Moshe Feiglin.
“Every baby in Gaza is an enemy”: Ex-“Israeli” MP Moshe Feiglin
“Israeli” right-winger Moshe Feiglin, a former Likud lawmaker and current member of the Zehur party, made a shocking statement saying “every child, every baby in Gaza is an enemy”.
In an interview on the morning show of Hebrew Channel 14, Feigling stated that “Israel’s” enemy is not Hamas, and the only path to victory is if no single Gazan child will be left in the Gaza Strip.
"The enemy is not Hamas, nor is it the military wing of Hamas, as our military commander tells us, that we are forbidden to harm a Hamasnik unless he is part of the military wing."
"Every child in Gaza is the enemy. We need to occupy Gaza and settle it, and not a single Gazan child will be left there. There is no other victory."
The statement comes amid heightened political tensions in “Israel”, after opposition party leader and left-winger Yair Golan said “killing babies is a hobby for Israel” in Gaza.
Golan, a former “Israeli” military chief , accused Netanyahu’s government of being “full of vengeful types with no morals and no ability to run a country in a time of crisis,” adding that the current renewed military campaign in Gaza risks “Israel’s” existence by becoming a pariah state.
The statement sparked reactions across “Israel’s” right-wing parties, and from Netanyahu himself, who claimed that this is an “outrageous incitement against our heroic soldiers and against the State of Israel.”
“Israeli” Defense Minister Israel Katz said: “Vile blood libel against our regular and reserve soldiers.
Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said: “Golan knowingly spreads lies, defames Israel and the IDF in the eyes of the world.”
“Israel” has come under massive international pressure to abandon its intensified military campaign in Gaza and allow urgent humanitarian aid into the besieged strip.
The UN announced Monday that it had been cleared to send in aid for the first time since "Israel" imposed a total blockade on March 2, sparking severe shortages of food and medicine.
But aid groups say the amount allowed in is not enough to meet needs.