Kernow Damo

Israel’s Hostage Story Just Collapsed - And The Government Has Lost It


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The debate over the exact role Israel played on October 7th has blown apart again as the guy charged with finding the hostages speaks out. Right, so they told you it was the most moral army in history. They told you they were doing everything, everything, to bring the hostages home. They hung the yellow ribbons and they made the solemn vows. And then the man Netanyahu’s regime put in charge of actually finding those hostages, a retired major general named Nitzan Alon, sat down and explained how it really works. He said most of the Israelis killed in Jabalia were killed by Israeli fire. He said they started with “hostages first” and then chose a different path. He said the rescued were more afraid of their rescuers’ bombs than their captors. So let’s be clear about the story they’re selling. It’s not a rescue mission that went wrong. It’s a military doctrine that worked exactly as designed, and the design was always to sacrifice the saved to prove you can’t be beaten. The lie isn’t in the error. the contradiction is in the objective. Right, so the story of what happened in Gaza after October 7th is not a story of Hamas outsmarting Israel. It’s not a story of intelligence failure alone, claims for or against on that depending on whether you take Israel’s word for that or the likes of Egypt who said they supplied said intelligence. It’s a story of a state’s doctrine allegedly sacrificing its own people, the hostages Hamas took. It’s a story we’ve heard before, but now with another voice speaking up on this, seemingly now confirmed by the man they put in charge of finding them. Nitzan Alon, the retired major general they appointed as the hostage and missing persons coordinator, has sat down and said the quiet part out loud. He’s confirmed that most of the Israeli captives killed in the Jabalia refugee camp were killed by Israeli fire. Not by Hamas. By the Israeli military. By the bombs and the shells sent in to destroy Hamas, which ended up destroying the people they were supposedly there to save. He says they started with a “hostages first” policy. That was the public promise, the thing they told the families, the banner they hung over the whole operation. Bring them home. But Alon says they chose a different path. They pivoted. The priority became dismantling Hamas, and the hostages became, functionally, expendable within that calculation.

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Kernow DamoBy Damien Willey