Prime Minister Sharon will not be able to appoint former GSS senior Ehud Yatom as head of his Anti-Terrorism Task Force, at least in the near future. The Supreme Court ordered Sharon to explain within six weeks why he should be allowed to appoint Yatom. The Court thus responded positively to a petition by Meretz MKs Yossi Sarid and Mossi Raz, who claimed that Yatom\'s involvement in the killing of two captured terrorists in the Bus 300 incident 17 years ago disqualifies him from the post. Yatom was given a blanket pardon at the time, and was promised at the time that \"no harm would come to him as a result.\" Yatom\'s defenders say that the Court\'s decision is an unfair retraction of that promise. In addition, said his one-time attorney Dov Weisglass, Yatom was following orders from his superiors in the GSS at the time, and common practice in Israel is that orders that are not clearly illegal or immoral - i.e., they have no \"black flag waving over it\" - must be followed.