Defense Minister Israel Katz said Friday he will not approve the promotion of a senior reserves officer, citing his apparent involvement in the Brother in Arms protest group, after the military included the officer in a late-night announcement Thursday of a round of senior appointments.

It was the latest incident in several clashes between Katz and IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir.

The list, announced by Zamir shortly before midnight, included two officers promoted to brigadier general, 28 promoted to colonel, and one brigadier general and nine colonels who are moving to new positions at the same rank.

Col. (res.) German Giltman, who retired from the IDF in 2022, was set to be promoted to brigadier general and return to the military to serve in a senior role in the Ground Forces.

His promotion and appointment were recommended to Zamir by senior officers, including Operations Division chief Maj. Gen. Itzik Cohen, who was the commander of the 162nd Division — and Giltman’s commander — for most of the war, as well as designated Mossad director Maj. Gen. Roman Gofman, who served alongside Giltman in the Armored Corps over the years.

Get The Times of Israel’s Daily Edition
by email and never miss our top stories

By signing up, you agree to the terms

Giltman served some 700 days in reserves as a “combat manager” and the chief of staff for the 162nd Division, which operated in the Gaza Strip for many months amid the war.


Col. (res.) German Giltman (center) is seen with other members of the ‘Brothers in Arms’ reservist protest group, during a press conference in Tel Aviv, March 21, 2023. (REUTERS/Amir Cohen)

Born in Zaporizhzhia in the Ukrainian SSR, Giltman joined the IDF Armored Corps in 1991. He later served as commander of the 14th Reserve Armored Brigade and deputy commander of the 162nd Division. His last role in the IDF before retiring in 2022 was military attaché to Russia.

After being released from the IDF, Giltman participated in a Brothers in Arms press conference, a group made up of reserve soldiers that played a key role in mass protests against the government’s judicial overhaul plans in 2023.

At the event in March 2023, Giltman said: “I have served until today, both in active duty and in the reserves, because of an unwritten contract with the state. I am not willing to serve in a place that is not a democracy. You are putting us in a dilemma.”

In a statement on Friday morning, Katz said: “Whoever advocates refusal will not serve in the IDF.”

The defense minister said he had informed Zamir that he “categorically rejects” the promotion and appointment of Giltman, whom he claimed was “one of the leaders of Brothers in Arms, who called for refusal to serve in the IDF.”

“Anyone who preaches or encourages refusal will not serve in the IDF and will not be promoted to any position,” he added.


A photo provided by an anti-government activist shows judicial overhaul protesters in Tel Aviv holding up a banner during a weekly rally, September 23, 2023. (Gilad Furst)

For its part, Brother in Arms issued a statement Friday slamming Katz as the “minister of draft dodging,” pointing its finger at the defense minister for the government’s proposed law to entrench broad exemptions from conscription for ultra-Orthodox yeshiva students.

“Israel Katz, who is pushing a [draft] evasion scheme for tens of thousands of Haredim, dares to disqualify a senior officer with 30 years of dedicated service to the state,” said the group.

“Giltman, who served dozens of days in reserve duty [each year, before the war] and who reported for duty immediately on October 7 — he is Katz’s enemy,” Brothers in Arms said.

“But draft dodgers who declare ‘we will die before we enlist’ — for them, he hands over an evasion scheme. There has never been a defense minister who harmed the country’s security and the fighters’ morale like the minister of draft dodging. Katz does not fight Israel’s enemies — he fights the heroes who defend it,” the protest group added.


Police detain an ultra-Orthodox man during a protest against Haredi enlistment to the IDF outside a military recruitment center in Jerusalem, November 12, 2025. (Chaim Goldberg/Flash90)

Giltman on Friday claimed that he was “never part of the Brothers in Arms movement.”

“It seems someone is misleading the minister,” he told Army Radio.

“I was in the Armored Corps Soldiers for the Defense of Democracy movement. I did not call for refusal or for not volunteering,” he said, referring to another protest group.

He said that the press conference that he participated in, in which he was wearing a Brothers in Arms t-shirt, “was of all the reservist movements, and I did not speak there about refusal.”

“Since I was released from the IDF, I have been doing reserve duty, including during the war,” Giltman told the radio station. “I was asked to return to permanent service, and for me, this is an important and moral matter, just as I have acted for the good of the state for 33 years until today.”

“It’s important that the truth come out,” he added.


Then-Israel’s defense attaché to Russia, Col. German Giltman, on February 26, 2020. (Israel Defense Forces)

Katz had previously said he would not approve any promotions and appointments in the military that are not brought to him beforehand for review.

The defense minister has been engaged in a months-long, escalating campaign against Zamir over senior IDF appointments by selectively promoting officers and denying the appointments of others with whom he apparently does not see eye to eye.

Last month, the two traded barbs publicly after Katz ordered a re-investigation of the military’s external review of its earlier internal probes into the failures surrounding the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack.

In response, Zamir accused Katz of political interference and harming the military’s preparedness by freezing senior promotions — which the defense minister must approve — for 30 days.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu later met separately with Zamir and Katz to try and defuse the spat, and they have attended security meetings together despite the tensions.


You appreciate our journalism

You clearly find our careful reporting valuable, in a time when facts are often distorted and news coverage often lacks context.

Your support is essential to continue our work. We want to continue delivering the professional journalism you value, even as the demands on our newsroom have grown dramatically since October 7.

So today, please consider joining our reader support group, The Times of Israel Community. For as little as $6 a month you’ll become our partners while enjoying The Times of Israel AD-FREE, as well as accessing exclusive content available only to Times of Israel Community members.

Thank you,
David Horovitz, Founding Editor of The Times of Israel


Join Our Community


Join Our Community

Already a member? Sign in to stop seeing this