Israel charges only 1 soldier with looting in Gaza despite damning evidence
A displaced Palestinian man stands on the rubble of a mosque destroyed during the two-year Israeli offensives, surrounded by tents in Gaza City, Feb. 11, 2026. (Reuters Photo)


Only one Israeli soldier has been charged with looting during Tel Aviv’s genocidal war in the Gaza Strip despite widespread video evidence and multiple investigations, and the case concluded with a plea deal, Israeli daily Haaretz reported Wednesday.

The newspaper said it obtained the data from the Israeli military establishment, adding that the army believes the single case represents "only the tip of an iceberg” in light of social media footage that appears to show soldiers vandalizing and looting Palestinian property.

"Despite multiple cases of looting and property destruction by Israeli soldiers during the ground operations in Gaza and Lebanon, only one resulted in a criminal indictment, which was ultimately resolved Monday in a plea deal due to evidentiary difficulties and investigative failures,” the paper said.

Under "the plea deal,” a military court sentenced the reserve soldier to 60 days in prison and an additional 30 days of community military service, the newspaper said.

According to the indictment, a military unit in the summer of 2024 entered a house in Rafah in southern Gaza to search for weapons and gather intelligence. During the operation, a reserve soldier noticed a bag, opened it, took cash from inside and placed it in his personal bag.

In October, while on leave from combat duty, the unnamed reserve soldier attempted to deposit money into his personal bank account. About 5,000 shekels (approximately $1,600) of the amount were found to be counterfeit, raising suspicions among bank staff, Haaretz said.

The bank employee reported the matter to the police, who referred the case to the military police. About six months later, the military police filed an indictment, the newspaper said.

The Israeli military claimed that it "takes any harm to civilian property, especially acts of looting, very seriously and strictly prohibits them.”

According to data obtained by Haaretz, at least six additional criminal investigations were opened in 2024 over suspicions of looting or vandalism by soldiers during the war, but none resulted in indictments.

The newspaper said information obtained through a freedom of information request submitted by the non-governmental organization Hatzlacha showed that most looting cases involved theft of ammunition, Kalashnikov rifles and pistols. Other cases included the theft of motorcycles and, in one instance, electrical appliances taken from Gaza and later sold in Israel.

The Military Advocate General’s office also investigated incidents in which soldiers desecrated copies of the Muslim holy book, the Quran, in the Nabi Saleh Mosque near Ramallah, damaged medical equipment in a hospital in Gaza and looted Islamic religious items, the report said.

Haaretz, however, noted that "although some soldiers recorded themselves committing such acts, no disciplinary or criminal action was taken against them.”

A U.S.-backed cease-fire agreement has been in place in Gaza since Oct. 10, halting Israel’s two-year war that has killed more than 72,000 people, mostly women and children, and injured over 171,000 others since October 2023.

Despite the cease-fire, Israeli forces have committed hundreds of violations through shelling and gunfire, killing 603 Palestinians and injuring 1,618 others, according to Gaza’s Health Ministry.