
Haaretz
Israel's oldest daily newspaper; editorially independent left-of-centre broadsheet with strong investigative and military-affairs coverage.
Last refreshed: 17 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
How does Haaretz's editorial independence shape its coverage of Israeli military operations?
Timeline for Haaretz
Called the MOU Netanyahu's second worst fiasco after 7 October
Iran Conflict 2026: Netanyahu sidelined by the deal on IranMentioned in: Khamenei orders the uranium to stay
Iran Conflict 2026Published the intelligence assessment on 18 May
Iran Conflict 2026: Haaretz: strikes left Iran nuclear capacity intactMentioned in: Brent breaks $110, ADNOC bypasses Hormuz
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: Tehran texts diverge from Washington's five points
Iran Conflict 2026Is Haaretz a reliable source on the Iran war?
What did Haaretz report about Iran's Hormuz mines?
Background
Founded in 1918 as Hadshot Ha'aretz, Haaretz is Israel's oldest continuously published daily and its most consistently Left-of-centre mainstream broadsheet. Owned by the Schocken family for most of the twentieth century, it publishes a Hebrew print edition, an English-language digital and print edition, and a small Arabic edition. Haaretz is one of a small number of Israeli newspapers that regularly carries Palestinian perspectives and publishes investigative work critical of IDF Conduct, settlement policy, and defence-sector procurement. That editorial independence from the Israeli security establishment is both its domestic liability -- it is frequently accused of disloyalty by the political right -- and its international credential: precisely because it is not a mouthpiece for government, its critical assessments of Israeli military operations carry weight with non-Israeli audiences and in international legal proceedings.
Haaretz's military-affairs coverage is anchored by a senior correspondent with decades of sourcing inside the military-intelligence community, giving the paper access to critical internal assessments that official briefers will not put on the record. This institutional position makes Haaretz a primary relay for Israeli-source critiques of military operations and their strategic outcomes, distinct from the supportive coverage that characterises most Israeli tabloids. The paper's investigative desk has produced long-running exposés of settler violence, defence-sector contracts, and surveillance technology exports. Abroad it is cited in European, Gulf, and American coverage when Israeli-sourced dissent from government positions is required.
Haaretz's English edition serves as the principal English-language conduit for American intelligence assessments of Middle Eastern conflicts when US newspapers break scoops that Israeli-reading audiences first encounter via Haaretz's Hebrew live coverage. In major regional crises, the paper's role is effectively tripartite: Israeli-language journalism for domestic audiences, English-language relay of US and international assessments for global readerships, and a named source for critical Israeli assessments of the conflict's strategic outcomes that official Israeli communications will not make on the record.