Maybe not genocide, almost certainly a war crime. |
And then I got into a conversation with a family member about ethnic cleansing versus genocide. I am far more confident that what is happening in Gaza is ethnic cleansing. We have had a variety of statements from Israeli officials referring to this as a/the nabka--a repeat of something that had long been denied--that the new Israelis expelled the Palestinians from contested territories in 1948. Reports that Netanyahu has been looking for other places to settle the Palestinians are very disturbing. The level of violence and its targeting, as this WP analysis illustrates only too clearly, is suggestive. Israel has more done more damage to civilians and civilian infrastructure in a couple of months than other contemporary campaigns and it is not close. Remember, the 21k civilian casualties in Gaza is almost certainly an undercount that will get worse as the destruction of the health care system and the shortages of food and water kick in.
Israel and its fans will claim that they need to eradicate Hamas because it has genocidal intent. I sympathize with that, but genocide is partly about power. One cannot engage in mass killing unless one has the powers of a state or something close to it. So, in the genocide conversation, one can argue that one side might have intent, but it is the other side that has the ability to engage in large scale destruction and is doing so. Hamas may present a threat to engage in genocide, but it is Israel that is actually killing large numbers of people, mostly civilians including many, many children.
I need to mention one dynamic here: conflating all Palestinians with Hamas and arguing Hamas needs to be eradicated leads to the conclusion, intentionally or not, implicit or explicit, that to destroy Hamas, one needs to eliminate the Palestinians. Which leads to the biq question:
Is the intent of Israeli leaders to eliminate all Palestinians? Just those living in Gaza? Not so clear, so one could argue it is not genocide. But that is really a quibble. Israel is forcing Gazans to move south, and so-called safe zones are not so safe (which reminds me of Bosnia). Israels and its supporters can argue about genocide/not genocide, and maybe that is a conversation that could be more comfortable than addressing the contemporary situation--Israel is killing large numbers of innocents out of revenge, rage, and/or a misconception that hitting much, much harder will ultimately lead to deterrence. I included the bluesky post because it illustrates something very, very powerful--that Israel is engaged in a variety of horrific tactics and no strategy (if Israel had one) could justify it. Attacking hospitals and refugee camps is simply wrong--it is immoral and it is also bad strategy. Netanyahu recently said he was seeking to destroy Hamas,** demilitarize Gaza, and deradicalize the Palestinians. This campaign may be temporarily successful at the second, but it will not destroy Hamas, and it will do the opposite of deradicalizing the Palestinians.
I remarked that when Israel had hit the 20,000 casualty figure, was that
disproportionate enough, given that something less than 2,000 Israelis
died on or after October 7th? It is quite clear that Israel has violated
international humanitarian law repeatedly and intentionally. I get that Israelis think international relations is gamed against them--all the UN votes by countries that have deplorable human rights records, etc. That international law is less important than survival, but some of this is a self-fulfilling prophecy--that Israel burned whatever goodwill it received in the aftermath of October 7th by engaging in a campaign of revenge and collective punishment.
One of thing that has been so disturbing is the realization that there are two meanings to Never Again--never again will Jews be victims or never again will we let mass killings take place. It is clear now that Israeli leaders and their supporters believe that Never Again means that Jews will never be victims again, even if it means victimizing others. The lesson I thought I had learned growing up was that Never Again meant fighting against oppression, persecution, victimization, regardless of the targeted group. I can't help but think that all of this is a betrayal of what we were supposed to learn from the Holocaust.
All of this is awful. Hamas is awful, Netanyahu is awful, terrorism is awful, collective punishment is awful. Whether one wants to call it genocide or not, what Israel is doing is awful--it is counterproductive and it is immoral. So, from a strategic perspective, Israel's campaign is bad. From a moral perspective, it is wrong. Hamas's gross violations of human rights do not justify violating international humanitarian law, even if it were producing a successful outcome, and it is certainly not doing that.
Thus, I avoid using genocide as a label for all of this because it is largely superfluous--one can condemn what Israel has been doing without it.
* The term politicide was invented to cover the attempt to kill many/all people of the same party or movement that is ethnically heterogeneous.
** None of this justifies Hamas or legitimates what Hamas has done. The recent story about the systemic gender violence committed by Hamas makes abundantly clear that Hamas is an awful, awful organization. That they deliberately use their own people as shield not to protect the organization but to raise the hypocrisy costs for Israel--that is, they are deliberately getting Palestinians killed--makes them utterly deplorable. They should be defeated and destroyed. But Israel is actually empowering Hamas by walking into the traps it has set.
Really appreciated these thoughts. I think the "All of this is awful..." paragraph really nails it. I'm so tired of "only the side I don't like is awful..."
ReplyDeleteThe recent story about the systemic gender violence committed by Hamas
ReplyDeleteIs that the one the NYT just retracted?