I don't believe in war, and besides, rm not suit- ed for the army personally." The boy said his father, who fought in the Six-Day War, sup- ports his decision. "He knows I'm too delicate for the army." The teens talked about the individualistic, materialistic influences coming into Israel from America, the music, the media that constant- ly prime them for high living, for following their desires. This is not the sort of thinking that whets one's appetite for basic training. "We've been brainwashed," said the girl headed for the intelligence unit. The youngsters said the problem of de- clining military motivation was common to all youth except the national religious — the children of West Bank settlers and members of the B'nei Akiva youth group, many of whom combine army service with yeshiva REDUCTION page 138