A Policy-Oriented Think Tank Addressing Foreign Policy and National Security Issues for a Safe Israel

Eyal Ben-Ari

Prof. Eyal Ben-Ari

An anthropologist and sociologist who has carried out research on the armed forces of Israel, Japan, and Taiwan.

Prof Eyal Ben-Ari completed his PhD in Cambridge University and was professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He specializes in East Asian security, the IDF, the Japan Self-Defense Forces, and issues related to the armed forces of the democracies (conscription and reserves systems, managing diversity, and social and organizational transformations). He has published over twenty-five books (authored and edited) mostly about the armed forces but also about early childhood education, local communities in Japan, and popular culture in East Asia. Ben-Ari served as Director of the Harry S Truman Institute for the Advancement of Peace (at the Hebrew University and Chair of the Israel Anthropological Association, as well as in select IDF committees and as consultant for the IDF’s Behavioral Science Center.

Senior Researcher at JISS.

Articles by Prof. Eyal Ben-Ari

לשכת הגיוס

Will the existing conscription model meet the needs of the IDF after the Gaza war?

Israel will need a much larger army to fight a multi-front war, some of those now receiving early discharges may stay in service for longer periods since stricter criteria for release will be put in force. One lesson of the present war is a renewed recognition of border defense so the IDF will invest more resources in training and deploying forces for this mission along with the continued preparation for a broader war.

Tokyo, Japan: People gather while holding placards in colors of the Ukrainian flag during the concert at Ikebukuro Nishiguchi Park Outdoor Theater Global Ring Theater .

Japan and the War in Ukraine

Two weeks after the war began, Japan announced that its new National Security Strategy scheduled to be published this year would recategorize Russia from “partner” to “security challenge,” thus placing it alongside China and North Korea.

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