Chief of General Staff (Israel)

Chief of the General Staff

Incumbent
Gadi Eizenkot

since 16 February 2015
Residence HaKirya, Tel Aviv
Appointer The Government
Inaugural holder Yaakov Dori
Formation 1947

The Chief of the General Staff, also known as the Commander-in-Chief of the Israel Defense Forces (Hebrew: ראש המטה הכללי, Rosh HaMateh HaKlali, abbr. Ramatkalרמטכ"ל), is the supreme commander and Chief of Staff of the Israel Defense Forces.

At any given time, the Chief of Staff is the only active officer holding the IDF's highest rank, rav aluf (Hebrew: רב-אלוף), which is usually translated into English as lieutenant general, a three-star rank. (The lone exception to this rule occurred during the Yom Kippur War, when former Chief of Staff Haim Bar-Lev, who was a cabinet member at the outbreak of and during the war, was brought out of retirement and installed as chief of Southern Command. For a brief period, he and Chief of Staff David Elazar were both in active service with the rank of rav aluf.)

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) is an integrated force, its ranks are the same in all services. It has a slightly compacted rank structure; for instance, the Chief of Staff (Ramatkal or rav aluf (Hebrew: רב-אלוף)) is seemingly only equivalent to a lieutenant general (NATO OF-8) in other militaries. Rav aluf means 'arch-general', which would be equal to a field marshal or five star general in other armies and equivalent to OF-10.

The position of ramatkal is defined in the Basic Law: The Military (1976), clause three:

The Chief of Staff is formally appointed once every three years, with the government often extending the term to four years, and in some occasions, even five. As of 16 February 2015, the Chief of General Staff is Gadi Eizenkot.

Significance

Given the importance of the IDF in Israeli society, the Chief of Staff is an important public figure in Israel. On appointment of a new Chief of Staff, mass-circulation papers such as Yediot Aharonot and Israel Hayom customarily provide their readers with large-scale portrait photos of the new Chief, and Israeli citizens often hang such photos in homes and shops. Former Chiefs of Staff often parlay the prominence of their position into political life, and sometimes the business world. Two Chiefs of Staff (Yitzhak Rabin and Ehud Barak) have become Prime Minister of Israel and nine others (Yigael Yadin, Moshe Dayan, Tzvi Tzur, Haim Bar-Lev, Mordechai Gur, Rafael Eitan, Amnon Lipkin-Shahak, Shaul Mofaz and Moshe Ya'alon) have served in the Knesset. Of these, only Tzur did not get appointed to the Cabinet. Five former Chiefs of Staff (Dayan, Rabin, Barak, Mofaz, and Ya'alon) held the position of Defense Minister, widely considered to be the most powerful ministerial post in the country and the immediate civilian superior of the Chief of Staff; of these, Mofaz is the only one to serve as Defense Minister over his immediate successor as Chief of Staff (in Mofaz's case, Ya'alon). Moshe Dayan served also as Foreign Minister. Soon after his discharge, Dan Halutz became the CEO of a prestigious car importer. Ehud Barak took a hiatus from politics twice after defeats for re-election and pursued successful international business ventures.

List of IDF Chiefs of Staff

Order Name Dates
1st Yaakov Dori 1947–1949
2nd Yigael Yadin 1949–1952
3rd Mordechai Maklef 1952–1953
4th Moshe Dayan 1953–1958
5th Haim Laskov 1958–1961
6th Tzvi Tzur 1961–1964
7th Yitzhak Rabin 1964–1968
8th Haim Bar-Lev 1968–1972
9th David Elazar 1972–1974
10th Mordechai Gur 1974–1978
11th Rafael Eitan 1978–1983
12th Moshe Levi 1983–1987
13th Dan Shomron 1987–1991
14th Ehud Barak 1991–1995
15th Amnon Lipkin-Shahak 1995–1998
16th Shaul Mofaz 1998–2002
17th Moshe Ya'alon 2002–2005
18th Dan Halutz 2005–2007
19th Gabi Ashkenazi 2007–2011
20th Benny Gantz 2011–2015
21st Gadi Eizenkot[1] 2015–present

References

  1. Ginsburg, Mitch. "Maj. Gen. Gadi Eizenkot to be named 21st commander of IDF". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
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