The Kfar Aza Massacre

The Kfar Aza Massacre
Above: Images of Israelis hostages held by the Palestinian militant group Hamas in the Gaza Strip since October 7, hang outside a destroyed house in Kibbutz Kfar Aza near the border with the Gaza Strip on September 12, 2024. Image copyright: Menahem Kahana/ AFP

The Hannibal Directive

Another controversial aspect of the Oct. 7 attack has been Israel's alleged use of the Hannibal Directive. The Hannibal Directive, established in 1986, was an Israeli military protocol designed to prevent soldier abductions, even at the risk of the captured soldier's life. It allowed for extreme measures, including heavy firepower and unrestricted firing on potential escape routes.

While the Israeli military denied permitting the killing of their own troops, many soldiers understood it as such. The policy's legality was questioned under international law, and its use led to accusations of war crimes. Israel reportedly suspended the Hannibal Directive in 2016 in favor of new protocols balancing kidnapping prevention with protecting lives.

Above: Israeli soldiers stand on a tank near the border with the Gaza Strip in Kfar Aza, Israel on October 10, 2023, Image copyright:Amir Levy/Stringer/Getty Images Europe via Getty Images

The Hannibal Directive on Oct. 7

During the Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel, conflicting reports emerged about the directive's implementation. Some sources claimed the Israeli military ordered its use to prevent Hamas from taking soldiers captive, while others stated that the Israeli government had not confirmed its implementation. A UN report suggested that the directive resulted in the killing of up to 14 Israeli civilians in two instances during the Oct. 7 attack. Former Israeli Air Force officer Colonel Nof Erez, meanwhile, described the situation as "a mass Hannibal." The Israeli military examined about 70 vehicles hit by fire from helicopters, drones, or tanks on their way to Gaza, with all occupants reportedly killed in some cases. At Kibbutz Be'eri, an incident resulted in the death of 13 hostages when the IDF attacked a house.

The Israeli army spokesperson stated that internal investigations of what transpired on Oct. 7 have begun. Human Rights Watch reported that only a minority of civilian deaths resulted from fighting between Israeli armed forces and Palestinian armed groups. At the Nova music festival, there were unconfirmed reports of Israeli helicopters potentially hitting festival participants.

The Spin

Pro-Israel narrative

The idea that Israel intentionally killed its own people on Oct. 7 is both ludicrous and ghastly. Though there is evidence that Israeli forces accidentally killed some civilians on Oct. 7, there is simply no evidence that most of the civilian deaths on Oct. 7 were caused by the Israeli military. Such assertions are callous attempts to whitewash Hamas' crimes.

Pro-Palestine narrative

There is ample evidence to suggest that Israel expanded its use of the Hannibal Directive on Oct. 7, effectively killing large scores of Israeli civilians. From orders dictating that "not a single vehicle can return to Gaza" to the use of helicopter gunships at the Nova festival, Israel slaughtered its own people and subsequently blamed Hamas. Hamas' Oct. 7 attack was focused on military infrastructure, not civilians.


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