In Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu yesterday disbanded the so-called Plesner Committee that was supposed to create a new law to end the exemption from the military draft for haredi (ultra-Orthodox) Jews after Israel's Supreme Court struck down the Tal law which gave yeshiva students exemptions. Haaretz reported yesterday that two of the government coalition partners withdrew from the committee last week after it would not go far enough in meeting their demands that all Israeli Arabs (who are now draft exempt) be subject to the draft. Then the haredi representative on the committee left over threats to use personal sanctions against ultra-Orthodox men who avoid military service. Netanyahu said: "Unfortunately, the committee could not reach an agreed-upon formulation and it could not form a recommendation that would garner a majority in the Knesset."
UPDATE: Jerusalem Post reports that despite the Prime Minister's dissolution of the Plesner Committee, on Wednesday (July 4) Committee chairman Yohanan Plesner at a news conference presented the committee's recommendations in his own name. The recommendations call for a complex arrangement that would result in most haredi men serving in an obligatory national service by the time they reach age 23 or else facing a significant fine.