Sephardic Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef calls killing terrorists "a mitzvah" that will save lives, deter other terrorists.
Israel’s Chief Sephardic Rabbi, Yitzhak Yosef, told listeners during his weekly Torah class that it was a “mitzvah” to kill terrorists during attacks. The Chief Rabbi also said that in the heat of the moment, one should not worry about potential legal problems.
“If a terrorist comes after someone while brandishing a knife, it’s a mitzvah to kill him – [as the Talmudic maxim says] ‘when one comes to kill you, kill him first’. Don’t worry about being taken to court afterwards, or that IDF Chief of Staff will criticize it; don’t worry about that.”
Rabbi Yosef argued that killing terrorists not only neutralizes the immediate threat, it can help deter future attackers as well.
“As soon as a terrorist knows that if he goes out with a knife he won’t be coming back alive, that will deter them, so it’s a mitzvah to kill him; as soon as one of them comes brandishing a knife looking to murder, it’s a mitzvah to kill him."
Once a terrorist has been neutralized and disarmed, however, Rabbi Yosef rules that the terrorist shouldn’t be killed on the spot, rather, he must be imprisoned for life.
“If he [the terrorist] doesn’t have the knife anymore, then he needs to be given a life sentence.”
Last Thursday, Ramat Gan Rabbi Ya’akov Ariel made a similar ruling, prohibiting the killing of terrorists once they have been neutralized and pose no threat.