
Former Green Beret: 'Without Question, I Witnessed War Crimes' In Gaza
'I witnessed the Israeli forces shooting at the crowds of Palestinians,' Anthony Aguilar told BBC . 'I witnessed the Israeli forces firing a main gun tank round from the Merkava tank into a crowd of people, destroying a car of civilians that was simply driving away from the site. I witnessed mortar rounds being fired at the crowd… to keep them controlled.'
The GHF is led by an evangelical Christian leader with close ties to Prime Minister Netanyahu and President Trump. The organization was established in Israel in a collaboration of American evangelicals and private security contractors. Soon after the GHF began distributing aid to war-torn Gaza in May, disturbing reports emerged of Israeli soldiers killing unarmed Palestinians approaching aid points for food. Reports of dozens of Palestinians being killed in single incidents have become common. Last week, the UN human rights office said more than 1,000 Palestinians have been killed while trying to receive food at the distribution points.
Aguilar was blunt in characterizing what he observed in the context of his US military service:
'In my entire career, I have never witnessed the level of brutality and use of indiscriminate and unnecessary force against a civilian population…an unarmed, starving population. I've never witnessed that in all the places I've been deployed to war until I was in Gaza, at the hands of the IDF and US contractors … Without question, I witnessed war crimes.'
He also condemned the GHF and its hired American guns:
'My professional opinion of how the sites were established was what I would describe as 'amateur.' Inexperienced, untrained, no idea of how to conduct operations of this magnitude. That would be my most benign assessment. In my most frank assessment, I would say that they're criminal.'
The GHF said Aguilar's allegations were 'categorically false,' telling BBC that the retired Green Beret is 'a disgruntled former contractor who was terminated for misconduct.' In a separate statement, GHF said its own investigation concluded his claims are 'false and have no basis in reality.'
Former U.S. Army Green Beret who worked for the GHF says he witnessed the IDF commit war crimes, including using a tank to fire on a crowd of unarmed civilians. pic.twitter.com/glUmbXf5aF — Dave DeCamp (@DecampDave) July 26, 2025
However, Aguilar's description of lethal weapons being used to control unarmed civilian crowds is consistent with recent accounts given by IDF soldiers and other US contractors. Here's how one of several IDF soldiers and officers described the senseless killing in an exposé published by Israeli newspaper Haaretz :
'It's a killing field. Where I was stationed, between one and five people were killed every day. They're treated like a hostile force – no crowd-control measures, no tear gas – just live fire with everything imaginable: heavy machine guns, grenade launchers, mortars. Then, once the center opens, the shooting stops, and they know they can approach. Our form of communication is gunfire.'
'We open fire early in the morning if someone tries to get in line from a few hundred meters away, and sometimes we just charge at them from close range. But there's no danger to the forces. I'm not aware of a single instance of return fire. There's no enemy, no weapons.'
There are also many videos circulating on social media that corroborate claims of lethal weapons being used to control crowds. This one was included in the BBC's new report, with the network saying it verified the footage:
The IDF said it would review Aguilar's allegations. Meanwhile, responding to a widening uproar over massacres at food sites and rising malnutrition and starvation in blockaded Gaza, the IDF early on Sunday announced it had begun making food airdrops, describing them as part of 'a series of actions aimed at improving the humanitarian response in the Gaza Strip.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Gulf Insider
6 hours ago
- Gulf Insider
Is Trump Hellbent On Derailing India's Rise As A Great Power
Trump raged against India on Wednesday in a series of posts announcing his 25% tariff on its exports on the pretext of its trade barriers and close ties with Russia. He then announced an oil deal with Pakistan and predicted that 'maybe they'll be selling Oil to India some day!' His final post described India's economy as 'dead' and claimed that 'We have done very little business with India' despite it being the fastest-growing major economy in the world and bilateral trade amounting to nearly $130 billion in 2024. India's Ministry of Commerce & Industry calmly responded to Trump's tariff announcement by reaffirming its commitment to talks and declaring that the state 'will take all steps necessary to secure our national interest', which likely infuriated him since he probably expected Modi to anxiously call him. The favorable trade deal that he clinched with Japan last week and the totally lopsided one with the EU that followed emboldened him into playing hardball with India upon thinking that it'll fall into line too. The US wants India to open its agricultural and dairy markets, stop its massive import of discounted Russian oil, and rapidly diversify away from Russian military equipment. Complying with the first demand would be disastrous for the 46% of the Indian workforce employed in these industries, however, while the second would risk decelerating its economic growth and the third would make its security dependent on the US. The end result would therefore derail India's rise as a Great Power and turn it into a US vassal. Trump is hellbent on doing precisely that, which is the continuation of Biden's policy, as explained below: * 13 December 2022: 'Will The US Sell India Out To China To Sweeten The Deal For A Sino-American New Détente?' * 14 May 2025: 'There Might Be A Method To The Madness Of Trump Unexpectedly Damaging Indo-US Ties' * 16 May 2025: 'Trump's Desired Return To Bagram Airbase Could Reshape South Asian Geopolitics' * 7 June 2025: 'The US Is Once Again Trying To Subordinate India' * 13 July 2025: 'The US-Pakistani Rapprochement Could Have Far-Reaching Geostrategic Consequences' These analyses will now be summarized for the reader's convenience and placed in the current context. In brief, India's Russian-assisted rise as a Great Power hastens the coming of tri–multipolarity that'll in turn help midwife complex multipolarity, which would greatly reduce the likelihood of ever restoring US-led unipolarity or the short-lived period of informal Sino-US bi-multipolarity ('G2'/'Chimerica'). Russia's special operation and the West's reaction to it revolutionized International Relations and created the opportunity for India to make up for lost time in becoming a Great Power with truly global influence. The US responded to these developments by attempting to subordinate India via election meddling, infowars, and dual geopolitical pivots to Bangladesh (whose prior long-serving leader it helped depose) and Pakistan to pile on the pressure in pursuit of this goal or to contain India if it still refuses to concede. Complementary elements of this pressure campaign include political support for Delhi-designated 'Khalistani' separatists-terrorists and spring 2023's violent ethno-religious unrest in Manipur. If Trump's tariffs don't coerce India into becoming a US vassal, which the US would then exploit to coerce concessions from China in advance of its ultimate goal of restoring unipolarity, then he might settle for letting China subordinate India instead as part of the 'G2'/'Chimerica' scenario. Either way, he doesn't expect India's rise as a Great Power to continue due to the zero-sum dilemma in which the tariffs were meant to place it between becoming the US' or China's vassal, but India might still surprise everyone.


Gulf Insider
6 hours ago
- Gulf Insider
Israel Gives Hamas Annexation Ultimatum Despite Increased Criticism From West
Israeli officials have reportedly warned Hamas that if it rejects the latest ceasefire proposal, Israel will begin annexing parts of Gaza, according to a fresh Times of Israel report. The report cites Israel's Channel 12 which indicated Israel submitted its response to Hamas's latest counteroffer on Tuesday night, but does not expect the group to accept the terms. Already talks based in Doha had been stalled or essentially called off, after Prime Minister Netanyahu earlier this month recalled his negotiating team. Israeli forces have established and for many months overseen a de facto 'buffer zone' in Gaza which cuts deep into the Palestinian territory. 'Israel will not be patient for much longer,' a senior Israeli official was quoted in the report as saying. The Times of Israel report spells out, 'With negotiations for a ceasefire and hostage release deal having stalled, Israel has sent a message to Hamas that if it doesn't accept the proposal on the table in the coming days, Jerusalem will begin to take punitive measures against it, including the annexation of territory on Gaza's outer perimeter,' citing senior Israeli officials. As for specifics on where this threatened annexation could begin, the report says: According to the report, Israel told Hamas that it will not leave the Phildelphi Corridor along the Gaza-Egypt border or the buffer zone around the Gaza border; will not allow the opening of the Rafah Crossing; and will not agree to Hamas demands for a prisoner release so far-reaching it will leave few bargaining chips in Jerusalem's hands to compel Hamas to release the last batch of hostages in a potential ceasefire. This would effectively ensure that remaining hostages wouldn't be returned through a deal, as Israel would shut the door on having anything more to offer in terms of enticing Hamas to reach a new exchange agreement. Channel 12 has observed of the US stance that there is currently 'no appetite' within the White House to approve any big Israeli move to formally annex parts of Gaza. France, the UK, and most recently Canada have said they plan to recognize a Palestinian state at the upcoming UN assembly meeting in September, in a diplomatic blow to the Netanyahu government. Still, there's there's as yet no indication Washington is pressuring Israel to make concessions, and if anything Trump's earlier rhetoric on turning Gaza into the 'Riviera of the Middle East' could easily be taken as a green light to annex from Tel Aviv's point of view. But at the moment the majority of countries and leaders throughout the world have lambasted Israeli actions in Gaza, particularly for the lack of aid getting in amid the worsening humanitarian catastrophe as civilians starve to death.


Gulf Insider
17 hours ago
- Gulf Insider
Calls Grow For Nationwide Islamic Education In German Schools
Germany's Association for Education and Training (VBE) has called for the introduction of comprehensive Islamic religious education in schools across the country, arguing that Muslim students should be offered the same opportunities as their Christian peers. 'We are committed to ensuring that all believers can talk about their faith within schools and receive relevant information about their religion and other religions,' said VBE Federal Chairman Gerhard Brand in comments to the RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland (RND). He urged political leaders to ensure that schools are equipped with the necessary personnel and materials, and that programs are implemented quickly and expanded over time. Islamic religious education is currently regulated at the state level, resulting in significant variation. In North Rhine-Westphalia, Islamic religious education is already offered in schools, while in Bavaria, a state-run Islamic studies course is available as an alternative to ethics. However, the Bavarian model does not include cooperation with Islamic religious communities. According to estimates, around 5.5 million Muslims live in Germany, and at least 580,000 were attending school as of 2020. Yet only around 81,000 students are currently enrolled in Islamic religious education programs. Advocates say that expanding access to these classes is essential for integration and for protecting students from extremist influences. The Turkish Community in Germany also welcomed the initiative but warned of political and structural hurdles. 'Islamic religious education is a must — just like Catholic and Protestant religious education,' said the group's chairman, Gökay Sofuoglu. He called for educational standards to be aligned at a national level, while acknowledging the constitutional limits imposed by Germany's federal system. 'We would need a nationwide Islamic cooperation partner. Unfortunately, that isn't in sight at the moment,' he said. Sofuoglu stressed that while the state must remain secular, it has a duty to ensure fair and equal treatment of religious communities. 'I don't know how this could be regulated nationwide,' he added. Stefan Düll, president of the German Teachers' Association, told the RND that 'religious education in public schools, taught by teachers trained and state-certified in Germany, can provide a counterbalance to fundamentalist attitudes — mediated by the family or by fundamentalist preachers online.' The debate over Islamic education is not just reserved for Germany. As the Muslim population across Europe grows, both support for and opposition to Islamic teachings have risen in multiple European nations. In April of this year, Remix News reported how, for the first time, Muslim students had become the largest religious group in Vienna's schools, underlining the incredible demographic transformation taking place in the Austrian city. According to data obtained from the office of Bettina Emmerling, the city councilor responsible for education, Muslims now account for 41.2 percent of all students, while Christian students fell to 34.5 percent. The trend is only growing, and is accompanied by rising problems, including violence in schools, anti-Semitism, and contempt for women. 'Islam is changing our society in ways we do not want,' warned Christian Klar, a Viennese school principal, last October. He expressed concern over the 'rapid Islamization' of Austrian schools, alongside rising violence and anti-Semitic incidents. In January, it was reported that approximately 200 schools across the Spanish autonomous community of Andalusia now teach Islam as part of their curriculum, following the disclosure of official figures after a parliamentary request by the local Vox party. The inquiry submitted by Vox Andalusia sparked political debate over the extent to which the curriculum is being catered to immigrants and the scope of influence a rising Islamic community now has on institutions across the region.