reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A video argues that an Israeli soldier in front of a destroyed kibbutz home claimed Hamas fighters burned babies and beheaded them, but the video says this is a lie and that it will be proven using Israeli media. It questions how the concrete walls turned into rubble, noting fires burn wood and other flammable items and do not collapse concrete structures.
The video states that Israelis want viewers to believe Hamas did the destruction, but argues they were only armed with machine guns and small grenade launchers, which supposedly wouldn’t cause such damage, so the destruction was done by Israelis. It claims Israeli media provides the answers and that IDF soldiers responding to the Hamas attack were investigated. Tuval Eskapa, security team member for Kibbutz Be’eri, set up a hotline to coordinate between kibbutz residents and the Israeli army. He told the Israeli newspaper Haaretz that as desperation set in, field commanders made difficult decisions, including shelling houses occupied by residents in order to eliminate the terrorists along with hostages. Haaretz reportedly states that orders came down from the military’s high command to attack homes and other areas inside Israel, even at the cost of many Israeli lives. The army was allegedly able to restore control over Be’eri only after shelling the homes of Israelis who had been taken captive, with at least 112 residents killed and others kidnapped, according to the paper.
The video notes that much of the shelling in Be’eri was carried out by Israeli tank crews, cited by a reporter from the Israeli Foreign Ministry-sponsored outlet i24, who described small, quaint homes bombarded or destroyed, children’s toys left around, well-maintained lawns ripped up by tank tracks. It contends the IDF, in an act of desperation, decided to kill everyone, including hostages. Yasmeen Porat, a Nova Music Festival attendee who fled into the kibbutz, reportedly told Israeli radio that when Israeli special forces arrived during a hostage standoff, they eliminated everyone, including the hostages, because there was very, very heavy crossfire; she described how Hamas militants tied her partner’s hands behind his back, and she saw her partner lying on the ground, still alive, as security forces killed him and other hostages while opening fire on remaining militants, including with tank shells. This allegedly explains shrapnel and bullet holes in walls and the extensive rubble, and why severely burnt bodies of Israeli hostages exist.
The video asserts the IDF also used Apache attack helicopters; an Apache pilot told Mako that many rockets were fired at cars containing hostages. It also claims IDF forces opened fire on fleeing Israelis who were mistaken for Hamas gunmen, citing a resident of Ashkelon, Danielle Rachel, who nearly was killed escaping the Nova attack. It mentions an IDF commander, Avi Rosenfeld, ordering an airstrike on his own position after the Palestinian fighters attacked the Erez checkpoint, with the IDF bombing their own base to kill Palestinian militants.
The video concludes by saying Hamas did attack on October 7, but the point is to highlight the IDF’s poor response and the deaths of their own people. It cites Nova survivor Yasmeen Porat believing militants did not want to kill them and aimed to take them back to Gaza as hostages, suggesting the attack’s goal was to capture Israelis for a prisoner exchange. It argues some people question why it matters who is responsible for deaths, including babies, but the video insists the reason to cut through Israeli propaganda is to prevent justification of acts of genocide in Gaza, noting concern over escalation toward a regional conflict. It ends with a call to share the video, “RIP to all those who lost their lives, especially the thousands of innocent children in Gaza, incurring the wrath of a misled population. Free Palestine.”