Anger over the October 7 Hamas attack overrode concern for civilians, Yariv Oppenheimer has said
The New York Times report that Israel had relaxed the rules of engagement in Gaza to tolerate mass civilian casualties adds to a “very ugly picture” of the ongoing conflict, Yariv Oppenheimer of Peace Now has told RT.
Within hours of the Hamas attack on October 7 last year, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) authorized junior officers to attack even low-level targets and risk harming civilian bystanders, the NYT reported on Thursday, citing interviews with over 100 Israeli officers.
“I believe every word in this report,” Oppenheimer told RT on Friday, describing the picture it painted of Gaza as “very dramatic and disturbing.”
Oppenheimer noted that the Times article did not come as a surprise to anyone paying attention to events in Gaza since the October 7, 2023 attack by Hamas, as the Israeli military acted in anger, while “there was also a feeling of humiliation” in the Israeli society.
While previous rules of engagement allowed endangering up to ten civilians, the IDF increased the limit to 20 and even authorized strikes that could harm more than 100, according to the Times.
“When I see the pictures coming from Gaza in the last 24 hours, it seems that the policy remains to hit the target even at the price of many Palestinian civilians that are being killed on the spot,” Oppenheimer said.
He suggested that the new rules of engagement appear to apply only to the “full-scale war” on Gaza, as the recent Israeli invasion of Lebanon was more focused on Hezbollah.
“In Gaza it was a different story,” Oppenheimer told RT. “The brutal attack of Hamas changed the minds of Israelis, including the people in the army.”
Seeing the videos of some Palestinians in Gaza celebrating the October 7 incursion created a feeling among the Israeli soldiers, pilots and commanders that “there’s no innocent people in Gaza,” Oppenheimer argued.
Israeli society felt humiliated after the Hamas attack and “the revenge element was there very strongly” in the days thereafter, the peace activist stated.
Last year’s Hamas attack left more than 1,100 Israelis dead, while some 250 people were taken hostage. Around 100 Israelis are believed to be still held in Gaza.
More than 45,000 Palestinians have since been killed in Gaza, according to the enclave’s Hamas-run authorities. Nearly 70% of the verified casualties were women and children, the UN said last month.
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