The American channel "NBC News" reported that the Israeli army, during its recent communications with its allies, shared several inaccurate or disputed pieces of information, including the claim that the Arabic calendar served as a timeline for Hamas captors, and the use of curtains as evidence "for filming videos of hostages in the hospital." The American channel added that this questionable evidence generated widespread backlash, undermining Israel's credibility. Experts cited by the channel warned that if no serious concrete evidence is found under the Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza to support the claims that "the hospital is a Hamas command center," "Israel" will become like the boy who cried wolf, as no one will believe them due to their dishonesty. A senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a research institution in Washington, told the channel, "Even if they found something, no one will believe them, and at this stage, their credibility is being shot at." The American channel noted that polls show a significant decrease in the credibility initially granted to the Israeli army following October 7, now faltering in the face of images, massacres, and total destruction in Gaza, and that "these shifts in narrative and credibility do not go unnoticed." The channel also pointed out that Israel's efforts to prove its case have sometimes backfired, as seen with the Israeli army spokesperson Daniel Hagari during his tour at the Rantisi Hospital in northern Gaza, where he claimed Hamas used the hospital to detain Israeli hostages, pointing to a piece of paper as "evidence of guarding the hostages."