



The Israeli military said Sunday that it was unaware of reports that the United States intended to sanction its Netzah Yehuda Battalion, a unit previously involved in a series of controversial and violent incidents in the West Bank.
“If a decision is made on the matter, it will be reviewed,” the IDF said, in its first remarks on the issue.
The IDF’s statement came a day after the Axios website reported that, in an unprecedented step, the Biden administration was to announce sanctions against the Netzah Yehuda Battalion for alleged human rights abuses against Palestinians in the West Bank.
The battalion, which is part of the Kfir Brigade and largely made up of ultra-Orthodox troops, is currently deployed to the Gaza Strip front, following months in the north.
Previously, it was stationed permanently in the West Bank, where it was at the center of several controversies connected to right-wing extremism and violence against Palestinians, notably including the 2022 death of Omar As’ad, a 78-year-old Palestinian-American who had been detained, handcuffed, blindfolded, and later abandoned in near-freezing conditions by soldiers of the battalion.
Israel moved the unit out of the West Bank in December 2022 — though it denied it did so due to soldiers’ behavior — and it was stationed on the Syrian border until the outbreak of the ongoing war against Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
Amid the war in Gaza, Netzah Yehuda troops have participated in several pinpoint operations in northern Gaza’s Beit Hanoun.
The IDF said in its statement that the troops are “now participating in the war in the Gaza Strip, with courage and professionalism, while adhering to the values and spirit of the IDF and the principles of international law.”
“Over the past few years, the battalion’s troops have been at the core of operational activities around the clock, to safeguard the security of the citizens of the State of Israel, alongside being a leading battalion in the integration of ultra-Orthodox troops in the IDF,” the statement continued.
Regarding the controversial incidents, the army said that “the IDF is working and will continue to work to investigate every unusual event in a focused manner and in accordance with the law.”
Netzah Yehuda was created so that ultra-Orthodox and other religious soldiers could serve without feeling they were compromising their beliefs. The soldiers do not interact with female troops to the same extent as other servicemen and are given additional time for prayer and religious study.
Members of the unit have been involved in multiple controversial and violent incidents and have also been convicted in the past of torturing and abusing Palestinian prisoners and detainees.
Opposition leaders expressed dismay on Sunday at the reported intention of the US to impose sanctions on Netzah Yehuda.
Opposition and Yesh Atid party leader Yair Lapid claimed that “the source of the problem is not at the military level but at the political level.”
The world, he said in a post on the X social media site, “knows and understands” that far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, who is responsible for the Israel Police, “does not want the police to enforce the law in the West Bank” and allied far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich “is not opposed to Jewish terrorism and extreme settler riots.”
Centrist war cabinet minister and former IDF chief Benny Gantz joined the criticism, saying the infantry unit was “an integral part of the IDF” and was bound by military and international law.
Gadi Eisenkot, also a former IDF chief and a war cabinet minister, said imposing sanctions on any army unit is “fundamentally wrong.”
“We will work together to prevent the decision, because if there are complaints, they should be addressed to the political and military leadership and not to the commanders on the tactical level,” Eisenkot said.
The reported decision to impose sanctions also drew sharp condemnation from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who called it “the height of absurdity and a moral low.”
Describing the Axios report as “extremely grave,” Ben Gvir said that he “expects Defense Minister Yoav Gallant not to submit to American dictates” and that the members of Netzah Yehuda “must be fully supported.”
Ben Gvir subsequently wrote to Netanyahu, demanding that the prime minister respond to the American move by convening the security cabinet to discuss imposing “immediate sanctions” on the Palestinian Authority.
Citing unnamed American sources, the Axios report said the sanctions would bar the transfer of US weapons to the unit and prevent its soldiers from training with US forces or taking part in any activities with US funding, under the Leahy Laws.
Authored by then-senator Patrick Leahy in the late 1990s, the laws prohibit providing military assistance to individuals or security force units that commit gross violations of human rights and have not been brought to justice.
Since the Israel-Hamas war began on October 7, the US has issued three rounds of sanctions against settler individuals for violence against Palestinians, prompting harsh pushback from Finance Minister Smotrich, who has pledged to “fight with all our might” and not “let up” until all Western sanctions are lifted.
The latest round was issued on Friday and included the leader of the far-right group Lehava, Benzi Gopstein, who is a close ally of Ben Gvir.
Sam Sokol contributed to this report.