How a Culture Shift in the Israeli Military Helps Explain Gaza's Death Toll
snipped to get to the point:
But for the discussion to be useful, it should progress beyond these immediate interpretations to examine the deeper cultural patterns underlying such incidents. Most crucially, it must scrutinize the shift in military policy and ethos that can be traced back to the Elor Azaria affair of 2016-17. Azaria was an Israeli conscript who was captured on video executing a wounded and immobilized Palestinian assailant in Hebron. The Israeli military prosecuted Azaria for manslaughter and sentenced him to 18 months in prison.
While the case demonstrated the militarys commitment to its own ethical codes, it also sparked widespread protests from right-wing factions and a general backlash against military procedures. The army was accused of failing to support Azaria and creating a culture in which soldiers would hesitate to use force against Palestinian militants. To counter this claim, and from that point forward, the military began to announce the number of Palestinian fighters killed in its operations, demonstrating that its forces did not hesitate to engage.
Under the leadership of the militarys chief of staff, Aviv Kochavi, from 2019 to 2023, the killing-based criteria were reinforced. Kochavis goal was to remake the army into a lethal, efficient, and innovative fighting forcein other words, a death-generating army. He promoted this vision by enhancing the precision of weapon systems, improving the coordination between forces and intelligence, and increasing the rate of fire.
Kochavis directive for field commanders to assess, at the end of each combat phase, the number of enemy forces killed and objectives destroyedrather than solely focusing on territorial conquestsignified a shift toward necrotactics, where the primary goal of military engagement is killing the enemy. Killing becomes not just an outcome of warfare but its principal aim.
https://foreignpolicy.com/2024/04/09/israel-hamas-war-gaza-death-toll/
https://archive.ph/LZ3jU