Dershow
Politics • Education • Writing
There is no ‘genocide’ in Gaza — why the claim equals Holocaust denial
September 05, 2025

It has become fashionable among anti-Israel zealots — including hard-left academics — to use the term “genocide” to characterize Israel’s response to the murder, rape, beheadings and kidnapping of more than 1,400 innocent Israelis on Oct. 7, 2023.

Self-proclaimed “genocide scholar” Omer Bartov wrote in The New York Times this week that he knows genocide when he sees it, and he sees it in Gaza. (Not in Israel on Oct. 7, though).

The king of Jordan accused Israel of genocide on Monday, following the lead of the UN rapporteur on Palestine.

The label will no doubt be a central part of campus rallies this fall.

But this accusation is false as a matter of fact, morality, logic and law — and a dangerous distortion of history that amounts to Holocaust denial.

It trivializes the powerful term “genocide” and applies it to nearly every war fought by democracies during the last century, especially those directed against terrorism and other forms of modern asymmetrical warfare.

By doing so, it encourages terrorism and emboldens terrorists who use civilian human shields to force their enemies into making tragic and deadly choices.

Most distressingly, it makes genocide a meaningless epithet to be invoked promiscuously by those opposed to particular wars or nations.

The Holocaust was the personification of genocide. Its expressed aim was the destruction of the entire Jewish race, wherever they were located.

Not only did the systematic mass murder of six million Jewish civilians serve no military purpose, on many occasions the Nazis actually compromised military goals to accomplish their non-military goal of murdering every baby who had a Jewish grandparent.

They went so far as to ingather Jews from areas that were not military targets and transfer them to death camps.

These willful and systematic efforts to exterminate an entire “race” bears absolutely no relationship to what Israel is doing in Gaza: Every civilian death in Gaza is collateral to achieving legitimate military goals.

Even those who believe that Israel has gone too far in killing a disproportionate number of Palestinian civilians must acknowledge that Israeli actions do not parallel the gas chambers and mobile killing units that characterized the Nazi genocide.

To compare these two very different efforts is to suggest one of two possible conclusions: Either the Nazis did not employ gas chambers and other systematic methods of deliberately murdering every Jew they could find; or the Israeli government’s military campaign is morally indistinguishable from the Nazi death camps.

What Israel is doing is in no way comparable to the genocide planned and implemented at the Wannsee Conference of 1942.

It is comparable, though not in degree, to the hundreds of thousands of civilian deaths caused by American and British military actions following D-Day — including firebombing Dresden, Berlin and Tokyo and dropping atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

These military attacks were designed to destroy Nazism, defeat the armies that had started World War II and prevent a recurrence — just as Israel’s actions in Gaza are designed to destroy Hamas and prevent a recurrence of Oct. 7.

If anything, the allied bombings were worse: They were not directed primarily at military targets, but at civilian populations in an effort to demoralize them and to get them to demand surrender.

The number and proportion of civilian casualties in those Allied operations well exceeded even the exaggerated numbers provided by the Hamas health authorities.

In other words, accusing Israel of genocide in Gaza constitutes a false claim that the United States did practiced it, too, in the heroic battle to defeat Nazi Germany and imperial Japan.

So did many other nations that have waged wars since the end of World War II.

We may still compare and contrast what Israel is doing now to what the Allies did then. Any such comparison favors Israel.

Consider the ratio of civilian to combatant deaths, which is lower for Israel than for any army facing comparable enemies — especially those using civilians as human shields to protect their combatants.

In addition to bragging about using civilians as martyrs, Hamas hides its terrorists in protected tunnels while requiring civilians to remain above ground and vulnerable to attack.

Israel gains nothing and loses much whenever it kills a civilian in the course of trying to neutralize terrorists — but Hamas gains sympathy every time Israel accidentally kills a civilian, especially a child.

That is the Hamas strategy, and those who falsely accuse Israel of genocide incentivize the continuing use of this murderous gambit.

community logo
Join the Dershow Community
To read more articles like this, sign up and join my community today
0
What else you may like…
Videos
Posts
Articles
Young couple murdered by Hamas.
00:01:48
Hamas murders a peace activist
00:01:42
Guy, currently a hostage, risked his life to save a woman.
00:01:36

President Trump Delivers Remarks in Riyadh After Securing $600B Saudi Deal, May 13, 2025

AS GOOD AS IT GETS !

placeholder

Jodan Peterson - The West Is Too Weak For Radical Islam Douglas Murray

placeholder

Going all in - Fed Hesitates on Tariffs, The New Mag 7, Google's Value in a Post-Search World

placeholder
Elon Dershowitz, film producer, dies at 64

https://www.jpost.com/j-spot/article-864604

Read full Article
Elon Dershowitz, Film Producer and Son of Famed Lawyer, Dies at 64

https://www.newsmax.com/us/elon-dershowitz-film-producer-alan/2025/08/18/id/1222927/

Read full Article
Threatened recognition of Palestinian state threatens hostages, rewards terrorism

The threat by France, England, Canada, Australia, and other American allies to “recognize” a nonexistent Palestinian “state” has incentivized Hamas to reject US peace deals and has thus endangered the lives of the 20 living hostages.

As Marco Rubio put it: “Talks with Hamas fell apart on the day Macron made the unilateral decision that he’s going to recognize the Palestinian state...So those messages, while largely symbolic in their minds, actually have made it harder to get peace and harder to achieve a deal with Hamas.”

I’m in Israel to meet with Israeli leaders and to try to visit Gaza. After several meetings, I have been confirmed in my strong belief that the decision by these countries to recognize “Palestine” has emboldened Hamas to persist in its refusal to release the hostages in exchange for a ceasefire.

Both US President Donald Trump and his envoy Steve Witkoff have placed the blame squarely at the feet of Hamas for rejecting US proposals to end the current impasse.

Why should Hamas make a deal requiring it to make sacrifices in its bargaining position, when it is being promised the “gold ring” — recognition of statehood — for doing nothing?

Polls show that Palestinians, both in Gaza and the West Bank, would vote overwhelmingly to be governed by Hamas rather than the Palestinian Authority if free elections were held. This would be even more certain if Hamas were credited with securing a state — something the PA could not accomplish over the many years it has been in power.

Even if Hamas itself cares more about destroying Israel than having a Palestinian state recognized, they would gain much from having secured recognition.

Recognition rewards Hamas for terrorism

Recognition of statehood now would be widely and correctly seen as rewarding Hamas for its massacres of October 7, and it would send a loud message to terrorist groups around the world that terrorism is more effective than negotiation. 

It will encourage more Oct 7s — as Hamas has already promised — not only against Israel, but against other nations that are threatened by terrorists with grievances, which includes most democracies. 

Recognizing a Palestinian state without even conditioning such recognition on the release of the hostages will ensure continuing belligerence in Gaza. Hamas doesn’t care how many Gazans are killed.

To the contrary, they believe their cause benefits from the death of martyrs. That is why they use civilians as human shields and prohibit them from seeking shelter in the tunnels that protect their terrorists from Israeli bombings.

It is these immoral tactics — prohibited by the laws of war — that are rewarded and incentivized by giving Hamas what it wants: credit for achieving statehood without giving up anything: a major quid without quo.

No wonder Trump, the master of quid pro quo deal-making, is opposed to giving the Palestinians something for nothing. This is especially troubling, since the Palestinian leadership has turned down offers of statehood in return for real peace on numerous occasions.

As former president Bill Clinton recently put it: “The only time Yasser Arafat didn't tell me the truth was when he promised he was going to accept the peace deal that we had worked out. Which would have given the Palestinians a state in 96% of the West Bank and 4% of Israel, and they got to choose where the 4% of Israel was. So they would have the effect of the same land of all the West Bank. They would have a capital in East Jerusalem... all this was offered including...a capital in East Jerusalem and two of the four quadrants of the old city of Jerusalem confirmed by the Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak and his cabinet, and they said no, and I think part of it is that Hamas did not care about a homeland for the Palestinians. They wanted to kill Israelis and make Israel uninhabitable.”

What benefits — other than virtue signaling to their left wing and Muslim domestic constituents — do these countries expect to achieve by the hollow act of recognition? It will only make it harder for positions on both sides.

The Palestinians will be encouraged to persist in the terrorist tactics that produced recognition, and the Israeli right wing will demand annexation of the disputed territories that would comprise the theoretically recognized “state”— a “state” without recognized borders and without a recognized governing authority.

It is a recipe for anarchy, terrorism, and Islamic extremism with no counterbalancing benefits. It will make a two-state solution more difficult to achieve because a Hamas-controlled state would never recognize Israel as the nation state of the Jewish people, and Israel would never recognize a “state that was created — invented — without direct negotiations and reciprocal commitments.

So the virtue signaling and electoral pandering of these hypocritical governments will surely backfire and cause more deaths and suffering on both sides.

It is fitting that these phony recognitions will be announced from the podium of the UN general assembly— the same forum that declared Zionism to be form of racism, that welcomed a Palestinian terrorist leader wielding a gun, that platformed Holocaust denying Iranians, and that has served as the modern day version of the notoriously antisemitic Der Stermer of Nazi Germany.

Following the decision to equate Zionism with racism, the Israeli representative to the UN ascended the podium and tore up the text of the resolution. Several years later, it was rescinded.  

The false equation did little harm aside from damaging the credibility of the UN. It won’t be as easy to rescind the dangerous recognitions that will tarnish the UN this September — and will risk the lives of Israelis, especially hostages, and Palestinians.

Shame on France, Great Britain, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and other countries that will have the blood of innocent people on their hands.

Read full Article
See More
Available on mobile and TV devices
google store google store app store app store
google store google store app tv store app tv store amazon store amazon store roku store roku store
Powered by Locals