Haaretz February 15, 2024 article detailing the IDF Givati Brigade's refusal to return to Gaza, which is blocked from Google Translate.
Givati Brigade refuses to return to service, reports Israeli newspaper Image blurred intentionallySoldiers of an 'elite' Israeli military brigade have refused to go back into Gaza, according to Israeli paper
Haaretz, in an article that appears to be set
not to allow Google to translate it.So heavy have been the Givati Brigade's losses to Hamas's guerilla tactics, that the group of troops are 'too scared' to return to service in Israel's genocide of Palestinian civilians.
The soldiers told their commanders that they were too traumatised to return to the field and were afraid for their lives.
Haaretz said that the IDF command is unsure how to react to the refusal.
According to IDF figures, around six hundred of its troops have been killed or severely wounded in Gaza since the start of the ground invasion but Israeli media,
collating figures from the country's hospitals, estimate numbers in the thousands and Hamas's media outfit releases videos showing its successful guerilla attacks on Israeli tanks, infantry and fortifications almost daily.According to human rights group Euro-Med Monitor, Israel's assault on Gaza has killed and severely wounded well over 100,000 Palestinian civilians, mostly women and children, imposing famine on hundreds of thousands more and bombing
schools and hospitals. Israel has been put on trial for genocide and has been
ordered to protect Palestinian lives,
but has intensified its assault and is now regularly bombing and shelling Rafah, the tiny enclave it ordered Palestinians to move to as a safe haven, before what is expected to be a ground assault that will cause an even greater and completely avoidable humanitarian disaster.
Comment: The IDF is finding out what's it's like to confront a determined, resourceful opponent, as opposed to beating up old ladies and little kids.
These soldiers were blasé to begin with, but the murder and atrocities eventually take their toll.