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My son was one of 46 Americans murdered by Hamas. We need a US investigation
May 29 2026, 08:00

This past weekend we recognized Memorial Day and saluted American soldiers and citizens who defended our country against evil and terrorism across the globe. My son Itay was 19 years old when Hamas murdered him on Oct. 7, 2023. He was the youngest U.S. citizen taken hostage that day. He was an American. He was an Israeli. He was my child.

Almost a thousand days have passed since that morning — 966 days of unanswered questions. Grief does not end with an investigation. But without one, there can be no accountability and no rehabilitation.

I am not writing as a Democrat or Republican. I am writing as a father and as an American who believes this country has and must continue to stand by its citizens.

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The United States has a long tradition of investigating the deaths of its citizens in conflict zones. After four Americans were killed in Benghazi in 2012, Congress launched eight separate investigations, including a bipartisan Select Committee that conducted a two-year inquiry. After 19 American service members were killed in the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing in Saudi Arabia, the House National Security Committee opened a formal investigation, traveled overseas and issued a detailed public report.

Four Americans. Nineteen Americans. Their tragic deaths did not go unexamined.

On October 7, 46 Americans were killed on the Gaza border — more than 10 times the Benghazi toll. Yet Congress has not established a formal bipartisan investigative committee.

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The precedent exists. The tools exist. The silence should not.

Every day without an investigation is a day when evidence degrades and memories fade. Digital records disappear. Witnesses relocate.

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We are seeking justice, but not only for those who carried out the murders. Also for those who financed, enabled and armed them as well. That requires a serious inquiry with subpoena power and resources — not statements of sympathy.

There is no better time than now. The longer Congress waits, the harder the truth becomes to establish.

I have deep ties to Israel. My son wore the uniform of its armed forces. But unfortunately, for largely political reasons, the Israeli government has not prioritized a comprehensive investigation into the deaths of over 2,000 of its own citizens on October 7, including 46 Americans. Given Israel’s domestic politics, meaningful accountability is unlikely in the near term.

I don’t expect the current Israeli government to change its stripes. However, I am asking the United States to do what only it can: act on behalf of its own citizens.

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This call is about a simple principle: When Americans are killed in a war zone, Congress has a duty to determine what happened, why it happened and who bears responsibility.

That duty does not disappear because geopolitics are complicated. It does not pause because allies may be implicated. American lives cannot be subject to selective accountability.

For decades, the United States has operated on a clear standard: kidnapping and killing Americans must carry consequences. That principle must apply consistently — whether the perpetrators are terrorists, their sponsors or any official whose decisions contributed to preventable loss of life.

The appropriate mechanism is a formal bipartisan congressional committee, modeled on past precedents. Republicans who champion American sovereignty and the protection of citizens abroad, and Democrats who stand for oversight and accountability, should find common cause here.

Such a committee would carry the authority of Congress — including subpoena power and investigative resources. Its mandate must be straightforward: Follow the evidence wherever it leads and hold accountable all those responsible for the deaths of American citizens.

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This is not a Democratic demand. It is not a Republican demand. It is an American demand.

Over 966 days have passed. The evidence is aging. The families are still waiting.

I cannot bring my son back. But I can insist that his death — and the deaths of 45 other Americans — not be overlooked.

Congress must act. Together. Now. For America.

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