Startling Oct. 7 Report: Israeli Security Agency Blames Netanyahu Government, Sparking Outrage
Israel’s internal security service, the Shin Bet, acknowledged on Tuesday its failure to address signs of a planned Hamas assault preceding the devastating events on October 7, 2023. An attack by Hamas militants in southern Israel resulted in approximately 1,200 deaths and 250 hostages, triggering an intense conflict in the Gaza Strip. The agency’s declassified summary report highlighted critical oversights while also pointing fingers at government policies allowing Hamas to stockpile weapons, secure funding, and build support.
The Shin Bet’s investigation followed Israeli military findings that senior officers underestimated Hamas and misunderstood warning signals of the attack. This summary revealed warnings about a Hamas raid in 2018 and 2022 that were disregarded, highlighting the agency’s failure to incorporate these threats into its strategic scenario planning. Despite assertions of seriousness towards Hamas, the Shin Bet admitted it did not adequately respond to early signs of looming violence.
Publishing parts of the report underscores the incident’s severity, yet significant information remains classified. Criticism has grown against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s administration, which has so far resisted an independent public inquiry. Netanyahu, while debating in Parliament, expressed support for an investigative commission yet warned of potential political bias, stating, “I am not deterred by fabricated investigations and a political manhunt…I will continue to insist on the truth.”
Contrastingly, Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi, soon to resign as military chief of staff, accepted responsibility for the attack’s prevention failure, labeling it a “terrible failure.” Shin Bet chief Ronen Bar, committed to remain until hostages return, acknowledged the preventability of the attack but reported insufficient coordination with military counterparts and a lack of a clear responsibility chain, admitting, “This is not the standard that we expected from ourselves and the public from us.”
Unlike the military’s report, the Shin Bet’s analysis directly linked governmental policies to the attack. It criticized the government for allowing Hamas to amass arms, fundraise, and for its reluctance toward “offensive” strategies, including targeting leaders in Gaza. The agency discussed the impact of Palestinian detainee treatment and perceived societal weakness in Israel, calling attention to domestic unrest fueled by Netanyahu’s proposed judicial overhaul.
Insights mirrored in a report from The New York Times, based on various international officials’ interviews and official documents, also pointed to lapses preceding the attack. Netanyahu’s office refrained from commenting on the findings officially, but an unofficial statement discredited the agency’s investigation as inadequate and not reflecting the gravity of their failures.
The office criticized intelligence assessments indicating Hamas’s aversion to a campaign against Israel days before the attack, accusing Shin Bet head Ronen Bar of not alerting Netanyahu during the crisis. “The head of the Shin Bet did not see fit to wake the prime minister on the night of the attack,” the statement noted.
This incident remains a focal point of national discourse, as public demand for an independent, thorough examination persists amid controversy and calls for accountability.
Original Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/04/world/middleeast/israel-oct-7-attack-shin-bet.html
Category : Shin Bet,Israel,Hamas,Netanyahu, Benjamin,Israel-Gaza War (2023- ),Gaza Strip,Classified Information and State Secrets
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Publish Date: 2025-03-05 06:57:00