Do you think Israel is currently committing
genocide in the Middle East? I don’t, but I can see from social media activity
that many people do. If you’re one of them, then I’d encourage you to consider
why it is you think that. In a moment, I’ll explain why I don’t believe Israel
is committing genocide, but before I do, I think there are principally four
reasons why someone might be under the misapprehension that Israel is
committing genocide - and they range from very bad to bad. I’ll list them
hierarchically, from very bad to bad.
1) Malicious intent: The individual is blatantly anti-Israel (maybe in some
cases hatefully anti-Semitic), and will accuse Israel of genocide reflexively,
regardless of facts or definitions, as a way of demonising the state.
2) Ideological thrall: The individual holds a rigid, extreme leftist
ideological worldview - often aligned with radical activist frameworks – and
prejudice against Israel serves their own tribal bias, political agenda, virtue
signalling and attention-seeking – all feeding into their overly-simplistic
narrative of oppressed vs. oppressor.
3) Susceptibility to manipulation: The individual lacks the knowledge and
awareness of context that would disavow them of the notion that Israel is
committing genocide, and is ripe for manipulation.
4) Open to disinformation: The individual has been swayed by the biased
reporting and bad actors in society to believe Israel is committing genocide.
They have become understandably emotionally overwhelmed by images of suffering
and death, and are mistaking visceral outrage for informed judgment.
Each individual who believes that Israel is
committing genocide will fall into one, some, or all of those categories. For
example, Greta Thunberg probably falls into categories 1, 2 and 3 – or just 2
and 3 if you’re feeling generous (she is probably too ideologically entrenched
to be in 4), so does Roger Waters. Jeremy Corbyn, George Galloway, Owen Jones,
and countless other politicians and media figures fall into category 2 (often 2
and 3). Category 3 is bursting at the seams with celebrities and lesser known
bourgeois leftist dilettantes in artisanal sunglasses, and so is category 4,
where you’ll also find a wide range of people, from gentle, well-meaning
Methodist septuagenarians, to teenage keyboard warriors who aren’t yet old
enough to shave, to some dear personal friends who I love and respect
immensely.
The commonality in categories 1-3 (but especially
categories 1-2), is not just misinformation, but a profound psychological need;
to employ simplistic black vs. white logic, to feel morally superior, to divest
oneself of internal personal criticism and responsibility, and to belong to a
self-congratulatory cause bigger than oneself. If you’re weak in ways that the
world needs you to be strong, then this kind of in-group ideology is very
seductive. And a surefire way to tell that this is the case is to see how easy
it is to predict the other things people in that ideology believe. In a game of
collectivist mime troupe bingo, the squares would be filled with similarly
predictable dogmas - climate hysteria, ‘eat the rich’ socialism, woke
platitudes, no-platforming, performative solidarity rituals - all delivered
with the same sanctimonious tone. The commonality in category 4 is primarily
the need to locate moral clarity in a morally and socially complex world, and
to resolve emotional discomfort with simple, righteous certainty. To be fair,
the latter is, in many cases, a humble fault, but in reaching for moral
simplicity, many end up embracing a fiction that feels emotionally satisfying,
but collapses under the weight of evidence and reason.
Designer Outrage
One more point on the psychology, then we’ll move on
to the proposition in question. Here's a provocative but truthful statement. If
you’re in categories 1 and 2 (and sometimes 3) and accuse Israel of genocide,
but stay silent on Hamas, Hezbollah, Iran, and other regional actors who openly
call for Israel's destruction, then you're not standing for justice - you're
showing everyone that you're, at best, guilty of being manipulated by
perversely partisan media sources, and at worst, just an anti-Israel hypocrite,
not to be taken in the least bit seriously. In fact, in the latter case, your
selectivity is bordering on an anti-semitic weaponisation of language to
legitimise your narrow, unbalanced tribalism.
And if you're in the former group, didn't you ever
stop to wonder why the people who like to claim 'genocide' for Israel are
completely silent on their enemies who actually do wish genocide on Israel?
Surely you must have been just a little bit curious about the motives behind
this blatant inconsistency? I'm not even commenting at this stage about whether
it's fair to accuse Israel of 'genocide'. At this point, I'm merely pointing
out the absurd hypocrisy that plagues our society - that even if you do think
Israel is behaving awfully, staying completely silent on even more awful
behaviour in surrounding regions is preposterous, making you look weak and
incompetent. Unless the selective silence is because manipulative sources have
convinced you that these Islamic perpetrators of murder, rape, violence,
suppression of freedom and human rights abuses are not so bad after all - but
that is just as preposterous, and makes you look just as weak and incompetent.
It's the same sort of incongruity we've seen with
contemporary feminism for years – feminists such as the woeful Ash Sarkar, Kate
Smurthwaite, Grace Blakeley, etc - they'll willingly stand in a safe capital
city, holding a megaphone, screaming about "patriarchy" and
"toxic masculinity", angry that some people are upset about the
rights of the foetus, or that more CEOs are men than women, but they'll never raise
an eyebrow about Islam's toxic effects on women, with grooming gangs,
repression of rights, sexual inequality, hijabs, honour killings, forced
marriages and the oppressive nature of Sharia law towards the female sex. I
call this Designer Outrage.
Israel Is Not Committing Genocide
I’ve pointed out the hypocrisy of those claiming
Israel is committing genocide, while remaining silent on even worse regional
actors surrounding them. For those attempting a more balanced view, but still
holding the view that Israel is committing genocide, let's consider that claim
a bit further. I share some of the public criticisms of much of Israel's
conduct towards the Palestinians, but I also believe that throwing around the
word 'genocide' to describe Israel's actions isn't just factually wrong - it's
a lazy distortion of what the term means. Genocide refers to the intentional
extermination of a people. Misusing the language of atrocity trivialises actual
genocides - like the Holocaust, the Rwandan genocide, or the Armenian genocide.
It's not just bad history; it's offensive to actual victims of genocide whose
families were actually targeted for eradication (in actual fact, as the Jews
were in the Holocaust, and like they still are now by murderous ideologues in
surrounding Islamic nations).
Too many people are cunning, slippery, or merely
sloppy in their use of the word 'genocide' - because genocide means actions
committed with the specific intent to destroy a national, ethnic, racial, or
religious group. The intent element is crucial, and it's disingenuous to ignore
it. Israel's actions, while far from perfect, are undertaken against the
continued regional threat of perpetrators who wish to wipe them off the map -
fanatical enemies whose tactics are to use Palestinian civilians (and
hospitals, for example) as fodder for their murderous aims. What's ironic is
that Hamas - who wish to exterminate the Jews, and openly say so - are the ones
with genocidal desires, but the same people are silent about this.
While it's appropriate to scrutinise Israel's
conduct, failure to recognise the existential threats it faces is failure to
engage in the subject appropriately. Hamas explicitly calls for the destruction
of Israel and the killing of Jews, as do the leaders in Iran. The October 7th
massacre was not only a military operation; it involved targeted killing of
civilians, torture, and rape - acts of terrorism driven by genocidal rhetoric.
Hamas embeds itself among civilians, uses hospitals and schools for weapons storage,
and prevents civilians from evacuating - both to shield fighters and to use
civilian casualties as propaganda. This squalid tactic complicates Israel's
military response and raises the civilian toll in a tragic environment.
It's hard to deny that some of Israel's responses
have been heavy-handed, maybe even excessive, and even, in isolated incidents a
shocking mirror image of those who want to destroy them. But if you're going to
measure excess, you should at least understand what that means in this context.
Try imagining what it's like attempting to govern a country continually under
existential threat from some of the most wicked and morally devoid Islamic
fundamentalist groups on the planet - a country that continually lives in self-defense
against an adversary that openly calls for its destruction, and will use any
tactic necessary to achieve its aims. It's difficult to imagine a country not
acting excessively under those conditions - these are extreme acts of
self-preservation, where Gazans are also many of the most innocent victims of
this complex, harrowing situation.
So, I'd really encourage you to not use the word
'genocide' when describing Israel’s predicament - especially as they are a
people who have themselves experienced one of the worst genocides in human
history, and certainly the most systematically executed, and still carry the
scars today. Words like "genocide" carry historical trauma and legal
implications - and misusing language dilutes meaning and compromises the full
truth and can blind us to the real moral and legal complexities at hand.
Criticising Israel's military actions is one thing - but calling it ‘genocide’
undermines credibility, and perversely distracts from both the complexity of
the situation, and the real goals of groups like Hamas and Iran, who do
actually commit egregious violations of international law that are much more
like genocide than what Israel is doing.