Chief of General Staff (Israel)

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The Chief of 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. The Chief of Staff is the only active Israeli officer with the rank of Rav Aluf (Hebrew: רב-אלוף‎) at any given time. It is the highest rank in the IDF, equivalent to the rank of Lieutenant General (or General) in Western armies.

[edit] Legal position

The Ramatkal's position 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 January 22, 2007, the Chief of General Staff is Gabi Ashkenazi.

[edit] Significance

Given the importance of the IDF in Israeli society, the Chief of Staff is a highly-respected and public figure. Former Chiefs of Staff frequently parlay the prominence of their position into political life. 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 was not appointed to the Cabinet. Ehud Barak and two other former Chiefs of Staff (Dayan and Mofaz) 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.

[edit] List of IDF Chiefs of Staff

  1. Yaakov Dori (1947–49)
  2. Yigael Yadin (1949–52)
  3. Mordechai Maklef (1952–53)
  4. Moshe Dayan (1953–58)
  5. Haim Laskov (1958–61)
  6. Tzvi Tzur (1961–64)
  7. Yitzhak Rabin (1964–68)
  8. Haim Bar-Lev (1968–72)
  9. David Elazar (1972–74)
  10. Mordechai Gur (1974–78)
  11. Rafael Eitan (1978–83)
  12. Moshe Levi (1983–87)
  13. Dan Shomron (1987–91)
  14. Ehud Barak (1991–95)
  15. Amnon Lipkin-Shahak (1995–98)
  16. Shaul Mofaz (1998–2002)
  17. Moshe Ya'alon (2002–05)
  18. Dan Halutz (2005–2007)
  19. Gabi Ashkenazi (2007–)
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