At the heart of the NGO’s headline-making report is an effort to compel Israel to treat enemy civilians the way it would its own. And that, say those who set the IDF’s ethical guidelines, is both impracticable and immoral

Breaking the Silence, an Israeli nongovernmental organization, used to gather and publish accounts of military service in the West Bank and Gaza as part of an attempt to turn Israeli society against the occupation of those areas. Now it has shifted tack.

The NGO’s most recent report, at its core, seeks to change how Israel wages war.

Breaking the Silence, which on Tuesday is hosting a public launch of the report in Tel Aviv, largely expects Israel to value and seek to preserve the lives of the citizens of Gaza and limit collateral damage just as it would if its own civilians were being held by Hamas — an approach that would mean more Israeli soldiers would pay with their lives, fewer Palestinian lives would be lost, and Israel’s ability to bring its military might to bear against Hamas would be drastically reduced.... Read More: Times of Israel