Israeli army ordered mass Hannibal Directive on 7 Oct: Media
An investigation from Israel's leading newspaper
indicates Israel deliberately killed many of its own civilians and soldiers
during Hamas' Operation Al-Aqsa Flood to prevent them being taken captive back
to Gaza
JAN 11, 2024
https://new.thecradle.co/articles/israeli-army-ordered-mass-hannibal-directive-on-7-oct-media
The Israeli military implemented the “Hannibal
Directive” during Hamas’ attack on 7 October, killing some of its own civilians
and soldiers to prevent Hamas from taking them as captives back to Gaza,
according to an investigation by Israel’s leading newspaper, Yedioth
Ahronoth, which will be published in full on 12 January.
The Hebrew edition of the paper wrote on 11 January that “one of the revelations
revealed in the investigation is that at noon on October 7, the IDF [Israeli
army] ordered all of its combat units in practice to use the ‘Hannibal
Procedure’ although without clearly mentioning this explicitly by name.”
The order was to stop “at all costs any attempt by
Hamas terrorists to return to Gaza, that is, despite the fear that some of them
have abductees,” the paper wrote.
The Times of Israel described how the Hannibal procedure, or directive,
"allows soldiers to use potentially massive amounts of force to prevent a
soldier from falling into the hands of the enemy. This includes the possibility
of endangering the life of the soldier in question in order to prevent his
capture.”
A previous Haaretz investigation of the directive concluded that “from the point
of view of the army, a dead soldier is better than a captive soldier who
himself suffers and forces the state to release thousands of captives in order
to obtain his release.”
During the 7 October attack, Hamas and other
Palestinians successfully took some 240 Israeli soldiers and civilians from the
settlements (also known as kibbutzim) and military bases back to Gaza as
captives.
Hamas hoped to exchange them for the thousands of
Palestinians, including women and children, held in Israeli prisons.
Hamas used the Toyota pick-up trucks and motorcycles
with which they entered Israel, as well as cars stolen from the settlements, to
take Israeli captives back to Gaza. Some were also taken to Gaza on foot and
even in carts pulled by tractors by other Palestinians who crossed into Israel
after the Hamas fighters breached the border fence.
According to Yediot Ahronoth, about a
thousand “terrorists and infiltrators” were killed in the area between the
settlements and the Gaza Strip
But the paper added it is not clear at this time how
many of the Israeli abductees were killed due to the activation of the Hannibal
directive:
“In the week after the attack, soldiers of elite units
checked about 70 vehicles that were left in the area between the settlements
and the Gaza Strip. These are vehicles that did not reach Gaza, because on the
way they were shot by a combat helicopter, an anti-tank missile or a tank, and
at least in some cases everyone in the vehicle was killed.”
As journalist Dan Cohen reported, the Israeli military killed Efrat Katz, age 68, as
she was being taken from Kibbutz Nir Oz to Gaza on a cart pulled by a tractor
on 7 October. Her daughter, Doron Katz-Asher, and two granddaughters, Raz, age
2, and Aviv, age 4, were also in the cart.
Doron Katz-Asher later told Israel’s Channel
12 that the Israeli army opened fire on the tractor, injuring her two
daughters and killing her mother, Efrat.
As previously reported by The Cradle, Israeli Air
Force (reserve) Col. Nof Erez described Israel’s actions on 7 October as a
“mass Hannibal” event“ in response to the use of Apache helicopters and tanks.
“What we saw here was a mass Hannibal. There were many openings in the fence,
thousands of people in many different vehicles with hostages and without,” he
told Haaretz.
The revelation that the Israeli military informally
issued the Hannibal Directive raises questions about the deaths of many Israeli
civilians who were initially presumed taken captive by Hamas on 7 October but
whose bodies were later discovered near the Gaza border fence.
For example, 80-year-old Carmela Dan and her
12-year-old autistic granddaughter Noya both vanished on the morning of 7
October. The family assumed both were taken captive by Hamas. But two weeks
later, Israeli authorities announced their bodies “were found near the border
fence,” Foreign Policy reported.
On 19 October, Carmela’s niece told NBC News, “There was an operation by the
Israeli army some days ago at this point to retrieve bodies, and we believe
that it took them time to run what we know to be three DNA tests and to
identify that it was both of them.”
In another widely reported case, an Israeli brigadier
general, Barak Hiram, acknowledged to the New York Times that he
gave an order on 7 October for a tank commander to open fire on a home in
Kibbutz Be’eri to kill Hamas fighters, even though 14 Israeli captives were
barricaded inside the home as well.
At roughly sundown, Hiram told the tank commander:
“The negotiations are over. Break in, even at the cost of civilian casualties.”
The Hamas fighters and all but one of the captives
were killed, including 12-year-old twins Liel and Yanai Hetzroni. Their bodies
were so severely damaged and burned that it took weeks to identify them.
In an interview with Channel 12 on 26 October,
before Hiram had publicly acknowledged giving the order to fire on the home in
Be’eri, the general alluded to his logic on 7 October. He stated, “I am very
afraid that if we return to Sorana [Israeli military headquarters in Tel Aviv]
and try to hold all kinds of negotiations, we may fall into a trap that will
tie our hands and not allow us to do what is required, which is to go in,
manipulate, and kill them [Hamas] ...”
In another case in Be’eri, an elderly couple, Mati and
Amir Weiss, were allegedly killed by Hamas fighters who entered their home on
the morning of 7 October. Mati sent a message to their son Yuval that the
fighters had entered the house and that Amir had been shot.
Yuval, who was a member of the kibbutz security team,
provided their location to commanders in the army, telling them Hamas fighters
were inside the home.
To explain the elderly couple’s death, Haaretz writes, “Mati and Amir Weiss were attacked by terrorists
who blew up one of the walls of their safe room and shot them.”
But the picture of the Weiss home published by Haaretz shows
a massive hole in the wall of the home and significant damage to the roof,
suggesting a tank shell or helicopter strike had hit it.
The Hannibal Directive was also evident on 7 October
at the Nova music festival, where Hamas allegedly massacred 364 Israeli
partygoers.
Though Israeli army ground units did not respond to
the Hamas attack on 7 October for many hours, the Southern District Commander
of the Israeli Police, Maj. Gen. Amir Cohen gave the order, code-named “Philistine Horseman,” at
6:42 am to dispatch Border Police units to various sites to confront the Hamas
attack.
These units included elite counter-terror units, known
as Yamam, who were dispatched by helicopter, according to Israeli officials
speaking with the New York Times.
These units apparently opened fire on partygoers as
Hamas was taking people captive.
Germany’s Bild reported the testimony of Maya P., who survived the
festival. Bild writes, “The terrorists who set up the road
blockades came disguised as police officers and soldiers.”
“People ran into them hoping to be rescued, and then
they were executed,” Maya said, crying.
Another survivor, Yuval Tahupi, stated to CNN, “A police lady told us most of the
terrorists are dressing like soldiers, as cops, as security guards, so don’t
trust anyone.”
Both Maya and Yuval could not imagine that Israeli
forces had fired on them, so they assumed Hamas fighters must have been
disguised as soldiers and police.
Israeli attack helicopters also were deployed to the
Nova site, opening fire on partygoers as well.
Haaretz reported that “According to a police source, an
investigation into the incident also revealed that an IDF combat helicopter
that arrived at the scene from the Ramat David base fired at the terrorists and
apparently also hit some of the revelers who were there.”
The BBC documented an apparent instance of the
Hannibal Directive by helicopter fire. The British state broadcaster writes that car dash cam footage its journalists
reviewed shows “a group of men appear. Only one is armed - they appear to be
there to loot … Two people, a man and a woman, who were hiding in a car are
discovered and led away.”
“The woman who was taken suddenly reappears two
minutes later. She jumps and waves her arms in the air. She must think help is
at hand - by this time, the Israeli Defence Forces had began [sic] their
efforts to repel the incursion. But seconds later, she slumps to the floor as
bullets bounce around her. We don’t know if she survived.”
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