IDF Sees Sharp Rise in Psychiatric Exemption Requests Following Service Deferral Cancellation
Since the cancellation of the military service deferral arrangement in mid-2023, the Israel Defense Forces have experienced a significant surge in requests for psychiatric exemptions from service. These requests are typically based on single psychiatric evaluations diagnosing severe conditions, rather than ongoing treatment, raising suspicions of evasion attempts. IDF representatives reported this trend to the Knesset State Control Committee, highlighting the heavy burden it places on the military mental health system and its impact on processing regular recruits.
During a follow-up discussion on the State Comptroller's report about IDF recruitment and screening procedures, Lieutenant Colonel Eyal Zilber, head of recruitment offices in the medical screening branch, described the increase as "enormous," particularly in diagnoses like psychosis. He linked this rise directly to the repeal of the "Torato Omanuto" law and noted that many exemption requests come from individuals aged 24 to 25, which raises further professional doubts about their sincerity.
The overload on the military mental health services has caused significant delays, with recruits reportedly waiting over ten months for profile changes or document reviews. To manage the backlog, first-line medical officers sometimes assign partial medical profiles as interim solutions to allow recruitment processes to continue. Despite efforts to establish clearer criteria for evaluating psychiatric opinions, current measures have not fully curbed the growing phenomenon, according to professional sources.
This development occurs amid ongoing personnel shortages and sustained pressure on both regular and reserve forces since the outbreak of the recent conflict, underscoring the challenges faced by the IDF in maintaining effective recruitment and screening under strained conditions.