As Gaza death toll soars, secrecy shrouds Israel’s targeting process
November 5, 2023 The Washington Post
Video
filmed on Nov. 1 shows survivors after three strikes hit Gaza's densely
populated Jabalya refugee camp in the course of a day. (Video: Obtained
by Reuters)
JERUSALEM
— The Israeli airstrikes that hit the Jabalya refugee camp on Oct. 31
sent buildings tumbling down on families displaced from across the
besieged enclave. More than 110 people were killed, many of them women
and children crushed beneath the rubble, doctors said.
The Israeli military said the operation achieved its aim.
“We
were focused on our target,” Lt. Col. Richard Hecht, a spokesman for
the Israel Defense Forces said Monday, referring to Ibrahim Biari, a
high-ranking Hamas commander. “We know that he was killed.”
Since
the conflict began, nearly 10,000 Palestinians have already been
killed, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, as the IDF presses for the
destruction of the Hamas militant group that rules the enclave. Although
Israeli officials insist that each strike is subject to legal approval,
experts say the rules of engagement, which are classified, appear to include a higher threshold for civilian casualties than in previous rounds of fighting.
“There
was always a conscious effort to limit the amount of civilian
casualties in the few occasions that we have struck in areas where we
knew that there would be civilian casualties,” said Jonathan Conricus,
the international spokesman for the IDF. He would not comment on whether
Israel has changed its rules of engagement and accused Hamas of
inflating the death toll.
A
comparison of satellite imagery captured on Oct. 31 and Nov. 1 shows
the destruction following an Israeli airstrike on Jabalya Refugee Camp
in Gaza. (Video: Maxar Technologies)
“Essentially,
the laws of armed conflict strike a balance” between the military
advantage of the attack and the expected harm to civilians, said Pnina
Sharvit Baruch, a former IDF legal adviser.
“The
higher the military advantage, the higher harm to civilians would still
be considered proportionate,” she said, describing Israel’s logic,
saying that any harm to civilians is collateral, not intentional.
The
consequences of those calculations are spread across the floors of
Gaza’s hospitals and morgues. Entire families have been killed; infants
are buried with their parents in mass graves. Strikes have hit water
towers and bakeries, schools and ambulances. Human rights groups have
flagged a growing number of strikes as potential war crimes and urged an
international investigation.
In
comments last month, the International Criminal Court’s prosecutor,
Karim Khan, said that every military decision-maker in the conflict
should be “on clear notice that they will be required to justify every
strike against every civilian object.”
International
law requires militaries to make clear distinctions between civilians
and militants, and to take all possible precautions to prevent civilian
harm. The principle of proportionality prohibits armies from inflicting
civilian casualties that are “excessive” in relation to the direct
military advantage anticipated at the time of the strike.
It
is an inexact standard that requires a full investigation, a difficult
task in an active war zone. How Israel is selecting its targets is
shrouded in secrecy, making it extremely hard for experts to judge their
legality. U.S. officials say they do not know exactly how IDF
commanders are assessing the threshold for civilian casualties — even as
they publicly urge Israel to minimize the death of innocents.
The
Israelis have significantly reduced the number of airstrikes in recent
days, a possible sign that the U.S. message is getting through, one
senior State Department official told The Washington Post, speaking on
the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive talks. The official
added that strikes were still causing dramatic casualties.
In
the Jabalya attack, which took out an entire residential block, the
Israeli military suggested it was carefully planned to target a senior
Hamas figure in the tunnels below the refugee camp.
“And
we struck it and it was taken out and dozens of Hamas operatives were
killed with him,” Conricus said. “Of course, it’s sad and regrettable
that civilians are killed, but it is a legitimate military target.”
In
calculating the risk to civilians, military planners could reasonably
have assessed that the number of casualties would be in the hundreds,
experts say.
“The
Jabalya strike, because it was a planned attack, shows that Israel must
have a tolerance for civilian casualties which is orders of magnitude
greater than that that was used by, say, the U.S. Air Force in the war
against ISIS,” said Mark Lattimer, executive director of the Ceasefire
Centre for Civilian Rights.
Palestinians
look at the aftermath of an airstrike on a house in Khan Younis, south
of the Gaza Strip on Friday. (Loay Ayyoub for The Washington Post)
On Oct. 14, just a week into the war, the Israeli air force said
it had dropped 6,000 bombs on Hamas targets in Gaza. By contrast, a
little more than 7,300 bombs were dropped on Afghanistan by the U.S.-led
coalition in all of 2019, the heaviest year of aerial bombardment
there.
The IDF has since provided only sporadic updates on the number of strikes conducted.
Another
U.S. administration official told The Post the Israeli calculus about
acceptable levels of civilian casualties was clearly different from that
of the United States, but insisted there was a robust process in place
to assess each strike. They spoke on the condition of anonymity to talk
about sensitive conversations.
“U.S.
interlocutors who are professionals on this issue of deconfliction and
conduct of campaigns have had these discussions” with their Israeli
counterparts, the senior State Department official said.
The
United States provides the Israeli army with military and intelligence
support, and is therefore required by the Geneva Conventions to ensure
that bombing raids in Gaza do not breach international law.
On
Sunday, IDF spokesman Daniel Hagari appeared to foreshadow the
possibility of targeting major hospitals, citing their alleged use by
militants to fire on Israeli forces. He described medical facilities as a
“key part of [Hamas’s] war machine” and urged that they be evacuated.
Medical
relief organizations and doctors inside the hospitals have repeatedly
emphasized that they cannot comply. The facilities are packed with
hundreds of people, some of them on life support, as well as newborns in
incubators. Thousands of displaced residents are also sleeping on
hospital grounds, believing them to be safer than the ruined
neighborhoods they fled.
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has framed the fight against
militants in existential terms. The group and its infrastructure —
spread among Gaza’s population of more than 2 million civilians — can
and will be destroyed, he has said.
Baruch
said the savagery of Hamas’s Oct. 7 assault on Israel, which killed
more than 1,400 people, gives Israel greater latitude under
international law to act in self-defense: “Those standards say, we
understand that you might be attacked so viciously that the only way to
defend yourself is to use a lot of force and unfortunately harm
civilians because there is no other way.”
But the principle of proportionality remains unchanged, experts say.
Hagari
laid out on Sunday the number of warnings that Israeli forces have
issued to Palestinian civilians to evacuate areas under bombardment:
1,524,000 fliers dropped from the sky, almost 6 million messages sent to
cellphones and 20,000 phone calls.
But
Gaza is one of the most densely populated areas in the world. With the
exits sealed to all but foreign nationals and a small number of wounded
Palestinians — and bombs falling across the enclave — there is no
meaningful place for civilians to escape.
As
Israel’s list of pre-vetted strike locations is depleted, the emphasis
of its air campaign is shifting to so-called dynamic targeting, where
decisions are made relatively quickly — an approach that has led to
higher civilian casualties in other air wars, including those by the
U.S.-led coalition against ISIS in Iraq and Syria.
That
change would have “stark implications for civilian harm,” said Marc
Garlasco, a former defense intelligence analyst. “When you switch to
dynamic targeting you are doing a much more rapid collateral damage
assessment and you are not able to take as many precautions.”
An
Israeli soldier stands on top of a howitzer at a staging area in
southern Israel that fires toward Gaza on Oct. 28. (Heidi Levine for The
Washington Post)
Israel
may also be blinder than in previous periods, experts say, as hundreds
of thousands of civilians shelter in new locations, sometimes moving
several times a week in search of safety.
“In
the first days of the war, the Israelis will know a lot. They’ll know
about patterns of life, they can do good collateral damage estimates,”
said Michael Schmitt, a professor of international law at the University
of Reading who served 20 years in the U.S. Air Force as a judge
advocate.
“At this point in the war room, those thresholds would be necessarily a bit lower than they were on day one.”
There
are also questions about the strength of the intelligence being used to
choose targets inside Gaza, less than a month after thousands of Hamas
militants launched a devastating surprise attack on Israeli soil.
“It
calls into question how good the IDF’s intelligence is, and that bears
on both targeting implementation on the front end but also on
assessments of incidental harm to civilians and civilian objects,” said
Brian Finucane, a Crisis Group senior adviser who has advised the U.S.
government on counterterrorism and the use of military force.
With
unrest gripping the occupied West Bank and missiles flying along its
border with Lebanon, Israel’s monitoring assets may also be stretched
thin, said Schmitt. “The calculation goes: I’ve got to watch the north.
I’ve got to watch all these other areas. So I can’t allocate all my
resources to Gaza.”
As
casualties kept climbing Sunday, the impacts of the bombing campaign on
Palestinians could be seen in photographs too graphic to publish,
shared online by Ghassan Abu Sitta, a plastic and reconstructive surgeon
working in the area’s largest hospital. A 9-year-old girl’s arm had
been gouged so deeply by shrapnel that it resembled a shark bite. A boy
of the same age had his mouth blown open.
“Even
if there is a legal justification for each and every airstrike in Gaza,
this conflict has been catastrophic for the people of Gaza,” Finucane
said. “Falling within the law only gets you so far.”
Birnbaum reported from Tel Aviv. Meg Kelly in Washington and Melanie Lidman in Tel Aviv contributed to this report.