Your post is quite contradictory. When a group of fanatic protesters (and Israel has alot of them) cried out for "Israeli Justice" - i.e. to release those soldiers accused of crimes against humanity, they were supported by Israeli leaders - i.e. leaders Ben-Gvir and Netanyahu to name but two. The narrative in Israel is more about defending the criminals rather then acknowledging the crimes. By all accounts this was not an isolated incident. The Israeli Government denied bad things were happening and when one of their own highlighted the issue she was effectively ostracized and invited to.... "take a long swim".
What we are seeing is that Israeli society is either supporting torture and murder, or looking the other way. Those Israeli's that finally get the courage to stand up and highlight the problem in society, are promptly removed from society. Justice is in very short supply, rather we are seeing a collective movement to silence accountability. Dismissing multiple reports and multiple leaks as “hamas propaganda” is a very dangerous thing. The notion of I am good and you are bad is never safe. everyone has their good and bad moments and if people refuse to acknowledge their bad moments then those bad moments will multiply. That is the road that Israel is taking. We are not talking about Hamas or Palestinians here; we are talking about Israeli society’s refusal to look honestly at itself. I am reminded of the Ambulances incident. "shoot at them" "detain them" "torture them" "execute them" "bury them" "bury the ambulances too" no accountability whatsoever. this is a very dark road, and very very difficult to turn around. what do these events do to the conscience of an Israeli soldier? nothing good.
If someone raped your sister and murdered your mother, and then the cop who caught him shoved a stick up his ass, would you really care? Probably not. You only care when it fits your own agenda.
You’re judging an entire nation based on a loud fringe. Israel, like any democracy, has its extremists, but most Israelis don’t support torture or murder. We serve, fight, and die to protect civilians, including Arabs and Palestinians, while Hamas and others celebrate death and use civilians as shields.
When a soldier commits a crime, he faces investigation, trial, and punishment. That’s not denial, that’s accountability. The fact that such cases even reach the media and courts shows that Israel still holds itself to a legal and moral standard, something that doesn’t exist under Hamas rule.
Those protests you mentioned were led by a small group of ultra-right radicals, the same kind Ben Gvir represents. Most Israelis just want to live in peace, raise their kids, and never see another war. But peace won’t come from fake moral comparisons or one-sided hate. It starts by admitting that Israel’s enemies target civilians on purpose, while Israel struggles to defend itself under impossible circumstances.