The IDF worked to create an expansive buffer zone in Gaza along the border, Breaking the Silence (BTS) said in a report.
The NGO’s report, released this week and which includes testimony from over 10 soldiers, states that, in practice, this meant razing homes and agricultural fields in Gaza to create a flat area about one kilometer from the border in which the IDF would have a clear line of sight.According to a satellite analysis cited in parallel to the report, the IDF is accused of leveling over 6,200 buildings Gaza since January in a one-kilometer-wide buffer zone.
The report also includes testimony from IDF soldiers who described the rules of engagement in the buffer zone, with some expressing concern that all those who entered certain areas were considered terrorists and highlighting that Gazans may not have had a way to know that the area was forbidden to enter.The IDF responded to the accusations in the report, saying that “the IDF is committed to protecting the residents of the State of Israel from the threats posed by Hamas and other terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip, primarily through an updated and relevant defense strategy.”The IDF added that as part of this defense strategy, in accordance with the political echelon, “the IDF destroys terror infrastructure, strengthens defense components in settlements, maintains a broad military presence in the security zone adjacent to Israel, and works to eliminate threats in the area.”The IDF said these measures are essential to prevent the operation of terror organizations in the area and ensure security.October 7 massacre, or launching fire towards Israeli settlements," the IDF added.
“All actions are carried out in compliance with international law, with the understanding that the security zone is a vital component of the IDF’s ability to prevent the enemy from carrying out offensive terrorist activities, such as those seen in theIt also said that IDF actions are directed only against military targets and terror actors, in accordance with international law, and added that it warns civilian populations in military areas to protect them.A major who served in northern Gaza said he heard a perimeter being discussed as early as November 2023.
In November 2023, the talk in the operations room was that the war would last a year and be like the West Bank with localized operations in Gaza, the major told BTS.They also “talked about the perimeter in the northern Gaza Strip, that we were going to conquer an area that would be cleared of everything and that would be a buffer between Israel and the Gaza Strip,” he told the organization.When speaking about civilians in the area, the idea that there are “no innocents” in the designated area guided operational activity, an IDF warrant officer in reserves told BTS. The warrant officer added that part of the rationale given to soldiers was that the area overlooks the fence, and terrorists can shoot at the fence from that area.A sergeant-major told BTS that the conquest of this area was done separately from the clearing of the area.He added that some of the houses that were destroyed contained clear evidence that they had been used for terror activity.“At least a few dozen of the houses we took down were houses that were full-on incriminated. We found hostages’ belongings in them,” he said.These houses, however, were “by no means the majority,” he added, explaining that it was dozens of houses out of hundreds.Explaining how the IDF operated in these areas, a captain in the Armored Corps told BTS that “the IDF decides on a certain line, and conceptually, anyone who crosses it is considered a threat. It happened at the Netzarim Corridor, and it happened on the border, too.“There are no clear rules of engagement,” he added, saying that there was “room for discretion on the ground,” and that ultimately company and battalion commanders could determine the rules of engagement.There was no “proper combat procedure,” such as exists in the West Bank, he added, saying that “there is no system of accountability in general. Anyone who crosses a certain line that we have defined is considered a threat and is sentenced to death. That did exist. It was an IDF definition. There was a line.”A staff-sergeant-major also commented in his testimony on the rules of engagement in the perimeter area, saying the orders were “Adult, male – kill. Shoot to kill. For women and children, shoot to drive away.
'Don't kill women, children, or the elderly'
“You don’t kill women, children, or the elderly,” he added.The staff-sergeant-major added that reservists would raise the question whether the fact that there was a perimeter area they could not enter was communicated to Palestinians, saying they did not have an answer.Additional soldiers whose testimony was included in the report highlighted that rules of engagement were localized.A captain told BTS that the IDF also instigated fire “for the sake of instigating fire,” explaining that this was partially to produce a psychological effect and partially “for no reason.”He added that “the IDF’s system has failed and fallen apart,” saying the system by which the IDF classified suspicious and civilian sites had fallen apart.“Maybe it’s Hamas’s fault that this diagnosis is complex. But we set out on this war out of insult, out of pain, out of anger, out of the sense that we had to succeed. This distinction [between civilians and terrorist infrastructure], it didn’t matter. Nobody cared,” he added.
Yonah Jeremy Bob contributed to this report.