What the deaths of Hamas-held Israeli hostages in Gaza say about IDF rules of engagement

Special Three hostages who were abducted from Israeli communities near the Gaza border, from left, Alon Shamriz, Samer Al-Talalka and Yotam Haim. Israeli troops mistakenly shot the three hostages to death. (AFP)
Three hostages who were abducted from Israeli communities near the Gaza border, from left, Alon Shamriz, Samer Al-Talalka and Yotam Haim. Israeli troops mistakenly shot the three hostages to death. (AFP)
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Updated 22 December 2023
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What the deaths of Hamas-held Israeli hostages in Gaza say about IDF rules of engagement

What the deaths of Hamas-held Israeli hostages in Gaza say about IDF rules of engagement
  • Alon Shamriz, Samer Talalka and Yotam Haim were mistakenly shot and killed by the Israeli military on Dec. 15
  • Critics claim the deadly incident is indicative of a lack of discipline and persistent disregard for civilian lives

LONDON: The Israeli military faces fresh accusations that it continues to disregard the rules of engagement during the war in Gaza, after its troops shot and killed three Israeli hostages last week.

Critics said the mistake was an inevitable result of the excessive reliance on violence by the Israel Defense Forces, or perhaps indiscipline.

That the three men were killed by would-be rescuers from their own side is tragedy enough. But the fact that the Israeli troops decided it was acceptable to open fire on unarmed individuals, who had their hands raised and were waving a white flag of surrender, shines a light on the brutal course of the war.

When they were killed in Gaza’s Shejaiya neighborhood on Dec. 15, the three men —Alon Shamriz, Samer Al-Talalka and Yotam Haim — were screaming for help in Hebrew and waving a white sheet daubed with the letters “SOS” as they approached soldiers.

The IDF was swift to denounce the killings as a breach of its own rules of engagement and said the three men had been “mistakenly identified … as a threat.” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed his “deep sorrow” over their deaths.

However, Avi Shamriz, the father of one of the men who was killed, told NBC News the shootings indicated that the war was being fought without due regard for the safety and well-being of the hostages.

About 250 people were taken captive when Hamas militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,139 people, mostly civilians, according to updated Israeli figures.

More than 100 Israeli and foreign hostages were released in exchange for 240 Palestinian prisoners during a week-long truce last month, mediated by Qatar and Egypt.

As protests took place in Tel Aviv about the government’s handling of the hostage crisis, Herzi Halevi, chief of the general staff of Israel, clarified the rules of engagement in cases of surrender.

“You see two people, they have their hands up and no shirts, take two seconds,” Halevi told soldiers in reference to the shooting incident, during which all three of the men had removed their shirts to make it clear they were not wearing suicide vests.

“What if it is two Gazans with a white flag? Do we shoot? Absolutely not. Even those who fought but now put down their weapons and raise their hands, we capture, we don’t shoot.”




People join family members of hostages held by Hamas as they gather to protest outside the home of UN Secretary General António Guterres on December 15, 2023 in New York City. (AFP)

Despite the assurances, critics suggest the incident in which the hostages were killed is in keeping with the IDF’s controversial track record in the use of force and the prioritization of the security of Israelis in Gaza and other occupied Palestinian territories.

Citing data from the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, sources told Arab News that such behavior by Israeli military forces had resulted in the deaths of more than 5,300 Palestinians, largely caused by bombs and bullets, between 2008 and a month prior to the start of the current conflict.

Muhannad Ayyash, a professor of sociology at Mount Royal University in Calgary, Canada, said it was well-known that the Israeli military played fast and loose with the rules of engagement prior to the Oct. 7 Hamas attack.

Based on accounts given by Israeli officers, Ayyash said those rules have been loosened further still since the current conflict began, so as to “allow soldiers to make fewer checks before shooting at suspected enemies,” including in instances of apparent surrender.

“I trust the reports of these officers, based on the facts we have observed since then,” Ayyash told Arab News.

“For example, snipers are shooting civilians, including in hospitals, and there has been at least one reported mass execution of women, children and babies who were sheltering inside a school, as well as so many other examples.”




This handout picture released by the Israeli army on December 17, 2023 reportedly shows a makeshift sign reading in Hebrew “Help, 3 hostages” using leftover food remains by by the three Israeli hostages who were mistakenly killed by Israeli forces, found after searches in a building adjacent to where the incident took place. (AFP/Handout / Israeli Army

Ayyash and others have drawn a direct link between the accidental killing of Israeli hostages by the IDF and the apparent willingness of personnel to shoot Palestinians who pose no threat.

Such incidents include the shootings of Eyad Hallaq, a 32-year-old man with autism, in May 2020 and journalist Shireen Abu Akleh in May 2022.

Israeli human rights monitor B’Tselem also accuses Israeli troops of “illegally executing” two Palestinians, one of whom was incapacitated and the other unarmed, during a raid in the West Bank.

Roy Yellin, B’Tselem’s director of public outreach, told Time magazine that the killing of the three Israeli hostages on Dec. 15 was “heart-breaking but not surprising.”

Over the years, he said, his organization has documented “countless incidents of people who clearly surrendered and who were still shot,” in contravention of all rules of war, and with little in the way of punishment of those responsible to act as a deterrent and help prevent future incidents.

However, Kobi Michael, a senior researcher at the Institute for National Security Studies, an independent think tank affiliated with Tel Aviv University, and the Misgav Institute for National Security, rejected claims that such incidents are part of standard operating procedure of the IDF.




Palestinians transport a captured Israeli civilian from Kibbutz Kfar Azza, near the Gaza border, to the Gaza Strip on October 7, 2023. (AP)

“What happened in Shejaiya on Friday is an exception to the rule, a very sore exception, and I think everyone understands it was a mistake, a breach of regulations,” he told Arab News.

“But it is not indicative of the IDF’s widespread disregard. We have to understand it in the context. We are talking about an incident in a place where 10 Israeli soldiers and a senior commander were killed.

“This is an area full of Hamas fighters that are trying their utmost to confuse the IDF soldiers by deception. The soldiers have less than a second to make the call on whether to shoot or not to shoot. This is something that does not represent the Israeli rules of engagement.”

Michael added that the Israeli military “conforms to the law of war” and is making efforts to minimize civilian casualties, even at the expense of its own troops.

Hassan Ben Imran, a member of the board at UK-based human rights organization Law For Palestine, is unconvinced by this assessment.




Palestinians evacuate from a site hit by an Israeli bombardment on Rafah, southern Gaza Strip, Wednesday, Dec. 20, 2023. (AP)

“Such responses are like those you find within a guidebook that they all read from” rather than reflective of the reality on the ground, Imran told Arab News.

Testimonies by former IDF soldiers, documented by the Israeli veterans group Breaking the Silence, also suggest that incidents in which the rules of engagement were disregarded are more common and widespread than the Israeli government or its military would care to admit.

Avner Gvaryahu, who heads the group, told Time magazine he was “skeptical” of the IDF statement that the three Israeli hostages were killed in “violation of the rules of engagement.”

He said accounts from soldiers who served during previous military campaigns in the Gaza Strip indicated that once the IDF deems an area to have been “cleared of civilians,” soldiers are instructed to “shoot everything that moves.”

The IDF had sought to clear civilians from the area in which Shamriz, Al-Talalka and Haim were killed, declaring it an active combat zone. It remains unclear why the three men were there at all, one theory being they had managed to escape their captors.




This handout picture released by the Israeli army on December 21, 2023 shows soldiers operating in the Gaza Strip, amid continuing battles between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas. (AFP/Handout/Israeli Army)

“Anyone who thinks it is easy for soldiers to make split-second decisions in the chaos of urban combat is naive,” Geoffrey Corn, chair of criminal law and director of Texas Tech University’s Center for Military Law and Policy, told Arab News.

“The reality is mistakes happen in war all the time and, sadly, sometimes deliberate violation of rules also happen.

“Where this (incident) falls along this continuum is impossible to know at this point but no matter, it was a tragedy. If a mistake, it’s important to acknowledge Hamas’ pervasive disregard of the rules of war almost certainly influenced the soldiers’ reaction to what they saw and heard.

“This is why treachery and violating the rules of war in order to gain an advantage by exploiting compliance with the rules is itself a violation of international humanitarian law.”

Speaking at an event on Tuesday, US President Joe Biden said he recognizes that the IDF is facing an enemy with one goal: “The elimination, through the use of terror, of the entire state of Israel.”

But despite what he described as these “added burdens,” he said Israeli forces must differentiate between members of Hamas and Palestinian civilians, and urged them to minimize non-combatant deaths.

 


Israeli strikes on Gaza kill 6, including 2 children

Israeli strikes on Gaza kill 6, including 2 children
Updated 4 sec ago
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Israeli strikes on Gaza kill 6, including 2 children

Israeli strikes on Gaza kill 6, including 2 children
  • The strike in the Muwasi area is a sprawling tent camp housing hundreds of thousands of displaced people
  • Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed over 44,000 Palestinians, more than half of them women and children
DEIR AL-BALAH: Israeli strikes on the Gaza Strip killed at least six people overnight, including two young children who died in the tent where their family was sheltering, medical officials said Sunday.
The strike in the Muwasi area, a sprawling tent camp housing hundreds of thousands of displaced people, also wounded the children’s mother and their sibling, according to the nearby Nasser Hospital. An Associated Press reporter at the hospital saw the bodies.
A separate strike in the southern city of Rafah, on the border with Egypt, killed four men, according to hospital records.
There was no immediate comment from the Israeli military. Israel says it only targets militants and tries to avoid harming civilians, but its daily strikes across Gaza often kill women and children.
The war began when Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking around people 250 hostage. Some 100 captives are still being held inside Gaza, around two-thirds of whom are believed to be alive.
Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed over 44,000 Palestinians, more than half of them women and children, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which does not say how many of the dead were combatants. Israel says it has killed over 17,000 militants, without providing evidence.
The war has destroyed vast areas of the coastal enclave and displaced 90 percent of the population of 2.3 million, often multiple times. Hundreds of thousands have crammed into squalid tent camps, where conditions have worsened as the cold, wet winter sets in.
Israel reached a ceasefire with Lebanon’s Hezbollah militants last week that has largely held, but that agreement, brokered by the United States and France, did not address the ongoing war in Gaza.
The United States, Qatar and Egypt have spent much of the past year trying to broker a ceasefire in Gaza and the release of the remaining hostages, but those efforts stalled as Israel rejected Hamas’ demand for a complete withdrawal from the territory. The Biden administration has said it will make another push for a deal in its final weeks in office.
US President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to end the wars in the Middle East, without saying how. He was a staunch defender of Israel and its policies toward the Palestinians during his previous term.

Syrian militants expand offensive after taking Aleppo

Syrian militants expand offensive after taking Aleppo
Updated 30 min 14 sec ago
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Syrian militants expand offensive after taking Aleppo

Syrian militants expand offensive after taking Aleppo
  • Thousands of fighters move to nearby province, facing almost no defense from government forces
  • Syria’s President Bashar Assad says will defeat militants no matter how much their attacks intensify

BEIRUT: Thousands of Syrian militants took over most of Aleppo on Saturday, establishing positions in the country’s largest city and controlling its airport before expanding their shock offensive to a nearby province. They faced little to no resistance from government troops, according to fighters and activists.

A war monitor, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said the insurgents led by Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham seized control of Aleppo International airport, the first international airport to be controlled by insurgents. The fighters claimed they seized the airport and posted pictures from there.

Thousands of fighters also moved on, facing almost no opposition from government forces, to seize towns and villages in northern Hama, a province where they had a presence before being expelled by government troops in 2016. They claimed Saturday evening to have entered the city of Hama.

A huge embarrassment for Assad

The swift and surprise offensive is a huge embarrassment for Syria’s President Bashar Assad and raises questions about his armed forces’ preparedness. The insurgent offensive launched from their stronghold in the country’s northwest appeared to have been planned for years. It also comes at a time when Assad’s allies were preoccupied with their own conflicts.

In his first public comments since the start of the offensive, released by the state news agency Saturday evening, Assad said Syria will continue to “defend its stability and territorial integrity against terrorists and their supporters.” He added that Syria is able to defeat them no matter how much their attacks intensify.

Turkiye, a main backer of Syrian opposition groups, said its diplomatic efforts had failed to stop government attacks on opposition-held areas in recent weeks, which were in violation of a de-escalation agreement sponsored by Russia, Iran and Ankara. Turkish security officials said a limited offensive by the militants was planned to stop government attacks and allow civilians to return, but the offensive expanded as Syrian government forces began to retreat from their positions.

The insurgents, led by the Salafi militant group Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham and including Turkiye-backed fighters, launched their shock offensive on Wednesday. They first staged a two-pronged attack in Aleppo and the Idlib countryside, entering Aleppo two days later and securing a strategic town that lies on the highway that links Syria’s largest city to the capital and the coast.

By Saturday evening, they seized at least four towns in the central Hama province and claimed to have entered the provincial capital. The insurgents staged an attempt to reclaim areas they controlled in Hama in 2017 but failed.

Preparing a counterattack

Syria’s armed forces said in a statement Saturday that to absorb the large attack on Aleppo and save lives, it redeployed troops and equipment and was preparing a counterattack. The statement acknowledged that insurgents entered large parts of the city but said they have not established bases or checkpoints. Later on Saturday, the armed forces sought to dispel what it said were lies in reference to reports about its forces retreating or defecting, saying the general command was carrying out its duties in “combatting terrorist organizations.”

The return of the insurgents to Aleppo was their first since 2016, following a grueling military campaign in which Assad’s forces were backed by Russia, Iran and its allied groups.

The 2016 battle for Aleppo was a turning point in the war between Syrian government forces and militant fighters after 2011 protests against Assad’s rule turned into an all-out war. After appearing to be losing control of the country to the militants, the Aleppo battle secured Assad’s hold on strategic areas of Syria, with opposition factions and their foreign backers controlling areas on the periphery.

The lightning offensive threatened to reignite the country’s civil war, which had been largely in a stalemate for years.

Late on Friday, witnesses said two airstrikes hit the edge of Aleppo city, targeting insurgent reinforcements and falling near residential areas. The Observatory said 20 fighters were killed.

Insurgents were filmed outside police headquarters, in the city center, and outside the Aleppo citadel, the medieval palace in the old city center, and one of the largest in the world. They tore down posters of Assad, stepping on some and burning others.

The push into Aleppo followed weeks of simmering low-level violence, including government attacks on opposition-held areas.

The offensive came as Iran-linked groups, primarily Lebanon’s Hezbollah, which has backed Syrian government forces since 2015, have been preoccupied with their own battles at home. A ceasefire in Hezbollah’s two-month war with Israel took effect Wednesday, the same day that Syrian opposition factions announced their offensive. Israel has also escalated its attacks against Hezbollah and Iran-linked targets in Syria during the last 70 days.

Insurgents raise flags over the Aleppo citadel

Speaking from the heart of the city in Saadallah Aljabri square, opposition fighter Mohammad Al-Abdo said it was his first time back in Aleppo in 13 years, when his older brother was killed at the start of the war.

“God willing, the rest of Aleppo province will be liberated” from government forces, he said.

There was light traffic in the city center on Saturday. Opposition fighters fired in the air in celebration but there was no sign of clashes or government troops present.

Journalists in the city filmed soldiers captured by the insurgents and the bodies of others killed in battle.

Abdulkafi Alhamdo, a teacher who fled Aleppo in 2016 and returned Friday night after hearing the insurgents were inside, described “mixed feelings of pain, sadness and old memories.”

“As I entered Aleppo, I kept telling myself this is impossible. How did this happen?”

Alhamdo said he strolled through the city at night visiting the Aleppo citadel, where the insurgents raised their flags, a major square and the university of Aleppo, as well as the last spot he was in before he was forced to leave for the countryside.

“I walked in (the empty) streets of Aleppo, shouting, ‘People, people of Aleppo. We are your sons,’” he told The Associated Press in a series of messages.

City’s hospitals are full

Aleppo residents reported hearing clashes and gunfire but most stayed indoors. Some fled the fighting.

Schools and government offices were closed Saturday as most people stayed indoors, according to Sham FM radio, a pro-government station. Bakeries were open. Witnesses said the insurgents deployed security forces around the city to prevent any acts of violence or looting.

The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said Friday Aleppo’s two key public hospitals were reportedly full of patients while many private facilities closed.

In social media posts, the insurgents were pictured outside of the citadel, the medieval palace in the old city center, and one of the largest in the world. In cellphone videos, they recorded themselves having conversations with residents they visited at home, seeking to reassure them they will cause no harm.

The Syrian Kurdish-led administration in the country’s east said nearly 3,000 people, most of them students, had arrived in their region after fleeing the fighting in Aleppo, which has a sizeable Kurdish population.

State media reported that a number of “terrorists,” including sleeper cells, infiltrated parts of the city. Government troops chased them and arrested a number who posed for pictures near city landmarks, they said.

On a state TV morning show Saturday, commentators said army reinforcements and Russia’s assistance would repel the “terrorist groups,” blaming Turkiye for supporting the insurgents’ push into Aleppo and Idlib provinces.

Russia’s state news agency Tass quoted Oleg Ignasyuk, a Russian Defense Ministry official coordinating in Syria, as saying that Russian warplanes targeted and killed 200 militants who had launched the offensive in the northwest on Friday. It provided no further details.


Israel says it struck Hezbollah weapons smuggling sites in Syria, testing a fragile ceasefire

Israel says it struck Hezbollah weapons smuggling sites in Syria, testing a fragile ceasefire
Updated 01 December 2024
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Israel says it struck Hezbollah weapons smuggling sites in Syria, testing a fragile ceasefire

Israel says it struck Hezbollah weapons smuggling sites in Syria, testing a fragile ceasefire
  • Days-old ceasefire halted months of fighting between both sides but has seen sporadic fire
  • Israel says it reserves the right under the ceasefire to strike against any perceived violations

TEL AVIV: Israeli aircraft struck Hezbollah weapons smuggling sites along Syria’s border with Lebanon, the Israeli military said Saturday, testing a fragile, days-old ceasefire that halted months of fighting between the sides but has seen continued sporadic fire.
The military said it struck sites that had been used to smuggle weapons from Syria to Lebanon after the ceasefire took effect, which the military said was a violation of its terms. There was no immediate comment from Syrian authorities or activists monitoring the conflict in that country. Hezbollah also did not immediately comment.
The Israeli strike, the latest of several since the ceasefire began on Wednesday, came as unrest spread to other areas of the Middle East, with Syrian insurgents breaching the country’s largest city, Aleppo, in a shock offensive that added fresh uncertainty to a region reeling from multiple wars.
The truce between Israel and the Iran-backed Hezbollah, brokered by the United States and France, calls for an initial two-month ceasefire in which the militants are to withdraw north of Lebanon’s Litani River and Israeli forces are to return to their side of the border.
The repeated bursts of violence — with no reports of serious casualties — reflected the uneasy nature of the ceasefire that otherwise appeared to hold. While Israel has accused Hezbollah of violating the ceasefire, Lebanon has also accused Israel of the same in the days since it took effect.
Many Lebanese, some of the 1.2 million displaced in the conflict, were streaming south to their homes, despite warnings by the Israeli and Lebanese militaries to stay away from certain areas.
Lebanon’s state-run National News Agency reported that an Israeli drone attacked a car in the southern village of Majdal Zoun. The agency said there had been casualties but gave no further details. Majdal Zoun, near the Mediterranean Sea, is close to where Israeli troops still have a presence.
The military said earlier Saturday that its forces, who remain in southern Lebanon until they withdraw gradually over the 60-day period, had been operating to distance “suspects” in the region, without elaborating, and said troops had located and seized weapons found hidden in a mosque.
Israel says it reserves the right under the ceasefire to strike against any perceived violations. Israel has made returning the tens of thousands of displaced Israelis home the goal of the war with Hezbollah but Israelis, concerned Hezbollah was not deterred and could still attack northern communities, have been apprehensive about returning home.
Hezbollah began attacking Israel on Oct. 8, 2023, in solidarity with the Palestinian militant group Hamas and its assault on southern Israel the day before. Israel and Hezbollah kept up a low-level conflict of cross-border fire for nearly a year, until Israel escalated its fight with a sophisticated attack that detonated hundreds of pagers and walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah fighters. It followed that up with an intense aerial bombardment campaign against Hezbollah assets, killing many of its top leaders including longtime chief Hassan Nasrallah, and it launched a ground invasion in early October.
More than 3,760 people have been killed by Israeli fire in Lebanon during the conflict, many of them civilians, according to Lebanese health officials. The fighting killed more than 70 people in Israel — over half of them civilians — as well as dozens of Israeli soldiers fighting in southern Lebanon.


Israeli military says projectile launched from Yemen intercepted

Israeli military says projectile launched from Yemen intercepted
Updated 01 December 2024
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Israeli military says projectile launched from Yemen intercepted

Israeli military says projectile launched from Yemen intercepted

The Israeli military said on Sunday that a projectile launched from Yemen was intercepted before it crossed into Israeli territory.
The military earlier said sirens had sounded in a number of areas in central Israel following a launch from Yemen.
The Houthis have fired missiles and drones at Israel repeatedly in what they say is solidarity with the Palestinians, since the Gaza war began in 2023.


Iraq PM says Syria security key to Middle East stability

Iraq PM says Syria security key to Middle East stability
Updated 01 December 2024
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Iraq PM says Syria security key to Middle East stability

Iraq PM says Syria security key to Middle East stability
  • “Sudani emphasized that Syria’s security and stability are closely linked to Iraq’s national security and play a crucial role in regional security

BAGHDAD: Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani told Syrian President Bashar Assad on Saturday that his country’s security was key to the stability of the whole region.
“Sudani emphasized that Syria’s security and stability are closely linked to Iraq’s national security and play a crucial role in regional security and efforts to establish stability in the Middle East,” his office said.