Israeli forces accused of killing their own citizens under the 'Hannibal Directive' during October 7 chaos
By Middle East correspondents Eric Tlozek, Orly Halpern and Allyson Horn
Fri 6 Sep
"Hannibal at Erez, dispatch a Zik [attack
drone]," came the command on October 7.
Those words, reported by Israeli newspaper Haaretz in
July, confirm what many Israelis have feared since the Hamas attacks on October
7 in southern Israel.
Israeli forces have killed their own citizens.
Israeli authorities say more than 800 civilians and
around 300 soldiers were killed on October 7.
A number of Israeli hostages have since died in Gaza.
Israelis are still reeling from the horror and pain of
the Hamas-led terror attack, which was the bloodiest single day in Israel's
history.
But the Israeli military is coming under increasing
pressure to reveal just how many of their own citizens were killed by Israeli
soldiers, pilots and police in the confusion of the Hamas attack on southern
Israeli communities.
Survivors and relatives have been asking not just
"what went wrong", but whether the military invoked the controversial
— and supposedly rescinded — "Hannibal Directive".
What is the Hannibal Directive?
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said the directive was
named at random by a computer program, but Hannibal was the famous Carthaginian
general who took poison rather than be captured by the Romans.
The doctrine, written in 1986 in response to the
kidnapping of Israeli soldiers in Lebanon, gave permission for Israeli forces
to fire on enemies holding their comrades hostage — even at risk to those
hostages.
Its authors said the directive did not allow captives
to be killed, but critics say that over time an interpretation spread through
the military that it was better to kill comrades than to allow their capture.
"They interpreted it as if they are [meant] to
intentionally, deliberately kill the soldier in order to foil the attempted
abduction, and that was wrong," Israeli philosopher Asa Kasher, who wrote
the IDF code of ethics, told the ABC.
"That is legally wrong and morally wrong and
ethically wrong, it's wrong on all accounts."
In 2011, Hamas successfully used an Israeli hostage to
secure a major prisoner exchange, swapping one Israeli soldier, tank
gunner Gilad Shalit, for more than 1,000 prisoners, including the current Hamas leader, Yahya Sinwar.
After October 7, there were some testimonies from
Israeli civilians and military personnel that Israeli forces responding to the
Hamas attack killed their own citizens.
Nevertheless, many Israelis and supporters of Israel
condemned anyone who suggested it had occurred, before more testimonies and
Israeli media reports confirmed it was true.
The IDF has not confirmed or denied a version of the
Hannibal directive was applied on October 7, only saying it is one of many
things from that day under investigation.
In response to questions from the ABC, the Israeli
military provided a statement saying: "The IDF is currently focused on
eliminating the threat from the terrorist organisation Hamas."
"Questions of this kind will be looked into at a
later stage."
'This was a mass Hannibal'
In July, the Israeli newspaper Haaretz
revealed commanders in the IDF gave the order to fire on troops who had been
captured by Hamas at
three separate locations, explicitly referencing the Hannibal Directive.
One former Israeli officer, Air Force Colonel Nof
Erez, told a Haaretz podcast the directive was not specifically ordered but
was "apparently applied" by responding aircrews.
Panicked, operating without their normal command
structure and unable to coordinate with ground forces, they fired on vehicles
returning to Gaza, knowing they were likely carrying hostages.
"This was a mass Hannibal. It was tons and tons
of openings in the fence, and thousands of people in every type of vehicle,
some with hostages and some without," Colonel Erez said.
Air force pilots described to Yedioth Ahronot newspaper the firing of "tremendous" amounts of
ammunition on October 7 at people attempting to cross the border between Gaza
and Israel.
"Twenty-eight fighter helicopters shot over the
course of the day all of the ammunition in their bellies, in renewed runs to
rearm. We are talking about hundreds of 30-millimetre cannon mortars and
Hellfire missiles," reporter Yoav Zeitoun said.
"The frequency of fire at the thousands of
terrorists was enormous at the start, and only at a certain point did the
pilots begin to slow their attacks and carefully choose the targets."
Tank officers have also confirmed they applied their own interpretation of the
directive when firing on vehicles returning to Gaza, potentially with Israelis
on board.
"My gut feeling told me that they [soldiers from
another tank] could be on them," tank captain Bar Zonshein told Israel's
Channel 13.
Captain Zonshein is asked: "So you might be
killing them with that action? They are your soldiers."
"Right," he replied, "but I decided
that this is the right decision, that it's better to stop the kidnapping, that
they won't be taken."
Investigative journalist Ronen Bergman wrote for Yedioth Ahronot
newspaper that the
military had enacted the Hannibal Directive at midday on October 7.
"The IDF instructed all its fighting units in
practice to follow the 'Hannibal Directive', although without clearly
mentioning this explicit name," he said.
"The instruction is to stop 'at all costs' any
attempt by Hamas terrorists to return to Gaza, using language very similar to
the original 'Hannibal Directive', despite repeated assurances by the security
establishment that the procedure has been cancelled."
Bergman's investigation found 70 vehicles were
destroyed by Israeli aircraft and tanks to prevent them being driven into Gaza,
killing everyone inside.
"It is not clear at this point how many of the
abductees were killed due to the activation of this [Hannibal] order on October
7," he wrote.
The original Hannibal Directive, while
confidential, reportedly recommends small arms and sniper fire towards
enemies holding hostages — and not to use bombs, missiles or tank shells.
In 2015, Israel's attorney-general said it
specifically prohibited killing a hostage.
It wasn't just soldiers under fire on October 7,
though.
Tank ordered to fire on house
In two incidents, Israeli civilians survived Israeli
forces firing on them and killing other hostages.
One survivor of Kibbutz Nir Oz, a Gaza border
community, described being fired upon by the
Israeli military as
Hamas members tried to take her and other hostages across the border in an
electric wagon.
"[An] IDF helicopter appeared above us. At some
point the helicopter shot at the terrorists, the driver and the others. There
was screaming in the wagon," Neomit Dekel-Chen told Israeli news site Ynet.
Ms Dekel-Chen said one woman, her friend Efrat Katz,
was shot and killed.
Six months later, an Israeli Air Force investigation acknowledged that it was likely an attack
helicopter, which had targeted the wagon, had killed Efrat Katz.
The probe found that the hostages could not be
distinguished from terrorists.
Nevertheless, Air Force chief Major General Tomer Bar
said he "did not find fault in the operation by the helicopter crew, who
operated in compliance with the orders in a complex reality of war".
The military has also confirmed troops were ordered to
fire at a home, despite knowing there were civilians being held hostage inside.
In Kibbutz Be'eri, where 101 Israeli civilians died, a
tank was ordered to fire upon at least one house, after a prolonged firefight
with around 40 Hamas gunmen who had been holding 15 hostages inside and
outside.
The "Pessi's house" incident has become
notorious in Israel, named after the resident, Pessi Cohen, who was killed
along with other hostages being held there.
It was the two survivors who revealed the Israeli
military had fired on the house.
"We know that at least one hostage was killed by
one of the shells," relative and October 7 survivor Omri Shifroni told the
ABC.
Three of Mr Shifroni's relatives were killed in
Pessi's house while he was hiding on the other side of the kibbutz with his
wife and children.
"There are a few others that we still don't know
and we may never know what exactly killed them," he said.
Mr Shifroni's aunt Ayala and her grand-niece Liel and
grand-nephew Yanai were all killed at Pessi's house — he believes by
terrorists.
But he remains upset about the Israeli military's
decision to use heavy munitions on homes in Be'eri.
"I think the real question, the moral question,
is whether it's the right thing to do — to fire tank shells on a house with
hostages — even though it's selective shooting," he said.
"I think it was not the right decision, not a
good decision and not moral.
"But I can also understand there was great chaos
in Be'eri and there was a lot of pressure to end the event there.
"I think they didn't intend to shoot and to kill
hostages, but when you shoot a tank shell on a house, you need to take into
account that that is likely to happen."
Israeli philosopher Asa Kasher told the ABC the
directive did not apply to civilian hostages
"That's a new situation, and all the
considerations are different," Professor Kasher said.
"Killing the civilian in order to foil the
attempted abduction is really [wrong] … everyone understands that that's way
outside of what is allowed in a democracy."
Professor Kasher said he was dismayed by reports
soldiers had applied the Hannibal Directive on October 7.
"They acted on very low professional
standards," he said.
"That's insane, it's not the nature of a
democracy, it's not the nature of the IDF, it's not the nature of the
command."
Military clears itself of wrongdoing
In response to repeated requests from Be'eri survivors
and relatives of those killed there, the IDF has opened an investigation into
its actions in the kibbutz.
In July, it released its operational review, but many in Be'eri were not satisfied.
The military cleared Israeli forces of any wrongdoing,
finding that a tank only fired "near" the house when negotiations to
release the hostages had failed.
"The team determined that, based on the
information reviewed and to the best of their understanding, no civilians
inside the building were harmed by tank shell fire, except for an isolated
incident outside the building where two civilians were harmed by
shrapnel," the report stated.
"The team determined that most of the hostages
were likely murdered by the terrorists, and further inquiries and reviews of
additional findings are necessary."
Sharon Cohen, the daughter-in-law of Pessi Cohen, told
Israeli radio she did not accept the investigation's conclusions.
"That's not really true [that hostages were not
harmed by tank shells]," she told Israel's Radio Bet on July 14.
"Out of personal privacy issues, I can't really
get into the details. These are details that we were told would be investigated
again.
"In addition, I'll say that because the incidents
in the kibbutz were so exceptional and strange and difficult, the whole issue
of removing the bodies, and autopsies, and all those things — essentially were
not done."
The IDF review also contradicts testimony from one of
the two survivors of Pessi's house, Yasmin Porat, who told Israel's Kan radio on October 15 that the Hamas gunmen had not
threatened the hostages and had intended to negotiate with police for their
safe return to Gaza.
She said an Israeli police special unit had started
the gun battle by firing upon the house, catching "five or six"
kibbutz residents outside in "very, very heavy crossfire".
In the interview, she was asked: "So our forces
may have shot them?"
"Undoubtedly," she replied.
"They eliminated everyone [in the house],
including the hostages."
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