Friday, September 19, 2014

UN Reports “Little Collateral Damage” Resulting From Israeli Airstrikes on Hamas Terrorist Targets

The U.N. Office of Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has confirmed that Israeli airstrikes targeted the Hamas infrastructure in Gaza and that Israel demonstrated exceptional efforts to minimize collateral damage by urging civilians to evacuate ahead of bombings – thus forfeiting the surprise effect guided by security requirements and not by retaliatory or political expediency.
 
Former Israeli Ambassador to Washington, DC, Yoram Ettinger, summarized the extensive report on the U.N. findings:
 
Israel did not retaliate by rote against Hamas’ systematic attacks on civilian targets; Israel bombed areas that harbored Hamas missile-launching grounds and facilities, command posts, terrorists’ homes and hide-outs, operational bases, weapon inventory and tunnels.
 
Most of the damage was concentrated in very limited areas of 25-square meters or less; while most of Gaza was not damaged at all or in a very limited manner.  Less than 5% of Gaza was hit by the Israel Defense Forces.  The most populated areas of Gaza City (Jabaliya, Khan Yunes, Rafah and Deir el-Balah) were disproportionally undamaged; either damaged in a very limited way or not damaged at all.
 
The areas highlighted by the UN damage assessment report are compatible with the Israel Defense Forces briefings on the location of Hamas facilities, especially in the Shuja’iya area … the area of the most intense battles.
 
While Hamas concentrated its terror facilities in civilian areas of Gaza — while systematically and deliberately targeting Israeli civilians in densely populated urban areas – the vast majority of these Gaza urban areas were undamaged.
 
Israel followed surgical bombing tactic and not carpet bombing; the attacks were neither random nor indiscriminate.  Most of the areas targeted by Israeli airstrikes housed multiple tunnel entrances and shafts, as well as launching sites for mortars and missiles and other terror-related infrastructures.
 
Rev. Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain (Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel

No comments:

Post a Comment