Friendly fire incidents were seen before the Gaza invasion and the 7 October attacks, with a non-commissioned officer shot and killed by IDF troops in Summer 2023 while securing an alley way in
Jenin with the elite
Egoz commando unit. Two others were killed in the same unit in January 2022 in the
Jordan Valley, with both incidents being highlighted as mistaken identities.[2][3]
After the 7 October attacks Israel mobilized about 360,000 reservists in the IDF, which were to add to their about 169,500 active duty personnel. By January 2024 about 295,000 reservists had reported for duty and many were potentially under trained due to timing concerns before being sent to fight.[4] The IDF has an annual budget of about $23.6 billion for the 2023, and possess a range of highly sophisticated defensive and offensive weaponry.[5]
Confirmed incidents
In the
Hamas led attack on 7 October, around 70 Hamas militants
attacked the Be'erikibbutz in southern Israel and at least 130 Israelis were killed in the attack. Several individuals were taken hostage in the kibbutz during the attack. Relatives of some of those killed have demanded a probe into the potential deaths of some of these hostages from
friendly fire, including one incident in which an Israeli tank fired at a house full of hostages.[6][7][8]
On 7 October, as Israeli Doron Katz-Asher and other members of her family were being transported from the
Nir Oz kibbutz on a tractor to be taken as hostages by Palestinian militants, the IDF fired on them to stop the tractor reaching Gaza; her mother Efrat Katz died from a bullet. Doron Katz-Asher was held hostage in Gaza for 49 days before being released during the
ceasefire in late November. [9] On 5 April 2024 it was announced that an IDF investigation found high credibility that Katz was likely killed by friendly fire.[10]
On 7 October, Ofek Atun and his girlfriend Tamar escaped from the
Re'im music festival massacre and attempted to enter kibbutz
Alumim, which was
also attacked, to seek refuge. Members of the kibbutz's security squad and a resident soldier mistook them for militants and opened fire, killing Atun and wounding Tamar.[11]
On 30 November 2023, In the
Givat Shaul shooting in
Jerusalem, two Palestinian gunmen killed three and wounded sixteen Israeli civilians. The gunmen were killed by
Yuval Castleman, an Israeli bystander who shot the gunmen. He was fatally shot by an arriving IDF soldier shortly after.[12]
On 8 January 2024, Israeli combat engineers were reportedly prepping to demolish a Hamas facility. A nearby tank crew mistakenly opened fire, leading to an electricity pole collapsing and setting off the explosives. Six soldiers lost their lives, and 14 others sustained injuries in the blast.[14]
On 28 April 2024, two Israeli reserve soldiers in Gaza were killed by an IDF tank shelling a building in the Netzarim corridor where a group of Israeli soldiers were staying. The incident took place amid an exchange of fire with Hamas operatives in the area.[15]
On 15 May 2024, five Israeli
paratroopers were killed after being shelled by an IDF tank believing them to be Palestinian combatants.[1][16]
IDF running casualties
According to the Israeli military, since the
ground invasion of Gaza beginning on 29 October, an average of two to six soldiers were killed each week from friendly fire for a total of 18 soldiers out of 170 killed as of 1 January 2024.[17] By 26 January the number of IDF troops killed in friendly fire incidents had been increased to 36 out of 188 soldiers reported as killed.[18] They were a part of the about 17% of soldiers war-related deaths that were classified as accidents.[19][20][21] On the six month anniversary of the 7 October attack in April 2024, the IDF published data on their engagements which included casualty numbers. Per the report 41 soldiers of the 604 killed since the start of the war were the result of operational accidents which included friendly fire.[22]
Of the deceased some were killed by Israeli airstrikes, shrapnel from their own explosives, being run over by Israeli armored vehicles, and mistakenly identified and hit with tank fire, shelling and/or guns. These numbers do not take into account injuries resulting from friendly fire, but the IDF has indicated that they have had reports of those.[18] Israeli hostages, who were freed by Hamas on 5th December 2023, convened with Benjamin Netanyahu's war cabinet. They asserted that Israeli helicopters intentionally targeted them as they entered Gaza during the Hamas attack on Israel on 7th October. Furthermore, they reported enduring continuous shelling from the Israeli military throughout their stay in the region.[23]
The transparency of Israel's disclosure regarding friendly fire fatalities has made them subject to additional scrutiny, as many nations do not make such information public.[14]
Hannibal Directive and Yedioth Ahronoth investigation
On 5 December 2023, Israeli
hostages released by Hamas met with
Benjamin Netanyahu's
war cabinet and claimed that, during the 7 October
Hamas attack on Israel they were deliberately attacked by Israeli helicopters on their way into Gaza, and were shelled constantly by the Israeli military while they were there.[24] The Israeli broadcaster
Channel 12 reported on 16 December that IDF forces had fired on a tractor carrying hostages to Gaza.[9] On 18 December the IDF admitted that "casualties fell as a result of friendly fire on October 7", but added that "beyond the operational investigations of the events, it would not be morally sound to investigate these incidents due to the immense and complex quantity of them that took place in the kibbutzim and southern Israeli communities due to the challenging situations the soldiers were in at the time."[25]
In January 2024, an investigation by Israeli newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth concluded that the IDF had in practice applied the
Hannibal Directive from noon of October 7, ordering all combat units to stop "at all costs" any attempt by Hamas militants to return to Gaza with hostages.[26][27] IDF helicopters fired on cars trying to cross into Gaza.[28] It is unclear how many hostages were killed by friendly fire as a result of the order.[26][27] According to Yedioth Ahronoth, Israeli soldiers inspected around 70 vehicles on the roads leading to Gaza that had been hit by a helicopter, tank or
UAV, killing all occupants in at least some cases.[26][27]
In an interview with Israelās Haaretz, Lieut. Col. Nof Erez stated that IDF forces were mostly wiped out on the ground along the Gaza border. This reportedly meant that there was no one that helicopter or drone pilots could communicate with, making the identification of persons on the ground very difficult. According to Erez, "the Hannibal [Protocol], for which we have been conducting drills over the past 20 years, relates to the case a single vehicle containing hostages: you know which part of the fence it comes through, what side of the road it would move to and even which road... What we saw here was a 'mass Hannibal'. There were many openings in the fence. Thousands of people in many different vehicles, both with hostages and without hostages."[29][30]
Reactions
Retired US Navy
admiral and former supreme leader of
NATO forces, James Straridis cautioned that the IDF had a very high friendly fire rate, even in an dense urban setting while speaking to reporters.[14]Atlantic Council fellow and military intelligence expert Alex Plitsas cautioned that due to the fog of war, while any friendly fire instances are cause for concern, it was difficult to discern or reflect on if highlighted broader issues with the IDF and their tactics.[31] Some experts such as retired US Lieutenant General
Sean MacFarland highlighted the urban combat, lack of evacuation, and poor building quality due to the blockade which could cause higher numbers of friendly fire. While others such as
Avner Gvaryahu of the IDF veterans organization against the occupation,
Breaking the Silence stated its due to a policy of "very loose rules of engagement."[18]
The sibling of one of the engineers killed in the 8 January incident, claimed the cause of his brothers death was a freak accident and he did not blame the soldiers involved as they were under large amounts of pressure and it was their duty to protect the engineers.[14]
^Liza Rozovsky (2024-01-06),
"Families of Israelis Killed in Be'eri Home Hit by IDF Tank on October 7 Demand Probe", Haaretz, retrieved 2024-01-06, [...] Brig. Gen. Barak Hiram said he had ordered a tank commander to fire on the home of Kibbutz Be'eri resident Pesi Cohen, in which Israeli civilians and many terrorists were holed up, 'even at the cost of civilian casualties.' [...] families of the killed Israelis demanded 'a comprehensive and transparent probe into the decisions and actions that led to this tragic outcome. [...]'