Israel's arrogance is becoming the evidence in the case against it

hebelehubele2 pts0 comments

Israel’s arrogance is becoming the evidence in the case against it | Israel-Palestine conflict | Al Jazeera

play<br>Live

Click here to searchsearch<br>Sign up

By Mohamad Elmasry<br>Professor in the Media Studies program at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies.

Published On 21 May 202621 May 2026

ListenListen (8 mins)<br>Save

Click here to share on social media<br>share-nodesShare<br>facebookxwhatsapp-strokecopylink

googleAdd Al Jazeera on Googleinfo

Israeli Minister of National Security and leader of the far-right party Otzma Yehudit, Itamar Ben-Gvir speaks during a meeting of his party at the Knesset, the Israeli parliament, in Jerusalem, 03 November 2025 [Abir Sultan/EPA]On Wednesday, Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir posted a video showing Israeli security officers abusing Sumud flotilla activists who were attempting to break Israel’s siege of Gaza.<br>In the footage, Ben-Gvir is heard taunting activists, who are forced to kneel with their foreheads to the floor and their hands tied behind their backs. At one point, a female activist who tried to speak up was grabbed by the back of the neck and forced violently to the ground.

Disturbing as it is, the video will not surprise anyone who has followed Israel’s treatment of either Palestinian detainees or foreign activists and aid workers.<br>The Israeli human rights group B’Tselem published, in August 2024, “Welcome to Hell”, a comprehensive report on the abuse of Palestinian detainees “as a matter of [state] policy”. According to B’Tselem, Palestinians held without charge are routinely subjected to sexual abuse, beatings, attack dogs, sleep deprivation and humiliation.<br>Earlier this month, veteran New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof published a detailed account of Israeli abuses, including allegations that dogs are used to sexually abuse Palestinian detainees.<br>These reports follow an August 2024 video leak showing Israeli officers gang-raping a Palestinian prisoner at the Sde Teiman detention facility, as well as a 2024 United Nations Special Commission report, which found that sexual abuse had become part of Israel’s “standard operating procedures”.<br>Israeli soldiers and officers have also targeted foreign nationals. Activists, journalists, aid workers, medics and humanitarian personnel have routinely been killed, attacked or abused without consequence.<br>Advertisement

In 2003, 23-year-old American activist Rachel Corrie was crushed to death by an Israeli bulldozer in Gaza as she tried to prevent the demolition of a Palestinian home.<br>In May 2010, Israeli commandos intercepted a Gaza-bound flotilla in international waters and killed nine activists on board the Mavi Marmara. Autopsies found that the victims had been shot at close range.<br>In May 2022, Palestinian American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, who worked for Al Jazeera, was shot in the head and killed by an Israeli sniper in the occupied West Bank. An investigation by the research agency Forensic Architecture and the Palestinian rights group Al-Haq, drawing on visual, audio and spatial analysis, found “clear intentionality” and “intent to kill”.<br>In April 2024, Israeli drones struck three vehicles belonging to World Central Kitchen in Gaza, killing seven aid workers from several countries. The vehicles were clearly marked, and the convoy had coordinated its movements with the Israeli military while travelling in a deconflicted zone. After one vehicle was struck, passengers fled to a second, which was also hit; a third was struck separately. An investigation suggested all three attacks were intentional.<br>Ben-Gvir’s video, then, does not represent a departure from the general behaviour of Israeli forces. It reflects a broader pattern of abuse, humiliation and dehumanisation. Tellingly, there has been no meaningful accountability for any of these incidents: No Israeli official or soldier has faced criminal prosecution in connection with any of them.<br>What is perhaps most striking about the Ben-Gvir video is that he posted it himself – suggesting not only pride in his behaviour, but confidence that neither he nor his officers would face punishment.<br>That self-assurance reflects a wider pattern among Israeli political, security and media figures, who have grown accustomed to being celebrated rather than punished for abusive behaviour. The soldiers who perpetrated the Sde Teiman gang rape were lauded by the political and media establishment; after the charges against them were dropped, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called them “heroic fighters”.<br>More broadly, soldiers and settlers have become openly boastful about apparent crimes, often posting the evidence themselves. During the height of the Gaza genocide, Israeli soldiers posted sniper videos of themselves shooting at unarmed civilians, alongside footage of themselves detonating Palestinian homes, looting shops, trying on Palestinian women’s lingerie and playing with the toys of children whose homes had just been destroyed. A 2024 Le Monde report...

israeli palestinian israel gvir video activists

Related Articles