The comments by Moshe Yaalon were swiftly denied and condemned by allies of 
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, who said that they would hurt the 
country and help its enemies.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/01/world/middleeast/israel-gaza-yaalon.html

By Adam Rasgon, Liam Stack and Natan Odenheimer

Reporting from Jerusalem and Tel Aviv

Dec. 1, 2024

A former Israeli defense minister has accused Israel of committing war crimes 
and ethnic cleansing in the Gaza Strip, a rare critique from a member of the 
security establishment at a time of war.

The comments by Moshe Yaalon came amid mounting criticism of the Israeli 
military’s conduct in Gaza. They were swiftly denied and condemned by allies of 
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, saying that they would hurt the 
country and help its enemies.

Mr. Yaalon served as the Israeli military’s chief of staff during the second 
intifada ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/28/world/year-of-intifada-sees-hardening-on-each-side.html
 ) and as Mr. Netanyahu’s defense minister during the 2014 war in Gaza, the 
longest conflict between Israel and Hamas before the current war. But he broke 
with Mr. Netanyahu in 2016 ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/21/world/middleeast/moshe-yaalon-israeli-defense-minister-resigns.html
 ) and has since become a critic of the Israeli leader.

At an event on Saturday, Mr. Yaalon denounced Mr. Netanyahu’s government for 
its actions in Gaza.

“The path they’re dragging us down is to occupy, annex, and ethnically cleanse 
— look at the northern strip,” he said. He also said Israel was being pulled in 
the direction of building settlements in Gaza, a notion that is supported by 
far-right politicians in Mr. Netanyahu’s government.

When the interviewer at the event asked Mr. Yaalon to clarify whether he 
thought Israel was on the way to carrying out ethnic cleansing, he responded: 
“Why on the way? What’s happening there? What’s happening there?”

“There’s no Beit Lahia ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/29/world/middleeast/israel-gaza-beit-lahia.html 
). There’s no Beit Hanoun. They’re now operating in Jabaliya. They’re basically 
cleaning the territory of Arabs,” he said, referring to towns and cities in 
northern Gaza where a renewed Israeli offensive against the militant group 
Hamas has caused extensive damage in recent months. Tens of thousands of 
Palestinians have been killed in Gaza ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/25/world/middleeast/israel-gaza-death-toll.html 
) since the war began in response to the deadly Hamas-led attack on Israel in 
October 2023.

Mr. Yaalon doubled down on his accusations on Sunday, saying on public radio 
that Mr. Netanyahu’s government was exposing Israeli commanders to lawsuits at 
the International Criminal Court and was putting their lives at risk.

“I’m speaking in the name of IDF commanders who are operating in the northern 
strip,” Mr. Yaalon told the Reshet Bet radio station ( 
https://www.kan.org.il/content/kan-news/politic/830771/ ). “They reached out to 
me expressing fear about what’s happening there.”

He later said, in an apparent reference to the government: “At the end of the 
day, they’re perpetrating war crimes” — while making clear that his issue was 
not with the soldiers themselves.

The Israeli military declined to comment on Mr. Yaalon’s accusations, which 
came ten days after the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/article/icc-arrest-warrants-israel-hamas.html ) for Mr. 
Netanyahu and Yoav Gallant, his former defense minister for crimes against 
humanity and war crimes in Gaza.

Mr. Netanyahu’s office has rejected the accusations against the men in the 
warrants, calling them “absurd and false” and accusing the court of being 
motivated by antisemitism.

Mr. Yaalon’s comments were condemned by Mr. Netanyahu’s Likud party, of which 
Mr. Yaalon is a former member.

“Yaalon already lost his way a long time ago,” said the party. “His defamatory 
words are a prize for the International Criminal Court and the haters of Israel 
camp. Israel is fighting back against a murderous terrorist group that carried 
out mass slaughter.”

Mr. Gallant said on Sunday that Mr. Yaalon’s statements were “a lie that aids 
our enemy and harms Israel.”

The Israeli military “acted according to the highest standards that can be 
applied in the complex and difficult war that was imposed on us,” Mr. Gallant 
said in a post on ( https://x.com/yoavgallant/status/1863148642304991502 ) 
social media. “The instructions and commands were always given in accordance 
with the law.”

Israel’s communications minister, Shlomo Karhi, said Mr. Yaalon “crossed all 
the red lines. ( https://www.inn.co.il/news/654851 ) ” while Tally Gotliv, a 
firebrand Likud lawmaker ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/03/world/middleeast/netanyahu-israel-hostages-protests.html
 ) , called him “worse than our biggest enemies.” ( 
https://x.com/TallyGotliv/status/1862857850067792162 )

Israel has called on Palestinians from the northernmost reaches of Gaza to 
evacuate on several occasions since the war began last fall, including in the 
first week of the conflict ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/13/world/middleeast/gaza-strip-evacuation-israel-hamas-war.html
 ) and again in October. ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/11/world/middleeast/gaza-israel-north-evacuations.html
 ) Tens of thousands of people have heeded those warnings and fled, but many 
are believed to have remained in the area ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/15/world/middleeast/gaza-jabaliya-evacuations.html
 ) , either because they cannot or do not want to leave.

Mr. Yaalon’s statements were striking because they come at a time in which 
Israelis from across the political spectrum have united in their opposition to 
the I.C.C.’s issuing of the warrants for Mr. Netanyahu and Mr. Gallant.

They were also unusual because Israelis and their leaders — like people in many 
countries — tend to rally around the troops during a time of war. Criticism by 
former Israeli officials of the war has tended to focus on strategy or whether 
to agree a cease-fire with Hamas, not the military’s conduct veering into 
potential war crimes.

Of four former senior Israeli security officials contacted by The Times on 
Sunday, only one agreed to comment.

Ami Ayalon, the former director of the Shin Bet domestic intelligence agency 
who has criticized Mr. Netanyahu in the past, said he wasn’t sure whether 
Israel’s actions in Gaza met the legal definition of “ethnic cleansing.” But he 
described the Israeli government’s policy directives for the military as 
“immoral and unjust,” saying they could expose commanders and soldiers to 
prosecution by the International Criminal Court.

In recent months, aid organizations and world leaders, including President 
Biden, have warned of a humanitarian catastrophe in North Gaza. During that 
time, Israel has allowed little humanitarian aid to enter ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/13/world/middleeast/gaza-aid-us-israel.html ). 
Last month, Israel banned imports of commercial goods, saying that Hamas was 
benefiting from their sale. North Gaza is the northernmost of Gaza’s five 
governorates.

Israeli officials have said that Palestinians from North Gaza will be able to 
return to their homes after the war. Mr. Netanyahu has dismissed the idea of 
building settlements in Gaza, but hard-line members of his right-wing coalition 
have advocated for it.

Some Israelis worry that Mr. Netanyahu’s indecision about plans for postwar 
Gaza could result in a long-term occupation of the enclave, leaving open the 
possibility for right-wing members of the coalition to advance their ambitions 
to build settlements.

Some Palestinians from Gaza also took note of Mr. Yaalon’s comments.

Akram Atallah, a Palestinian columnist originally from Jabaliya, said he 
considered Mr. Yaalon’s remarks to be “extremely important.”

“This remark strengthens the Palestinian narrative of what is happening in 
Gaza,” he said. “And it isn’t coming from an Arab official or a sympathetic 
member of the international community. It’s coming from someone who was a 
general at the top of the Israeli system.”

Adam Rasgon ( https://www.nytimes.com/by/adam-rasgon ) is a reporter for The 
Times in Jerusalem, covering Israeli and Palestinian affairs. More about Adam 
Rasgon ( https://www.nytimes.com/by/adam-rasgon )

Liam Stack ( https://www.nytimes.com/by/liam-stack ) is a Times reporter on 
special assignment in Israel, covering the war in Gaza. More about Liam Stack ( 
https://www.nytimes.com/by/liam-stack )


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