This is Connor. Solvable In addition to the gang rape allegations, the fact that Israel killed a large number of its own citizens on October 7th appears to be beginning to leak into the mainstream media.
Of course, many have been pointing this out for months and have been accused of being anti-Semitic conspiracy theorists for doing so.
Nine months later, Haaretz reported: @Intifada (https://t.co/MXsCvqZTJz) after that Grayzone News (https://t.co/A9J1uRNvX7) October: Israel implements the Hannibal Order, killing its own citizens on October 7th.
A few independent… https://t.co/3l5P6YOfZ7
— Aaron Mate (@aaronjmate) July 7, 2024
Some of them even lost their jobs.
Five months ago, I detailed evidence that Israel was deliberately killing its own citizens, also known as the Hannibal Directive. In the clip below, I passionately defended Israeli hostages who were allegedly being killed by Israel. I was later reprimanded and fired… https://t.co/QPjONXksuO pic.twitter.com/zoVLI6r9a3
— Brieanna Joy Gray (@briebriejoy) July 7, 2024
The Washington Post Hit Articles It was picked up by media outlets such as the Electronic Intifada and The Grayzone in January. It’s good that Haaretz finally reported on the Hannibal Directive, but it was about seven months too late. One wonders how the Washington Post’s attack article was used to curb the influence of “conspiracy theories.” The Electronic Intifada noted at the time:
The Washington Post’s attack on the Electronic Intifada reflects the frustration felt by Israel and its supporters in the US media at the failure to impose their own version of events.
In the United States, direct censorship of publications is not an option, as the First Amendment protection of free speech remains strong.
Therefore, Nexus Between governments, think tanks funded by governments and weapons manufacturers, and big tech companies seeking to control what we can all say online.
The Washington Post article will therefore likely be used by Israeli lobby groups to pressure big tech companies to curb the influence of journalists who challenge Israel’s lies, in the name of fighting so-called “disinformation.”
Will the State Department continue to pretend it doesn’t know anything?
can’t believe it: Sam Husseini As for Israel’s “Hannibal Directive,” Miller claims he has “never heard of it,” particularly in regards to its use on October 7th or against U.S. citizens.
Miller: “I have no knowledge of that directive…” pic.twitter.com/lndfHR0bkB
— Decensored News (@decensorednews) June 25, 2024
Will the WaPo apologize? Unfortunately, that is probably as unlikely as news that Haaretz’s Hannibal Directive had any impact on Israel’s destruction of the Gaza Strip. At the time of writing, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu continues to insist that the Gaza ceasefire agreement must allow Israel to resume fighting until Israel’s “objectives” are achieved.
Jake Johnson is a senior editor and staff writer. A common dream.
Israeli newspaper Haaretzreport The Israeli army said Sunday that it repeatedly used a protocol known as the “Hannibal Directive” during the Hamas-led attack on Oct. 7 to prevent the kidnapping of Israeli soldiers, even if it meant endangering the lives of military prisoners and civilians.
Based on documents and interviews with soldiers and senior Israeli officials, Haaretz found that Operation Hannibal orders – drawn up in 1986 to instruct the use of force to prevent enemy militants from capturing soldiers – “were used at three military sites infiltrated by Hamas, potentially putting civilians at risk.”
According to Haaretz, during the first hours of the Hamas-led offensive, Israeli soldiers received orders that “not a single vehicle could be returned.” Gaza.”
“At this point, the IDF did not know the scale of kidnappings along the Gaza border, but they knew that many were involved,” the paper continued. “So it was perfectly clear what the message meant and what the fate of those kidnapped would be.”
The full text of the Hannibal Directive has not been made public. However, according to A Haaretz article about the directive more than 20 years ago stated in part that “in the event of a kidnapping, your primary mission will be to rescue the soldier from the kidnappers, even if this means harming or injuring the soldier.”
“Small arms fire will be used to bring the kidnappers to the ground or to stop them,” the statement added. “If the vehicle or the kidnappers do not stop, deliberate single (sniper) shots should be fired to shoot the kidnappers, even if it means shooting our soldiers. In any case, all measures will be taken to stop the vehicle and prevent it from escaping.”
The Israeli authorities Admitted On October 7, there were “several incidents of our troops firing on our troops.” In April, the Israeli military Said One of the hostages taken by Hamas fighters during the October attack was likely killed in an Israeli helicopter strike.
But the Israel Defense Forces, which have killed more than 38,000 people in Gaza since October 7, refused to say whether Hannibals were used in the Hamas-led attacks.
“It is not known how many civilians or soldiers were affected as a result of these measures, but the cumulative data shows that many of those kidnapped were at risk of exposure to Israeli fire, even if they were not targeted,” Haaretz stressed on Sunday.
The Hannibal Command was first used on October 7, when “a guard post at the Yifta outpost reported that someone had been kidnapped at the Eretz border crossing, adjacent to the IDF liaison office,” Haaretz reported.
“‘Hannibal is in Erez,’ the order came from division headquarters, ‘send Zik.’ Jig “This is an unmanned attack drone and the meaning of the order is clear,” the paper reported.
The order was used at least two more times during the attack, according to Haaretz, which cited an anonymous source in Israel’s Southern Command as saying that Israeli forces were instructed to “turn the area around the border fence into a killing zone and blockade the west.”
The newspaper continued:
One known and widely reported incident of an attack on civilians occurred at the home of Pessi Cohen in Kibbutz Beeri, where 14 hostages were held captive in the house. The Israel Defense Forces attacked, killing 13 people.The Israel Defense Forces are expected to release the results of their investigation into the incident in the coming weeks. Brigadier General Barak HiramThe commander of the 99th Division in charge of the operation at Beeri on October 7 was using the Hannibal method. Did he, as he later stated in an interview with The New York Times, order the tanks to advance at the expense of civilian casualties?
Haaretz reports that the U.N. investigation The IDF concluded on October 7 that it had “likely applied the Hannibal Directive,” killing at least 10 Israeli civilians.