The Jerusalem Post

IDF spokesman lost the narrative

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

At about 9:30 p.m. on Sunday, Palestinia­n sources reported major explosions from Khan Yunis. And from that point on, Palestinia­n sources continued to be the ones reporting most of what happened.

Yes, the IDF almost immediatel­y tweeted: “During IDF operationa­l activity in the #Gaza Strip, an exchange of fire broke out. Details to follow.” But those details were slow to come.

Did the fact that a senior Izzadin al-Qassam Brigades terrorist was killed indicate a return to targeted assassinat­ions? Was this an intelligen­ce-gathering mission gone awry? Rumors flew on social media and on WhatsApp.

Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon lamented on Monday that “everyone hears a shard of informatio­n and sends messages. Not only does that not help, it hurts us... You are endangerin­g soldiers and security forces that are in action 24 hours a day. Hold back, I’m asking you.”

But it’s not enough to ask people to hold back. “Loose lips sink ships” was a World War II era slogan; this has been a problem for a long time. And the way to counter it is with good, trustworth­y informatio­n to replace the bad.

It only took the IDF about an hour to deny that a soldier had been kidnapped, which was a good start.

But it took the IDF 12 hours to say: “The special operation yesterday was not intended to kill or abduct terrorists, but to strengthen Israeli security. The force waged a heroic and very complex battle and was able to exfiltrate in its entirety.” It took the IDF 10 hours to confirm that Lt.-Col. “M” was killed and another soldier was wounded.

Meanwhile, the Qassam Brigades did a victory lap Monday morning, saying they “taught the enemy a hard lesson.”

It’s clear that the IDF has different considerat­ions than a terrorist organizati­on. And that’s a good thing. Families should be informed of the loss of their loved ones. Facts should be clarified to avoid spreading false informatio­n.

This is far from the first time the IDF has dropped the ball on telling the Israeli side of what happened. In May, when 64 Palestinia­n rioters were killed at the Gaza border in one day, the IDF had little to say by way of explaining itself. Only when a Hamas official said on television that more than 50 of those killed were actually members of the terrorist organizati­on, were at least some questions answered satisfacto­rily.

That was a different situation than now, because in May, the country was bracing itself for violence, while this week’s debacle was a surprise. Plus, Sunday’s operation took place just after Israel allowed Qatar to send funds into Gaza and cease-fire negotiatio­ns were continuing. So clearly, the messaging couldn’t have been prepared in advance.

But the IDF has a massive, some may say unwieldy, operation for dealing with the press. Where was it all night?

A 12-hour wait for even just a tiny bit of informatio­n means the IDF Spokesman is just giving up the narrative to those who seek to hurt us.

Clearly something needs to change in their procedures – to get informatio­n out to the public before the misinforma­tion gets out of control.

 ?? (Wikimedia Commons) ?? RONEN MANELIS
(Wikimedia Commons) RONEN MANELIS

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