Another expert report finds Israel is committing genocide. The West yawns

Another expert report finds Israel is committing genocide. The West yawns

Amnesty, Human Rights Watch, and Medecins Sans Frontieres are all agreed. But 
the Gaza genocide is now just another routine news item, buried on the inside 
pages

Three separate reports published this month by leading international human 
rights and medical groups have detailed the same horrifying story: that Israel 
is well advanced in its genocide of the Palestinian population in Gaza.

Or, to be more accurate, they have confirmed what was already patently clear: 
that, for the past 14 months, Israel has been slaughtering tens of thousands of 
Palestinians with indiscriminate munitions, while at the same time gradually 
starving the survivors to death and denying them access to medical care.

Genocides can happen with gas chambers. Or with machetes. Or they can be 
carried out with 2,000lb bombs and aid blockades. Genocides rarely look the 
same. But they are all designed to arrive at the same endpoint: the elimination 
of a people.

Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) 
agree that Israel is striving for extermination. It has not hidden its intent, 
and that intent is confirmed by its actions on the ground.

Only the wilfully blind, which includes western politicians and their media, 
are still in denial. But worse than denial, they continue to actively collude 
in this, the ultimate crime against humanity, by supplying Israel with the 
weapons, intelligence and diplomatic cover it needs for the extermination.

Last week, MSF issued its report, titled Life in the Death Trap That is Gaza, 
concluding that Israel was intentionally “unravelling the fabric of society”.

The medical charity observed: “The violence unleashed by Israeli forces has 
caused physical and mental damage on a scale that would overwhelm any 
functioning health system, let alone one already decimated by a crushing 
offensive and a 17-year-long blockade [by Israel].”

MSF added: “Even if the offensive ended today, its long-term impact would be 
unprecedented, given the scale of the destruction.”

Rebuilding the society and dealing with the health consequences will “span 
generations”.

Intention proven
MSF’s findings followed hot on the heels of an 185-page report by Human Rights 
Watch, which concluded that Israel was committing “acts of genocide”.

The organisation limited its focus to one Israeli policy: its systematic effort 
to deprive the population of access to water – a clear measure of 
intentionality, the critical yardstick for judging whether mass killing has 
crossed into genocide.

At a news conference, Lama Fakih, HRW’s Middle East director, said their 
research had proved Israel was “intentionally killing Palestinians in Gaza by 
denying them the water that they need to survive”.

Israel had done so in four coordinated moves. It had blocked pipelines 
supplying water from outside Gaza. It had then cut off power to run the pumps 
that Gaza’s own supplies from wells and desalination plants depended on.

Next, it had destroyed the solar panels that were the backup to deal with such 
power cuts. And finally, it had killed crews trying to repair the supply system 
and aid agency staff trying to bring in water supplies.

“This is a comprehensive policy preventing people from getting any water,” 
HRW’s acting Israel and Palestine director, Bill Van Esveld, concluded. He 
added that the group had made “a very clear finding of extermination”.

‘Pattern of conduct’
HRW echoed a much wider-ranging report by Amnesty International, the world’s 
best-known international human rights organisation.

In a 296-page report published in early December, Amnesty concluded that Israel 
had been “brazenly, continuously” committing genocide in Gaza – or “unleashing 
hell” as the organisation phrased it more graphically.

The period of Amnesty’s research ended in July, five months ago. Since then, 
Israel has further intensified its destruction of northern Gaza to drive out 
the population.

Nonetheless, Amnesty described a “pattern of conduct” in which Israel had 
deliberately obstructed aid and power supplies, and detonated so much explosive 
power on the tiny enclave – equivalent to more than two nuclear bombs – that 
water, sanitation, food and healthcare systems had collapsed.

The scale of the attack, it noted, had caused death and destruction at a speed 
and level unmatched in any other 21st-century conflict.

Budour Hassan, Amnesty’s researcher for Israel and the occupied Palestinian 
territories, said Israel’s actions went beyond the individual war crimes 
associated with conflicts: “This is something deeper.”

Agreeing with major Holocaust and genocide scholars, Amnesty concluded that the 
high bar needed to prove genocidal intent in law was crossed last May when 
Israel began destroying Rafah, the area in southern Gaza that it had herded 
Palestinian civilians into as a supposedly “safe zone”.

Israel had been warned not to attack Rafah by the world’s highest court, the 
International Court of Justice (ICJ), but went ahead anyway.

‘Mass denial’
For some time, leading Holocaust and genocide scholars – among them Israelis – 
have been speaking up to warn not only that a genocide is unfolding, but that 
it is nearing completion.

Last week, Omer Bartov even managed to get his message out on CNN. He told 
Christiane Amanpour that Israel was carrying out “a war of annihilation” on the 
Gaza Strip. “What the IDF [Israeli military] is doing there is destroying 
Gaza,” he said.

Amos Goldberg, another Israeli Holocaust expert, noted that Raphael Lemkin, a 
Jewish-Polish scholar who coined the term “genocide”, described its two phases.

“The first is the destruction of the annihilated group and the second is what 
he called ‘imposition of the national pattern’ of the perpetrator. We are now 
witnessing the second phase as Israel prepares ethnically cleansed areas for 
Israeli settlements.”

Goldberg added: “Like in every other case of genocide in history, right now we 
have mass denial. Both here in Israel and around the world.”

Bartov’s invitation by CNN appeared to have been provoked by an article in 
Haaretz, Israel’s most liberal newspaper. It published last week testimonies 
from Israeli combat soldiers, in which they described committing and witnessing 
war crimes in Gaza. They paint a picture of systematic erasure that, even from 
their limited perspective, looks ominously like genocide.

The soldiers describe shooting dead anyone who moves inside undeclared 
so-called “kill zones”, even children, and then claiming them to be 
“terrorists”. The dead are left to be eaten by packs of dogs.

The only words one Israeli reservist found to describe Israel’s repeated and 
intentional killing of children in Gaza was “pure evil”.

According to a senior reserve commander recently returned from the enclave, the 
Israeli army has created “a lawless space where human life holds no value”.

Another says units compete to see who can kill the greater number of 
Palestinians, indifferent to whether they are Hamas fighters or civilians.

Others describe these units as operating like “independent militias”, 
unrestrained by military protocols.

‘Everyone is a terrorist’
How the Israeli army implemented the Gaza genocide is alluded to in the Haaretz 
article. After the Hamas attack on 7 October 2023, the military leadership 
devolved normally centralised decision-making to local field commanders.

Many of those commanders live in the most religiously extreme of the illegal 
Jewish settlements in the West Bank. Not only are they Jewish supremacists, but 
they follow rabbis who believe all Palestinians, even babies, pose a threat to 
the Jewish people and must be exterminated.

Notoriously, a group of influential settler rabbis formalised their genocidal 
teachings into a book called The King’s Torah.

One senior commander identified by Haaretz is Brigadier General Yehuda Vach, a 
settler from Kiryat Arba, possibly the most extreme of all Israel’s West Bank 
settlements.

For many years, Vach headed the military’s officers training school, passing on 
his extreme views to a new generation of officers, presumably some of whom are 
now making decisions in Gaza.

Today, he heads Division 252, in which many of the soldiers who spoke to 
Haaretz have served.

One of his officers recounted how, after Hamas’ military leader Yahya Sinwar 
was killed in October, Vach held an official meeting to determine what to do 
with his body. He wanted to strip Sinwar’s corpse naked, put it in a public 
square, dismember it and pour sewage over the remains.

In an address to soldiers, he is reported to have echoed a genocidal view 
widely shared in Israel, that "there are no innocents in Gaza”. Even Israel’s 
supposedly liberal President Isaac Herzog has said as much.

But according to one officer, Vach has made this view an “operational doctrine”.

Vach’s view of Palestinians is that “everyone's a terrorist". And that means, 
given Israel’s current, explicit aims in Gaza, everyone must be killed.

Nothing sticks
None of this should surprise us. Israeli leaders from the very start announced 
their genocidal intent. And more than a year ago, Israeli soldiers serving in 
Gaza began telling us of the systematic nature of Israel’s war crimes.

But like everything about this genocide, those accounts made no impact on the 
western political and media consensus. Nothing has stuck, even when it is the 
soldiers themselves documenting their atrocities, and even when it is Israeli 
Holocaust experts concluding that these crimes amount to genocide.

It has been nearly a year since the ICJ, comprising more than a dozen 
internationally respected judges, decided that a “plausible” case had been made 
that Israel was carrying out a genocide in Gaza.

The judiciary is amongst the most conservative of professions.

The situation in Gaza is incalculably worse than it was last January when the 
court issued its ruling.

But the wheels of justice are required to turn slowly, even though Gaza does 
not have time on its side.

How is this permanent condition of mass denial possible? There is nothing 
normal or natural about it. The denial is being actively and furiously 
manufactured.

Only because we live in a world where billionaires own our politicians and 
media do we need courts and human rights groups to confirm what we can already 
see quite clearly being live-streamed to our devices.

Only because we live in a world owned by billionaires do those same courts and 
rights organisations spend long months weighing the evidence to protect 
themselves from the inevitable backlash of smears aimed at discrediting their 
work.

And only because we live in a world owned by billionaires is it possible, even 
after all those delays, for our politicians and media to ignore the findings 
and carry on as before.

The system is rigged to favour the imperial hub of the United States and its 
client states.

If you are an African dictator, or an official enemy of the so-called West, the 
most minimal evidence suffices to prove your guilt.

If you are under the protection of the US godfather, no amount of evidence will 
ever be enough to put you behind bars.

It is known as realpolitik.

Always another story
For many months, the western media’s role has been to gaslight us by pretending 
the genocide is something else.

First, the mass slaughter of Palestinians was presented simply as a natural 
desire by Israel to eliminate “terrorism” on its doorstep following the Hamas 
attack of 7 October 2023.

It was chiefly a story of Israeli "self-defence" that conveniently overlooked 
the preceding decades in which Israel had driven Palestinians off their land, 
either out of their homeland entirely or into ghettoes, then colonised the land 
illegally with apartheid-style Jewish settlements, and subjected the 
Palestinian ghettoes to brutal Israeli military rule.

In the coverage after 7 October, the Palestinians – long the victims of an 
illegal occupation – were viewed as squarely to blame for their own suffering. 
To suggest anything else – to worry that a genocide was unfolding – was a sure 
sign of antisemitism.

Then, as the slaughter intensified – as Gaza was levelled, hospitals wrecked, 
the population collectively punished with an aid blockade – the official story 
faltered.

So a new narrative was advanced: of international efforts to reach a ceasefire 
ending “the cycle of violence”, of the focus on securing the release of the 
hostages, of Hamas intransigence.

We were back to the familiar framework of an intractable conflict, in which 
both sides were to blame – though, of course, the Palestinians more so.

Now, as it becomes impossible to continue pretending that Israel wants peace, 
to ignore the fact that it is expanding the slaughter, not reining it in, the 
media strategy has shifted once again.

As the genocide reaches its “final stage” – as the Israeli Holocaust scholars 
Omer Bartov and Amos Goldberg warn – the media have largely lost interest. If 
there is no way to both-sides the genocide, then it must be disappeared.

And in media-land, there is always another story that can be promoted. There 
will always be another front-page lead rather than the most disturbing one of 
all, in which western leaders and the media are full participants in the 
live-streamed extermination of a people.

BBC buries the news
That is the context for understanding the media’s collective yawn as the three 
genocide reports dropped one after another this month.

Israel’s accusations that Amnesty’s report was antisemitic were entirely 
expected. What should not have been was the media’s largely indifferent 
response.

The BBC was a case study in how to bury bad news. Its flagship television news 
programmes – the dominant news source for Britons – ignored the story 
completely.

Meanwhile, its poor cousin, the 24-hour news channel, which draws a far smaller 
audience, did mention the Amnesty report, but captioned it: “Israel rejects 
‘fabricated’ claims of genocide.”

In other words, when the BBC did offer very limited coverage, it skipped the 
news story of Amnesty’s findings and went straight to Israel’s predictable, 
outraged reaction.

In an investigation for Drop Site News last week, Guardian columnist Owen Jones 
spoke to 13 current and recently departed BBC staff. They said the 
corporation’s coverage of Gaza was heavily skewed to present Israel’s actions 
in a favourable light.

In a WhatsApp chat for senior BBC Middle East editors, correspondents and 
producers, one participant – incensed by the “fabricated claims” caption – 
wrote: “FFS! – It’s an open goal for those who say we’re frit [afraid] of 
upsetting the Israelis and keep on couching our stories in an ‘Israel says’ 
narrative’.”

The BBC’s website, by far the most influential English-language online news 
source, inexplicably ignored the Amnesty report for 12 hours after the embargo 
was lifted.

Even then, it appeared as the seventh item. For the following week, it was not 
included in the “Israel-Gaza” index on the website’s front page, making it 
unlikely it would be found.

This pattern has long been true in the BBC’s coverage of Israel and Palestine, 
but it has become far more glaring since the stakes were raised for Israel by 
its genocide.

As Jones’s investigation discloses, BBC management has tightly restricted 
control over the Gaza coverage to a small number of journalists known to hew 
closely to Israel’s view of events – and despite their editorial role provoking 
what Jones calls a “civil war” in the BBC newsroom.

Notably, Jones did not publish his investigation in the Guardian, where there 
have been similar reports of staff indignant at the paper’s failure to give 
proper weight to the genocidal nature of Israel’s actions.

Rigged algorithms
What the BBC has been doing is not exceptional. As soon as a light is shone 
into the dark recesses of the state- and billionaire-owned media, the same 
picture always emerges.

Last week, an investigation revealed that Meta, the company that owns Facebook 
and Instagram, intentionally rigged its algorithms to suppress reports from the 
biggest Palestinian news sources after the Hamas attack of 7 October 2023.

Palestinian news outlets saw their views on Meta platforms fall significantly 
after the attack – on average by 77 percent – when they should have expected to 
see far greater interest. By contrast, views of Israeli news outlets rose 
sharply.

Paradoxically, the investigation was published by the BBC, though notably the 
research was initiated and carried out by the staff of its Arabic news service.

Also last week, more than a dozen whistleblowers from Deutsche Welle, Germany’s 
equivalent of state broadcaster the BBC, revealed to Al Jazeera that a culture 
of fear reigns in the newsroom when it comes to critical coverage of Israel.

Similar reports from whistleblowing staff have exposed the rigged nature of the 
coverage – always in Israel’s favour – in other major outlets, from CNN to the 
New York Times and the Associated Press news agency.

In reality, the same skewed news agenda can be found in every newsroom in every 
corporate media outlet. It just requires whistleblowers to come forward, and 
for there to be someone willing to listen and in a position to publish.

Why? Because a genocide unfolding in plain sight cannot be made to appear 
normal without an enormous expenditure of effort from institutional media to 
close the eyes of their audiences. To hypnotise us into indifference.

State of anxiety
Too many of us are susceptible to this process – and for a number of reasons.

In part, because we still trust these institutions, even though their chief 
function is to persuade us that they are there for our benefit – rather than 
the reality that they serve the interests of the larger corporate structures to 
which they belong.

Those western structures are invested in resource theft, asset-stripping and 
wealth concentration – all, of course, pursued at the expense of the global 
south – and the war industries needed to make this pillage possible.

But also, it is part of our psychological makeup that we cannot sustain 
attention on bad news indefinitely.

To watch a genocide unfold week after week, month after month, and be unable to 
do anything to stop it, takes a terrible toll on our mental health. It keeps us 
in a permanent state of anxiety.

The corporate structures that oversee our media understand this only too well. 
Which is why they cultivate a sense of powerlessness amongst their audiences.

The world is presented as a baffling place, where there are inexplicable forces 
of evil that act without any comprehensible causation to destroy all that is 
good and wholesome.

The media suggest international affairs are little different from a game of 
whack-a-mole. Whenever the good West tries to solve a problem, another evil 
mole pops up its head, whether it be Hamas terrorists, Hezbollah terrorists, 
Syria’s former dictator Bashar al-Assad, or the mad mullahs of Iran.

With this as the framework for the Gaza genocide, audiences are left sensing 
either that what is happening to Palestinians, however horrifying, may be 
deserved or that investing too much concern is a waste of energy and time. 
Another crisis will be along in a moment equally demanding of our attention.

And so it will. Because that is precisely the way the corporate media works. It 
offers a conveyor belt of bad news, one bewildering event after another – 
whether it be another disgraced celebrity, or murdered schoolgirl, or an 
outbreak of war.

The media’s role – the reason states and corporations keep such a tight grip on 
it – is to stop us from gaining a wider picture of the world, one on which our 
hands look far more bloodied than the "terrorists" we sit in judgment on. One 
where a powerful western elite, its corporate empire headquartered in the US, 
runs the planet as nothing more than a wealth-extraction machine.

And so we, the publics of the West, shrug our shoulders once again: at “man’s 
inhumanity to man”, at “the cycle of violence”, at “the barbarians at the 
gate”, at “the white man’s burden”.

Nearly 15 months on, the Gaza genocide has become entirely normal, it has 
become just another minor, routine news item to be buried on the inside pages.

Jonathan Cook



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