Deployment in the West Bank Founded in 1999, the battalion started off as a result of 18 months of discussions between a group of Haredi educators, led by Rabbi Yitzhak Bar-Chaim from Netzah Yehuda organization and the IDF, with just 30 soldiers in total. Soldiers from the battalion have been accused of a series of abuses. In 2015 a combat soldier from Battalion was jailed for 9 months under aggravated circumstances, after he was convicted of having electrocuted Palestinian suspects on two separate occasions, including arresting a Palestinian suspect near the West Bank city of Jenin, blindfolding, handcuffing, beating and the attaching electrodes to the man’s neck and electrocuting him. Four other soldiers involved in similar incidents were also indicted. In 2016, a military court sentenced an Israeli soldier from the Battalion to seven months in jail for allegedly beating detained Palestinians, arising when he beat Palestinians while they were under arrest at the battalion’s base several months prior. In 2021, Israeli Military Police arrested four soldiers from the battalion on suspicion of beating and sexually assaulting a Palestinian suspect, after a military doctor examined him as part of the arrest procedure and found signs of violence on his body, leading to the investigation. The Palestinian detainee was held by troops in the back of a military vehicle after his arrest in the West Bank, and was allegedly beaten en-route to an army base. In 2022, soldiers from the battalion arrested Omar Assad, a 78-year old
Palestinian American man. According to his autopsy[citation needed], Assad was beaten, leading to a heart attack. The soldiers responsible were not prosecuted, but the battalion was redeployed away from the West Bank. The US State Department asked its embassy in Israel to produce a report on the battalion following allegations of abuse of Palestinians and the battalion involvement in the
death of a 78-year-old Palestinian-American Omar Assad in January 2022. Following this incident the Israeli military said it would temporarily move the unit from the West Bank to the Golan Heights. The IDF said the decision "was made out of a desire to diversify their operational deployment in multiple areas, in addition to accumulating more operational experience" and was unrelated to the death of As'ad. In March 2026, reservists from the battalion assaulted and detained
CNN journalist
Jeremy Diamond and his crew while they were reporting from the West Bank village of
Tayasir. The IDF subsequently suspended the battalion's operational activities, apologized to CNN and promised to investigate the incident. Nagham Zbeedat of
Haaretz noted the inconsistency in the IDF's responses to the attack on Diamond and his crew and the
killing of the Bani Odeh family by IDF soldiers, and stated, "What has long been routine for Palestinians is now visible to an international audience, echoing the treatment Palestinians face daily, whether they are holding cameras or not."
Redeployment to the Golan Heights In late December 2022, the unit was transferred from the IDF
Central Command to the
Northern Command in preparation for an 11-month deployment in the Golan Heights. The various battalion positions operated, as before, under the arrangements of Haredi practice.
Gaza war Starting from October 7, 2023, in the wake of the
October 7 attacks, soldiers of the Netzah Yehuda battalion participated in the defense of the Gaza border communities and the ensuing
Gaza war. They have taken part in combat in the areas of Khan Yunis, Beit Hanoun, Jabalia, and other various locations around the strip. An investigation by
CNN in July 2024 found members of Netzah Yehuda were training Israeli ground troops and running Gaza operations. The battalion's operational activity in the West Bank was suspended by the IDF in April 2026 following an incident in which several soldiers detained CNN journalists and assaulted a cameraman. ==Leahy Law sanction==