Opinion: Israeli hostage rescue exposes a new layer of feeling in this horrifying war | CNN (2024)

Opinion:Israeli hostage rescue exposes a new layer of feeling in this horrifying war | CNN (1)

Damage and debris was left in the wake of an operation by Israeli special forces in the Nuseirat camp in Gaza on June 9, 2024.

Editor’s Note: Jill Filipovic is a journalist based in New York and author of the book “OK Boomer, Let’s Talk: How My Generation Got Left Behind.” Follow her onTwitter. The opinions expressed in this commentary are her own. Viewmore opinionon CNN.

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After almost 250 days of fear, horror and death, a sliver of good news out of the conflict between Israel and Hamas: Four hostages, civilians kidnapped by Hamas from the Nova music festival on October 7, wererescuedby Israeli forces on Saturday.

Opinion:Israeli hostage rescue exposes a new layer of feeling in this horrifying war | CNN (2)

Jill Filipovic.

But it’s not an unalloyed victory. The rescue was complex and, as is often the case, did not go all that smoothly. It also extracted a devastating civilian cost — a truth that complicates what should be a happy narrative about innocents rescued in a daring effort.

The hostages were being held in two residential buildings in a civilian area. In one apartment, fire fights broke out. Once the hostages were rescued, they were taken to the Mediterranean coast and evacuated via helicopter, but, as local resident Khalil Al Tirawi, told CNN, the operation wasdevastatingto civilians, “a barrage of heavy gunfire, artillery missiles, rockets.”

In the end, the four Israeli hostages were thankfully brought home safely. But dozens of Palestinians lost their livesand many more were injured. Thenumbersare unclear – the Gazan Health Ministry, which is controlled by Hamas, says 274 Palestinians were killed; the Israeli military said it was fewer than 100. CNN cannot independently verify either figure andneitherentity provided a breakdown of militant deaths versus civilian ones — but, undoubtedly, yet again, innocents were killed in a war they didn’t start and that has resulted in an overwhelming loss of life.

Andrey Kozlov was among the four rescued hostages from central Gaza on June 8, 2024. Marko Djurica/Reuters Related article An Israeli operation rescues four hostages and kills scores of Palestinians. Here’s what we know

This is a complicated moment. The rescue of the four hostages, Noa Argamani, Almog Meir Jan, Andrey Kozlov and Shlomi Ziv, is an unquestioned good, and the fact that they were being held in a civilian area, putting so many innocent lives at risk, is an example of just how cavalier Hamas is toward the Palestinian life they claim to value. Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar referred to civilian deaths in earlier wars as “necessary sacrifices.”

But the hostage rescue also createdone of the deadliest eventsin this war, with scores of people dead and wounded. It’s reasonable to wonder whether this could have been avoided with an earlier ceasefire agreement and a hostage exchange deal, efforts that have been stymied by both sides.

In the past several months, Israel hasrefusedceasefire agreements that would have released many hostages, to the great outrage of the hostages’ families. Many have taken to the streets to protest.

And so, the weekend’s rescue is a victory for Israel, but one with big caveats. Far too many innocent Gazans have been killed in this war. Many hostages arestill in captivity; others havebeen killed. As with so much else in this war, many observers and commentators evince a stunning disregard for human suffering felt on whichever side they’ve decided is “other.” Some shrug off the mass death of Palestinians as the natural outcome of war or even a deserved end for civilians included, while others suggest that captivity wasn’t so bad for Israeli hostages and whitewash Hamas’s brutality and strategy of putting civilians in the crossfire.

Yahya Sinwar attends a rally in support of Jerusalem's al-Aqsa mosque in Gaza City on October 1, 2022. Mahmud Hams/AFP/Getty Images/FILE Related article Hamas leader said civilian death toll could benefit militant group in Gaza war, WSJ reports

It is possible to hold many truths at once: thathostage-taking is a war crimeand Hamas’s atrocities on Oct. 7 were evil and devastating. That Israel’s scorched-earth response has extracted a shattering toll —death, destruction,fear, hunger— from thousands of innocents who did nothing other than be born Palestinian.

It’s also worth noting that the three male hostages who were rescued were unlikely to be at the top of any hostage exchange list, simply by the fact of their gender. Hostage negotiations have historicallyprioritizedthe release of women and children, and this was the case in the hostage release deal Israel and Hamas struck back in November. But the families of Almog Meir Jan, Andrey Kozlov and Shlomi Ziv surely love them as much as the families of the young women and children taken by Hamas. Had their lives been lost, it would have been just as hard of a blow to their loved ones, communities and countries.

Meir is just22 years oldand his fatherdiedhours before his son was returned to Israel, the father’s sister told Kan News, a CNN affiliate. As the Jerusalem Post reported, Meir’s mother, Orit, said that “this is the first time I have slept in eight months,” butaddedthat “there are 120 families who are waiting without being able to breathe or sleep without thinking about their loved ones in Gaza.” She used the moment topress her governmentfor a deal to release all of the hostages.

Andrey Kozlov, 27,dropped to his kneesand sobbed when he saw his mother for the first time. He had onlymoved to Israel from Russiaabout a year ago.

From left, Noa Argamani, Shlomi Ziv, Almog Meir Jan and Andrey Kozlov. Hostages and Missing Families Forum Related article Israel allegesjournalist held hostages in Gaza, without providing evidence

Shlomi Ziv, 41, said he learned Arabic while in captivity,according to Israel’s Channel 13, with Al-Jazeera on the television and his captors enforcing daily prayer and Quran readings. According to The Jerusalem Post, upon his return to Israel, helearnedthat the two friends he had been with at the music festival had been murdered and he began to cry. His cousin, Liat Ariel, alsospoke outabout the hostages who remain captive, calling Ziv’s rescue a “miraculous operation.”

“But we cannot stop and we will not rest. We still have 120 hostages in Gaza and they have to get out of there. We need to close a deal,” she said.

Noa Argamani, 26, has for months been one of the most prominent faces of the Israeli captives in Gaza, after a video of her kidnapping circulated widely on social media. Her family made publicpleasfor her release as her mother was battling brain cancer. “I want to see her one more time. Talk to her one more time,” Liora Argamani, 61, said. “I don’t have a lot of time left in this world.”

U.S. President Joe Biden looks on as he deliver remarks at the Westwood Park YMCA in Nashua, New Hampshire, U.S. May 21, 2024. Leah Millis/Reuters Related article Hostage rescue operation and Israeli political turmoil sharpen Biden’s damaging dilemma

Argamani did make it to see her mother, but her mother’s condition has badly deteriorated. “I believe she understood what was happening. There was a foggy response, but Liora is in a bad way, and she barely looked at Noa,” her father, Yaakovsaid, according to the Times of Israel. Argamani’s boyfriend,Avinatan Or,was also kidnapped from the Nova festival and remains held in Gaza.

These details matter, because these four are not simply “hostages” or symbols of a greater cause, but human beings with full lives and valuable futures.

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The same is true for the hundreds of thousands of Palestinian civilians who have been injured, killed, displaced and traumatized by this war — most of whose names the broader public will never know, and whose faces we’ll never see. They, too, are not simply “casualties” or “civilians” or “collateral damage,” but people whose safety and futures have been snatched away.

There is no limit on the breadth of our empathy or our ability to care about many people and many wrongs at once. Brutal wars like the one between Israel and Hamas can test our humanity. Many of us could take a lesson from the most vocal families of the hostages and press for less carnage, less violence and a peaceful long-term solution to this abominable war.

Opinion: Israeli hostage rescue exposes a new layer of feeling in this horrifying war | CNN (2024)
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