This October 7th story is breaking news in Australia, old news in Israel…and suppressed news in the US. It’s worth asking why.
The information in the article below, reposted from ABC, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, has been around for almost a year. Israeli news outlets began telling this story (in Hebrew) less than 2 weeks after the events of October 7th (for example, here and here and here).
Investigative alternative news media sites Mondoweiss, Electronic Intifada, and Grayzone began reporting on this topic in October; If Americans Knew produced its first article in November.
The Washington Post misrepresented the movement to challenge the Israeli narrative in January – completely ignoring reporting from Israel that had been getting it right for months. In July, this paper finally made a foray into serious reporting on the topic: the Hannibal Directive.
Otherwise, in US mainstream media, it is hard to find any mention of this topic – as significant as it is.
This information gap goes beyond the single matter of the Hannibal Directive. As IAK has documented throughout Israel’s genocide on Gaza – and for years before – Americans media as a whole has withheld massive amounts of critical information from its clients, and over-reported on other information.
Invariably, Palestinian narratives have been under-represented and purposely villified; at the same time, official Israeli narratives have been depicted unquestioningly as fact.
A few of the many investigative news pieces that have revealed this practice since the beginning of Israel’s war on Gaza include:
- When Israel Burned Refugees Alive, Establishment Media Called It a ‘Tragic Accident’
- Western media ignores Israeli confirmation of Hannibal Directive on 7 Oct
- Nuseirat massacre: Slaughtered Palestinians do not exist for West’s media
- The mainstream media distorted our anti-Vietnam War protests 50 years ago. They’re following the same strategy today
- Cable News Viewers Have a Skewed Attitude Toward Gaza War, Survey Finds
- Leaked New York Times Memo Tells Journalists To Avoid Words “Genocide,” “Ethnic Cleansing,” and “Occupied Territory”
- CNN staff say network’s pro-Israel slant amounts to ‘journalistic malpractice’
- Mainstream media covers up Israeli calls to drive two million Palestinians into permanent exile
- Coverage of Gaza War in NYTimes & other major papers heavily favored Israel, analysis shows
- Media bias in Western coverage of Israel’s war on Gaza
A few excellent media studies done in recent years:
- IAK Study: Only the News That Fits: How American Media Erase Palestine – Even Alternative Media
- IAK Study: Associated Press Double Standard in Israel-Palestine Reporting
- Study finds 50-year history of anti-Palestinian bias in mainstream news reporting
For more info on the pro-Israel media bias, go here or here.
Israeli forces accused of killing their own citizens under the ‘Hannibal Directive’ during October 7 chaos
by Eric Tlozek, Orly Halpern and Allyson Horn, reposted from Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC)
“Hannibal at Erez, dispatch a Zik [attack drone],” came the command on October 7.
Those words, reported by Israeli newspaper Haaretz in July, confirm what many Israelis have feared since the Hamas attacks on October 7 in southern Israel.
Israeli forces have killed their own citizens.
Israeli authorities say more than 800 civilians and around 300 soldiers were killed on October 7.
A number of Israeli hostages have since died in Gaza.
Israelis are still reeling from the horror and pain of the Hamas-led terror attack, which was the bloodiest single day in Israel’s history.
But the Israeli military is coming under increasing pressure to reveal just how many of their own citizens were killed by Israeli soldiers, pilots and police in the confusion of the Hamas attack on southern Israeli communities.
Survivors and relatives have been asking not just “what went wrong”, but whether the military invoked the controversial — and supposedly rescinded — “Hannibal Directive”.
What is the Hannibal Directive?
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said the directive was named at random by a computer program, but Hannibal was the famous Carthaginian general who took poison rather than be captured by the Romans.
The doctrine, written in 1986 in response to the kidnapping of Israeli soldiers in Lebanon, gave permission for Israeli forces to fire on enemies holding their comrades hostage — even at risk to those hostages.
Its authors said the directive did not allow captives to be killed, but critics say that over time an interpretation spread through the military that it was better to kill comrades than to allow their capture.
“They interpreted it as if they are [meant] to intentionally, deliberately kill the soldier in order to foil the attempted abduction, and that was wrong,” Israeli philosopher Asa Kasher, who wrote the IDF code of ethics, told the ABC.
“That is legally wrong and morally wrong and ethically wrong, it’s wrong on all accounts.”
In 2011, Hamas successfully used an Israeli hostage to secure a major prisoner exchange, swapping one Israeli soldier, tank gunner Gilad Shalit, for more than 1,000 prisoners, including the current Hamas leader, Yahya Sinwar.