Not to worry. It's sodomization Torah-style. It's kosher. It's all sanctioned by Yahweh who goes soft when the victim is a non-Hebraic untermensch, a.k.a. a human animal. Otherwise, the most moral nation on earth can go about sodomizing Palestinians with the sublime and Yahweh-mandated objective of making them "voluntarily" self-expel from their ancestral lands to make way for members of the Blight Unto Nations tribe of sheep-humping nomads in the deserts of Bronze Age Arabia.
Clearly, Israel is doing to the indigenous people of Palestine what every single western colonizer before it did. To name just a few of the most outrageous savagery in human history: the Spanish in Latin America, the French in Algeria, the Germans in Tanzania and Namibia. the British in India, and the closest to the Zionist babarity in Palestine is what Belgian King Leopold II did to the Congolese.
The unique feature of Israel's brutality as a foreign colonizer of indigenous people is that part of its creation mythology rests upon the fact that its colonizing settlers were once themselves victim of German brutality. You'd think that the vicissitudes of their self-declared "eternal victimhood" would have taught them to be civilized toward a people whose land they stole and whose nation they dislocated. But alas, they continue their 80-year-old torture of the Palestinian people, simply because they can and simply because someone is always making sure that they are supplied with the means of utmost barbarity.
And now Israel has finally officially joined the elite club of barbarian foreign colonizers.
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Israel's military prosecutor admits she leaked video of soldiers assaulting a Palestinian detainee
JULIA FRANKEL
Fri, October 31, 2025
FILE - Israeli soldiers gather at the gate to the Sde Teiman military base, as people protest in support of soldiers being questioned for detainee abuse, July 29, 2024. (AP Photo/Tsafrir Abayov, File) (ASSOCIATED PRESS)
JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel’s top military prosecutor resigned Friday, admitting she was responsible for leaking a video showing soldiers assaulting a Palestinian detainee at a notorious military detention center, according to excerpts of the letter published by Israeli media.
The admission has embroiled the prosecutor, Military Advocate General Maj. Gen. Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi, in a firestorm of criticism from the right-wingers dominating Israeli politics who say her actions betrayed the state.
The chain of events shows how a prosecutor such as Tomer-Yerushalmi, whose office is viewed by many human rights groups as being too soft on the wartime conduct of Israeli soldiers, faces heavy pressure from Israeli politicians to refrain from aggressively prosecuting alleged wrongdoing. It also follows broader attempts by the country’s political leaders to overhaul a judicial system that they see as an obstacle to government policies.
The leaked video was aired last year by Israel’s Channel 12 and purported to show an incident in which soldiers at the Sde Teiman detention facility in southern Israel had sodomized a Palestinian detainee from Gaza.
Israel’s military was investigating the case at the time and had arrested soldiers for suspected involvement, prompting fury from hard-line ultranationalists who violently overran the facility in protest.
In her resignation letter Friday, Tomer-Yerushalmi said that she had leaked the video to counter the criticism that the military was prioritizing Palestinian detainees over Israeli troops.
According to excerpts of the letter published in Israeli media, she wrote that the military had a “duty to investigate when there is reasonable suspicion of violence against a detainee.
“Unfortunately, this basic understanding — that there are actions which must never be taken even against the vilest of detainees — no longer convinces everyone," she wrote.
Defense Minister Israel Katz and a chorus of Israeli politicians castigated Tomer-Yerushalmi following her resignation, and Katz said she would not be reinstated. He said investigations would continue into those involved in the decision to leak the video.
Throughout the war, Israel’s treatment of Palestinian detainees from Gaza — especially at the Sde Teiman facility where the incident took place — has been characterized by rights groups as abusive. Detainees have been rounded up en masse and brought to detention facilities where they could be held for months without charge or trial. Many released detainees have reported frequent beatings from prison guards, scant food and awful conditions.
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The torture video shaking Israel to its core
Henry Bodkin
Mon, November 3, 2025
Masked guards pull a blindfolded prisoner to his feet from a face-down position on the floor.
He is marched into a corner, where Israeli soldiers have formed a barrier with riot shields, blocking the man from the view of a nearby security camera. He is surrounded and, as military guard dogs bark, there is movement from behind the shields.
The leaked footage does not make events entirely clear, but the Palestinian man — a suspected terrorist — was later admitted to hospital with severe rib and rectal injuries.
The footage of abuse at the Sde Teiman detention facility was first aired last year by Israel’s Channel 12 and prompted an investigation.
However, before the inquiry could take its course, the video prompted a backlash from politicians on the Right, including those close to Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, who dismissed accusations against the guards as a “blood libel”.
After rumbling on for more than a year, the scandal reignited last week when Maj Gen Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi, the IDF’s chief legal officer, admitted leaking the video.
She resigned from her post on Friday after her admission. On Monday authorities said she had been arrested following a several-hour disappearance on Sunday, prompting speculation about a possible suicide attempt.
Concerns over political influence on IDF
On Sunday, Mr Netanyahu characterised the fallout from the leaked video as “perhaps the most severe propaganda attack against the State of Israel” in its history.
Israel Katz, the defence minister, said that anyone who fabricates “blood libels against Israeli soldiers was unworthy of donning IDF uniform”.
Leaked CCTV footage purportedly showed an attack on Palestinian prisoners
The incident in the southern Negev Desert has exposed, in the view of opponents to the current government, the creeping politicisation of the IDF.
Maj Gen Tomer-Yerushalmi appeared to be a model servant of the state. Only the second woman to rise to the position, in 2021 she was appointed chief military advocate – effectively the IDF’s top lawyer.
However, the 51-year-old mother of three is now under investigation over the leak.
She had previously submitted an official statement to the High Court of Justice claiming she could not locate the source of the leak.
If leaking the video was sufficient to end her stellar legal career in the IDF, allegedly lying about it to Israel’s top court could be enough to land her in jail.
Maj Gen Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi, the IDF’s chief legal officer, admitted to leaking the video - AP/Oren Ben Hakoon
She is due to be questioned by police this week over her actions, and after significant concerns for her welfare when her car was found abandoned near a cliff-topped beach near Tel Aviv, officials said she had been found “alive and well”.
Maj Gen Tomer-Yerushalmi’s rapid fall from grace has shocked Israel. But it is why she felt the need to leak the video in the first place that is driving the public row.
The allegations of abuse at Sde Teiman against reservists from the IDF’s Unit 100, including a captain and a major, were already in the public domain before Channel 12 first broadcast the footage in Aug 2024.
The fact that the detainee was injured so grievously that he had to be admitted to a civilian hospital saw to that.
With rumours of not just this incident but allegations of systematic abuse at Sde Teiman beginning to reach the international press, the Military Advocate General Office began an investigation, on Maj Gen Tomer-Yerushalmi’s orders.
It was the investigation into the IDF’s soldiers that first prompted backlash from senior figures within Israel’s government.
The abuse allegations after all were the last thing the government needed, with Israel’s international reputation tanking due to the brutality of the Gaza campaign and war crimes indictments for the prime minister in the offing.
The country was also still in the grip of profound shock and, for many citizens, fury at the Oct 7 massacre, with extremely limited concern for the treatment of detained Palestinians.
The backlash against the investigation included violent scenes as protesters, including politicians, broke into two military compounds in protest at the investigation.
A huge amount of political pressure, both public and, it is alleged, privately, was also directed at Maj Gen Tomer-Yerushalmi to drop the probe, including accusing her of manufacturing the allegations.
Her decision to leak the video evidence has been seen as her essentially buckling under this pressure – a desperate act by a hitherto by-the-book lawyer determined to prove that her team were not making things up.
It may well prove disastrous for her personally.
There was concern for Maj Gen Tomer-Yerushalmi after her car was found abandoned near a cliff, but officials said she had been found ‘alive and well’ - Reuters/Nir Elias
Others worry that, more importantly, the fact that such a senior IDF officer could come under such political pressure in the first place indicates an erosion of respect for the neutrality of the military.
For critics of Mr Netanyahu, the so-called “MAG affair” shows that having allegedly tried to politicise Israel’s judiciary, leading to months of protest before the war, he is now trying the same with the military.
Mr Katz, seen as both a Netanyahu yes-man but also personally ambitious, is already accused of holding up the sign-off of senior military appointments – most of which are traditionally beneath the purview of ministers – in an effort to ensure political loyalty among the high command.
At the same time,Yariv Levin, the justice minister, is trying to warn Gali Baharav-Miara, Israel’s attorney general, from any involvement in the fallout of the Tomer-Yerushalmi case.
It follows the significant public disquiet over the dismissal of Ronen Bar, the director of Shin Bet, Israel’s internal security agency, earlier this year after he launched an investigation into Qatari influence on Mr Netanyahu’s staff.
The worry is that while Israel has always had rumbustious politics, the neutrality of its professional military and security services, which have traditionally remained sacrosanct, is under threat.
A lawyer for one of the five military guards at Sde Teiman has now called for the prosecutions to be dropped, arguing that proliferation of the now notorious video means his client cannot get a fair trial.
Whether or not that argument succeeds, Israel’s reputation as a country with the rule of law is once again in the dock.
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