IDF Atrocities --- Article Source: EXECUTIVE INTELLIGENCE REVIEW/DROP SITE NEWS

IDF Atrocities --- Article Source: EXECUTIVE INTELLIGENCE REVIEW/DROP SITE NEWS
British contractor David McIntosh, who had worked in Gaza with the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) from August-October 2025, became a whistleblower following his experience there, in which he documented war crimes committed by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) against Palestinians seeking food. McIntosh was a veteran commando of British special forces with significant combat experience.
In its lengthy April 13 report of McIntosh’s account, Drop Site News, notes that the only other whistleblower to emerge before McIntosh was retired Special Forces officer Anthony Aguilar, who worked with security contractor UG Solutions. McIntosh , who worked as a logistics manager for GHF logistics partner Safe Research Solutions (SRS), compiled both documentation and footage as evidence of IDF crimes. When asked why he waited five months after his return from Gaza to publicly air his charges, he said he had hoped for a chance to return to Gaza and gather more information, but had been unable to do so.
In the three months of his deployment, he was largely assigned to GHF’s Site 4, at which he documented the IDF’s “regular and indiscriminate” killing of unarmed Palestinian civilians. Based on eyewitness reports from fellow contractors, he reported on the IDF’s murder of a 12-year-old boy. “There was no reason [why] they shot him,” wrote McIntosh. “He was just standing, laughing and joking. He was left to bleed out.”
McIntosh was required to write daily reports for SRS higher-ups and wrote frequently of the atrocities he witnessed, with IDF snipers, tanks, and machine-gunners all positioning themselves at the correct angle so as to target those coming to pick up food. He never received a response to the reports he wrote to SRS superiors, who claimed that they never saw evidence of IDF atrocities, although they admitted that they had received complaints of “IDF misconduct.”
The effective coverup included directly targeting the contractors themselves, which impeded their work. McIntosh reported that he had had to sign a non-disclosure agreement as part of his work contract, but said that his conscience would no longer allow him to remain silent. “There’s a bigger issue at hand rather than my personal safety … if you document something that is wrong, then you should put it out there. I’m exposing war crimes.
Source: Telegram "no2nato"