Israel: change of course after aid workers killed in Gaza?
Following massive international criticism over the deaths of seven aid workers from the World Central Kitchen in the Gaza Strip, Israel's government has admitted mistakes were made and has now announced the opening of checkpoints to facilitate humanitarian aid deliveries. The pressure on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is also growing within Israel.
First cracks in the war cabinet
Benny Gantz, a member of the war cabinet and head of Israel's second largest opposition party, has called for early elections. A glimmer of hope, says La Repubblica:
“A political move in the ongoing conflict that was already on the cards, to a certain extent. Gantz has held a ministerial post since joining the emergency cabinet, but is not part of the majority coalition. On the contrary, he is the recognised opposition leader at the head of the HaMahane HaMamlakhti Party and according to analysts the only one who might be able to snatch the baton from Bibi. ... It's too early to say whether Gantz's words will be the end of the war cabinet. ... But the first crack has certainly appeared. According to the polls, if there were elections now Gantz would win 30 seats and Netanyahu's Likud 20.”
Cynical plan seems to be working
Aftonbladet voices dismay:
“The already dreadful hunger in Gaza has become worse. The boats from World Central Kitchen have turned back. It was already impossible to get enough aid supplies through and now it's even more difficult. Perhaps this is exactly what Hamas was counting on when it carried out its bestial attack on 7 October. That brutality would push the Israeli leadership to overstep all boundaries. That the revenge, no other word can be used here, would be so terrible that Israel would lose all moral credibility. A dreadfully cynical plan, but in a twisted way it looks like it might succeed.”
Why Israel has admitted to this mistake
In a move almost without precedent in the 76 years of its existence, Israel has admitted to committing a serious mistake, La Repubblica notes, and looks at the reasons:
“The first is that six of the seven victims are foreigners. ... This could be the straw that breaks the camel's back if the West distances itself from the Israeli operation in Gaza. The second is that the incident may provide further evidence for the war crimes charges before the International Criminal Court. ... The third reason is that Israel needs the World Central Kitchen: the NGO responded to the incident by suspending its humanitarian activities in Gaza, increasing the risk of famine, a catastrophe for which the UN holds Israel's government responsible.”
Deliberate or an accident?
Israel must immediately clarify how this could happen, Dagens Nyheter demands:
“Medical personnel and aid workers become victims in all wars, but there is a huge difference between when it happens unintentionally and when people are deliberately targeted. The latter is something we associate with the Russian military tactics we have seen in Syria and Ukraine. ... Israel must get to the bottom of what happened, and if the attack was deliberate, those responsible must be court-martialled. Otherwise the military leadership would be giving its blessing to a direct war crime, even if only after the fact.”
Protection of civilians not a priority
Admitting mistakes won't bring the dead back to life, Avvenire complains:
“No one doubts that it was a tragic accident - as the government has admitted - but that doesn't change the fact that the shooting of unarmed and identifiable aid workers is the result of rules of engagement that are not geared towards protecting the civilian population. ... A number of Jewish hostages have been killed in recent months, and dozens or hundreds of residents, mostly women and children, are caught up in the clashes every day. The local health authorities talk of 33,000 victims as of yesterday, so 1.5 percent of the total population.”
War is hell
Western politicians are hypocritical in pointing the moral finger at Israel, The Spectator comments:
“You would think a former PM who was involved in wars in which other accidents happened would understand that 'friendly fire', sadly, is all but inevitable in bloody conflict. ... It isn't only Cameron. US president Joe Biden has also weighed in, saying he is 'outraged' by the killing of the aid workers. You can't help but wonder whether he directed similar outrage at his own nation's military when 37 Afghanis at a wedding party, mostly women and children, were killed by mistake in a US airstrike [in 2012]. ... Terrible accidents happen in war. That's because war is hell.”
Netanyahu turning his back on the West
Rzeczpospolita is disappointed by Israel's reaction to the death of a Polish aid worker:
“True reflection by Netanyahu and the ultra-nationalists in his government is highly unlikely. This is clear from the initial reactions of the prime minister and his diplomats - no sympathy, no apologies, simply the statement that these things happen in wars. And so - by implication - they will continue to happen. And anyone who refuses to accept this and criticises Israel is an antisemite. ... Netanyahu's government has distanced itself from reality, at least from the reality of the Western world. ... It claims that it is fighting for Western values. But these are less and less recognisable in Benjamin Netanyahu's Israel.”