New Israel Fund In 2010, Im Tirtzu published a document, and launched a campaign in the Israeli media that said there were connections between organizations supported by the New Israel Fund and the
United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict (also known as the Goldstone Report). Im Tirtzu said that 92 percent of all Israeli testimonials in the report came from NIF funded organizations. The campaign included "vilifying" NIF chairwoman
Naomi Chazan as an agent of Hamas and Iran and a caption reading
Naomi-Goldstone-Chazan. According to Ron Kampeas (
Jewish Telegraphic Agency) Im Tirtzu's report said 16 NIF affiliated groups comprised 14 percent of all sources for the Goldstone report, while stating in a separate section that these constitute 92 percent of Israel-based negative reporting in the Goldstone report; some reporting had incorrectly confused the two separate figures and accused Im Tirzu as being inaccurate. Chazan claimed that, in her eyes, the campaign was directed against democracy itself.
Gideon Levy, writing in
Haaretz, likened Im Tirtzu's campaign against NIF to fascist tactics.
Gershon Baskin, a columnist in
The Jerusalem Post, spoke out about the newspaper's decision to cancel Naomi Chazan's column and accused Im Tirtzu of using an "anti-Semitic motif" as part of a "witch-hunt" that "is reminiscent of the darkest days of McCarthyism". That poster was called "style
Der Stürmer" by the Facebook group "Im Tirzu - fascists" and was charged for libel by "Im Tirtzu". Judge Refael Yaakobi accepted the characterization of Im Tirtzu's poster as being similar in style to that of the Nazi party's newspaper, writing in the court's decision, "examining that publication and the source for comparison reveals that indeed there is truth in the matter." During
Operation Pillar of Defense, Im Tirtzu published an open letter in American Jewish newspapers addressed to the New Israel Fund chair. The letter gave examples of NIF funded organizations that Im Tirtzu said accused Israel of war crimes, and asked if the NIF agrees with their accusations. The NIF rebutted Im Tirtzu's charges, stating, "Not one of the human rights organizations Im Tirtzu attacks accused Israel of war crimes in the recent Gaza action." NIF also quoted
Avichai Mandelblit, the IDF's Chief Military Advocate General during Operation Cast Lead: "The organizations are a conduit for getting information on very important matters so that IDF activity is normative.... I'm trying to get at the truth and they really help us do that. Our cooperation with B'tselem [A NIF-supported group] stands out. They help us to speak with witnesses, to investigate complaints ... with all of the criticism from these organizations on us, their goal is to get to the truth." As a result of the report there were calls in the Knesset to investigate the NIF and its operational arms in Israel.
Benny Begin, a cabinet minister at the time, characterized the allegations Im Tirtzu published as "lies" in a radio interview.
Abe Foxman said it was "absurd to blame Goldstone on the NIF".
Campaign against "foreign moles" In late 2015 Im Tirtzu came under the spotlight for a video, "The Foreign Agents — Revealed!", it released suggesting Israel was under siege with Israeli human rights activists, reliant on foreign funding, abetting terrorism. The film clip showed a Palestinian brandishing a knife with the intent of stabbing bystanders followed by a sequence of photos of named people,
Breaking the Silence's Avner Givaryahu,
B'tselem's
Hagai El-Ad, Ishai Menuchin, chair of
Amnesty Israel and head of the
Public Committee Against Torture in Israel, and a
Hamoked lawyer, Sigi Ben-Ari, who were portrayed in such a way as to imply they were accomplices of terrorism in an operation run by foreign countries. Menuchin was identified as a
plant for Holland, Ben-Ari as an agent for Norway, Givaryahu as a foreign agent for Germany, El-Ad as an agent for the European Union. The
Hebrew word used was
shtulim (singular
shatul), which Im Tirtzu translated as "foreign agents", actually means "implanted" and connotes "embedded, traitorous, terrorist-supporting moles". The four were subject to death threats on social media shortly afterwards. The film clip went viral, registering over 160,000 views on Ronen Shoval's Facebook page where it was posted. Shoval who had failed to win election that year as a
The Jewish Home candidate, urged viewers to back a draft law that would clamp down on NGOs reliant on foreign assistance. The video's release came shortly after Likud's
Yoav Kisch had declared his intention to push a bill branding such NGOs as
moles, with Kisch using the same word
shtulim employed by Im Tirtzu. In January 2016 a bill, sponsored by
Ayelet Shaked, was then proposed in the Knesset to crack down on foreign funding for NGOs active in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The bill would have required Israeli NGOs to register themselves as foreign agents. Numerous countries - Germany, the Netherlands, Britain and the
European Union - expressed their concern. Newspaper coverage linked the bill to Im Tirtzu's inflammatory video. Shoval, its former CEO, sung the praises of McCarthyism on Twittera at the time.
HaMoked In 2016 Im Tirtzu released a report claiming that the Israeli NGO
HaMoked received over 15 million NIS from European governments and has submitted nearly 60 petitions to the Supreme Court from mid-2014 to 2016 on behalf of 48 families of Palestinian terrorists responsible for the murder of 50 people. HaMoked declined to comment on the report.
Zochrot Im Tirtzu released a report ahead of 2017's International Holocaust Remembrance Day detailing Germany's funding of the NGO
Zochrot, which works to "promote Israeli Jewish society's acknowledgement of and accountability for the ongoing injustices of the Nakba and the reconceptualization of Return as the imperative redress of the Nakba". According to the report, the Government of Germany had provided over 1,100,000 shekels ($290,000) to Zochrot from 2012 to 2016, which is used by Zochrot to engage in "anti-Israeli" activities including screening its "Film Festival on Nakba and the Right of Return" on college campuses during "Israeli Apartheid Week", promoting an "
iNakba" smartphone application, and accusing Israel of "ethnic cleansing". Im Tirtzu contacted the German Ambassador to Israel over the funding, yet received no response.
Machsom Watch In May 2011 the organization called on Attorney-General
Yehuda Weinstein to launch a criminal investigation into the operations of
Machsom Watch (an NIF funded organization) for allegedly violating an
IDF order prohibiting Israelis from entering the Palestinian village of
Awarta. About a week before the
Shin Bet (Israel Security Agency) revealed the identities of the murder suspects for the
Itamar attack, senior Machsom Watch activist, Raya Yaron, was photographed hugging the mother of one of the men. Yaron said many other human rights organizations had also visited the village.
National service in foreign governments funded NGOs In 2016, Im Tirtzu issued a report stating that at least seven foreign government funded organizations that it deemed "anti-Israel" are eligible to receive
Sherut Leumi (National Service) positions. In response to the report, MK
Amir Ohana introduced a bill in cooperation with Im Tirtzu that was supported by Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu, which aimed to cancel national service positions in groups that receive the majority of their funding from foreign governments. The bill was later passed into law by the Knesset in a vote of 40–12.
Israeli organizations with UN advisor status In 2015 Im Tirtzu released a report titled "Activity of Israeli Organizations with Advisor Status to the United Nations, Against Israeli Policy", which claims that three Israeli NGOs use their U.N. advisor to promote anti-Israel sentiments in the United Nations. According to the report,
Adalah,
Ittijah, and the
Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions encourage the U.N. to accuse Israel of international law violations. These three organizations declined to comment on the report.
UN Fact Finding Mission on the 2014 Israel–Gaza conflict Following the release of the findings by the "United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the 2014 Israel–Gaza conflict", Im Tirtzu released a report detailing the use by the UN of research by Israeli NGOs in the report. According to the report, the UN report contained 72 references to reports by B'tselem, 8 references to Adalah, 8 references to Breaking the Silence, 12 references to HaMoked: Center for the Defence of the Individual, and 5 references to Yesh Din.
Jerusalem Ahead of 2016's
Jerusalem Day, Im Tirtzu released a report claiming that the Palestinian organization Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law Secretariat transfers millions of dollars to Israeli NGOs in order to delegitimize Israel and "obscure Israeli sovereignty in Jerusalem". According to the report, the Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law Secretariat acts as an independent organizations that manages donations from Denmark, Sweden, Switzerland and Holland and then transfers them to pro-BDS Palestinian and Israeli NGOs. Sarit Michaeli, the spokesperson for B'Tselem – one of the NGOs named in the report as receiving funds – said "this is a recycled lie by Im Tirtzu. This money actually comes from Switzerland, Holland, Denmark and Sweden. This organization transfers the funds from the donating countries and deals with the bureaucracy of the transfer. The organization itself does not determine who receives the funds." ==Funding==