Israel’s Hidden Front: How Israel’s Military Embeds Itself Among ‘Civilians’

Israel’s Hidden Front: How Israel’s Military Embeds Itself Among ‘Civilians’

Reposted from Quds News Network, June 14, 2025

As Iran responds to Israeli attacks, Israel has begun publishing photos and videos showing what it claims are civilian casualties. However, many of Israel’s key military command centers and bases are embedded inside or beside densely populated civilian areas, raising serious concerns about the use of human shields.

Israel has long accused the Palestinian resistance of using civilians as human shields. But a closer look at its own military infrastructure tells a different story. From Tel Aviv to Be’er Sheva, Israeli army bases, intelligence centers, and military leaders are embedded deep within cities and residential neighborhoods, protected not by concrete walls but by Israeli flesh and blood.

Matcal Tower, a military 17-floor high-rise building at Camp Rabin military base in HaKirya, is embedded within a densely populated civilian area.
Matcal Tower, a military 17-floor high-rise building at Camp Rabin military base in HaKirya, is embedded within a densely populated civilian area. (QNN)

At the heart of Tel Aviv lies HaKirya, Israel’s central military headquarters. It’s just a few steps away from the bustling Azrieli Center, Ichilov Hospital, residential towers, and the HaShalom train station. The commander-in-chief’s office sits only 450 meters from hospital patients. This proximity is not incidental. It’s strategic.

Across the country, similar patterns appear.

In Ramat Gan, the Sheba Medical Center neighbors the Tel Hashomer military base. In Haifa, the Israeli navy base is hidden behind the Rambam Medical Center, a civilian hospital. Even Israel’s alleged nuclear capabilities, reportedly housed in Sdot Micha Base, are surrounded by quiet rural communities near Beit Shemesh.

 

Civilians as a Human Shield Strategy

This overlap is not limited to infrastructure. Israel’s leadership, too, shelters in residential zones. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu resides in Jerusalem’s Talbieh neighborhood, surrounded by settlers.

The defense minister lives in Moshav Kfar Ahim, and the Israeli military chief of staff lives in Hod Hasharon. All are Israeli ‘civilian’ areas.

This practice isn’t new. It’s systematic.

The Israeli settlement enterprise in the West Bank mirrors the same approach. Entire communities of settlers, including women and children, are placed deep inside conflict zones.

They are the frontline of a colonial project. When violence erupts, these ‘civilians’ become both the shield and the justification for further expansion.

Meanwhile, military rabbis, settlement leaders, and ideological figures operate among the settlers, posing as spiritual guides. They shape policy and drive confrontation but deny responsibility when blood is spilled.

Military Bases in Plain Sight

Even advanced cyber warfare hides in plain sight. The Glilot base, reportedly home to Unit 8200, Israel’s elite surveillance unit, is just 2 kilometers from northern Tel Aviv’s residential zones. This site has been flagged by Hezbollah and other groups for its proximity to civilians.

The Palmachim Airbase, responsible for drone operations and missile testing, lies just 10–12 kilometers from densely populated areas like Yavne and Greater Tel Aviv. The base shares airspace with commercial zones, a fact that Israel rarely acknowledges.

This civil-military fusion is not an accident. It’s a strategy.

On the surface, Israel tries to project an illusion of normal life: soldiers stationed beside shopping malls, military towers rising over playgrounds, officers living quietly among schoolchildren. 

An Israeli girl holds an anti-tank rocket-launcher at the Glilot army base, north of Tel Aviv on May 8, 2008.
An Israeli girl holds an anti-tank rocket-launcher at the Glilot army base, north of Tel Aviv on May 8, 2008. (QNN)

But this is no coincidence. It is the architecture of a colonial project, one where the line between soldier and settler is deliberately blurred. Israeli ‘civilians’ are not just bystanders; they are often active participants or enablers of a violent military apparatus.

From settlement expansion to surveillance networks and military conscription, every layer of society is embedded in the machinery of occupation and war.

While Israeli officials accuse Palestinian fighters of operating from urban areas, their own army commands from skyscrapers, hospitals, and suburban homes.

They accuse Gaza’s defenders of hiding among civilians, yet embed their own war machines in the heart of Tel Aviv.

Israel’s military-industrial complex does not merely exist beside civilian life; it consumes and shields itself with it.


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