Israeli govt approves 'national guard' pushed by far-right Ben-Gvir
Israeli Minister of National Security Itamar Ben-Gvir speaks at the Knesset, Jerusalem, Israel, March 22, 2023. (EPA Photo)


The Israeli government approved Sunday a decision to form a national guard, officials said, pushed forward by the country's far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.

Critics, however, have opposed the decision warning it would function as a "private militia" for Ben-Gvir.

A statement from Ben-Gvir's office said the guard, which would operate under his ministry, would deal with "emergency scenarios, nationalistic crime, terror, and strengthening sovereignty."

It will be comprised of 1,800 members who will "bring back personal security" to Israelis, Ben-Gvir said in the statement relayed by his office.

More details about the guard's goals and authority will be issued by a committee within two months, the statement added.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office meanwhile said that a committee made up of members of "Israel's security agencies" would propose whether the police commissioner "or another body" will be in charge of the guard.

The move was a condition set by Ben-Gvir to agree to freeze the government's controversial judicial reforms, following months of protest and a crippling general strike Monday.

Opposition leader Yair Lapid slammed a separate government decision Sunday to cut budgets from all other ministries "to fund Ben-Gvir's private militia," calling it an "extremist fantasy of delusional people."

Former Public Security Minister Omer Bar-Lev, who had advanced the formation of such a force in 2022 as part of the border police, said it was already that force's responsibility to be dealing with the issues Ben-Gvir was tasking the national guard with.

"The thought that a private militia would be formed by an embarrassing minister who lacks understanding and was convicted of support of a terrorist group and incitement to racism is shocking," Bar-Lev wrote of Ben-Gvir on Twitter.

In his youth, Ben-Gvir was charged more than 50 times for incitement to violence or hate speech, and convicted in 2007 of supporting a terrorist group and inciting racism.