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Opinion

Israel won’t let reporters into Rafah… is that a wise strategy?

September 12, 2024 15:15
Copy Of IDF Rafah 2024_credit IDF
6 min read

Last week, I visited Israel with a delegation of senior military leaders from around the world, led by General Sir John McColl, former deputy supreme commander of Nato in Europe. The intention was to scrutinise how the IDF is conducting the war on the ground, to ascertain whether there was any substance to the allegations that it was prosecuting the war without sufficient care for civilians.

The schedule was quite remarkable. Not only were we promised extensive briefings from top commanders and officials from across the military and intelligence services, but meetings with the defence minister, Yoav Gallant, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu were also on the cards, as well as a tour of Rafah in the south of the Gaza Strip.

Many members of the delegation were starting from a point of some scepticism. Their military backgrounds did not make them fully immune to the effects of the broadcast media, which paints such a bleak picture of the Jewish state that it is hard to resist that point of view. Tragic footage of suffering civilians – Hamas censors any pictures of dead or wounded combatants, creating the impression that Israel is targeting the innocent – is aired alongside Hamas talking-points, such as the allegation that Israel has killed “40,000” people in Gaza (nobody mentions that about half of these were terrorists, a better record than other armed forces).

Yet as the days went by and the military experts grilled Israeli decision-makers about their strategy, tactics and rules of engagement, hearts and minds slowly changed. Soldiers understand the pressures and reality of combat. After observing the process by which every missile strike must be approved by experts in international law and senior officers before it is launched, for example, Sir John told me that the IDF system was “at least as rigorous” as that used by the British armed forces.