Israel’s military has sentenced two soldiers to 30 days in detention and removed them from combat duty after one was photographed smashing a statue of Jesus in southern Lebanon and another documented the act, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said.
The image, widely shared online in recent days, showed a soldier striking the head of a crucifix statue with what appeared to be a sledgehammer near the village of Debel. The incident triggered swift condemnation from religious leaders and foreign officials. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was “stunned and saddened” by what happened, and the IDF issued a statement expressing “deep regret.”
What the army decided
The IDF said an internal inquiry found the soldiers’ conduct “completely deviated from IDF orders and values.” In addition to imposing 30 days of military detention on the soldier who damaged the statue and the one who photographed him, both unnamed, the army said they were removed from combat duty. Six other soldiers who were present and did not intervene or report the incident will face separate disciplinary action, according to the IDF.
The military said troops recently replaced the damaged statue “in full co-ordination with the local community.” It also stressed that Israeli operations in Lebanon are directed at Hezbollah and other armed groups, not at Lebanese civilians.
How the incident unfolded
Locals in Debel said the statue stood on a crucifix outside a family home on the village’s edge. After an image of the vandalism circulated online, it set off anger well beyond Lebanon. The United States’ ambassador to Israel called for “swift, severe, and public consequences.” In Lebanon, church leaders denounced the act as a serious affront to Christian faith. “We totally reject the desecration of the cross, our sacred symbol, and all religious symbols,” said Father Fadi Flaifel, who heads Debel’s congregation.
The episode arrives at a tense moment along the Israel–Lebanon frontier. A US-brokered ceasefire that took effect on Friday paused about six weeks of fighting between Israeli forces and Hezbollah, though both sides have accused each other of violations. Thousands of Israeli troops remain deployed across parts of southern Lebanon. Lebanese authorities say more than a million people have been displaced and more than 2,290 killed since Israel began a military campaign in Lebanon on March 2, including 177 children and 100 healthcare workers. Israeli officials say Hezbollah attacks have killed 13 Israeli soldiers and two civilians in the same period.
Religious sites and symbols carry heightened sensitivity in the conflict. Outrage over the Debel statue added to international scrutiny of the conduct of forces on the ground and fueled calls for accountability. Israeli leaders, including the foreign minister, condemned the vandalism as contrary to national values, and the army’s punishment is one of the more visible disciplinary steps it has taken in Lebanon during the current hostilities.
What remains to be seen
The IDF has not publicly named the soldiers or detailed the separate measures planned for the six others present. It is also unclear whether the case will result in further criminal proceedings beyond military detention. For residents along the border and for Lebanon’s Christian communities, the focus now turns to whether the ceasefire holds and whether discipline in this case signals tighter controls on troops operating near civilian areas and religious sites.
The statue’s replacement in coordination with local leaders may help ease immediate tensions in Debel, but the broader test will be whether similar incidents are prevented as forces on both sides navigate a fragile truce.
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