CNN says IDF did nothing to stop Huwara terror attacks
The soldier suggested that the military should have used riot dispersal means to stop the settlers from heavily vandalising the town, setting homes and businesses on fire, and terrorising its residents.
An investigation published by CNN last week claimed that IDF soldiers did nothing to stop settlers from violently rampaging through the West Bank town of Huwara in an incident that shocked the nation in February.
In testimony provided to CNN by left-wing Israeli NGO Breaking the Silence, an unnamed soldier said to have been present that evening said the IDF did not make any attempt to prevent the group of settlers from entering Huwara.
The soldier suggested that the military should have used riot dispersal means to stop the settlers from heavily vandalising the town, setting homes and businesses on fire, and terrorising its residents.
“You have a group of dozens of people you see who are hot-headed and they start walking towards Huwara, they are masked and some of them may have knives. What do you think they are coming to do?” he said.
The incident on February 26, in which dozens of masked settler extremists wreaked havoc in the town, was condemned by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as well as a swath of key Israeli allies worldwide.
A senior IDF general referred to the incident as a “pogrom”, and President Isaac Herzog condemned the “cruel and violent rampage”.
The band of settlers entered Huwara pursuing revenge just hours after two Israeli brothers, Hallel Yaniv, 21, and Yagel Yaniv, 19, were shot dead while driving through the town.
Several days after the rampage, IDF chief Herzi Halevi vowed to “thoroughly investigate … the grave events of lawlessness”. To date, no IDF soldiers have faced any repercussions for the events.
The IDF soldier who shared testimony through Breaking the Silence said the Israeli military’s “biggest failure” was in not securing safe passage for Palestinian fire trucks and ambulances.
Video published by CNN appeared to show emergency vehicles stopped near the entrance to Huwara. The soldier claimed that the IDF did not do anything about settlers attacking those vehicles.
The CNN report claimed that video footage from Palestine TV shows IDF soldiers walking by as settlers lit wooden crates on fire and piled them in front of the entrance to the building of Huwara resident Nawal Dumeidi. But the CCTV footage published by CNN does not appear to show any IDF soldiers, and the TV network did not provide the Palestine TV footage.
Dumeidi told CNN that she was trapped inside her building for three days. A photo dated February 28, two days following the violence, on the Palestinian activist website Electronic Intifada, showed Dumeidi just outside her front door, examining the charred remains of the wooden crates.
Initial IDF investigations into the incident in Huwara revealed that security forces failed to contain the violence for hours despite early warnings of a planned violent protest. Troops were also preoccupied with searching for the gunman who killed the Israeli brothers.
Halevi said shortly afterward, “The IDF prevents many terror attacks every week. Unfortunately, we were unable to prevent the last ones. We also should have prevented what developed following the attack in Huwara.”