A genocide is happening in Gaza. We should say so.
We can no longer avoid these uncomfortable truths.
May 28, 2025
Palestinians
travel through Jabalia as they flee the northern Gaza Strip toward Gaza
City on May 19, amid Israeli evacuation orders and strikes. (Bashar
Taleb/AFP/Getty Images)
Throughout
history, atrocities have usually been committed under cover of
darkness. The perpetrators know that what they are doing is wrong. They
hide it. They deny it. They speak in euphemisms. But what happens when
they no longer feel the need to hide? What happens when they say the
quiet part out loud?
This is what is happening in Gaza today. The mask has come off.
Ethnic
cleansing has become the official policy of Israel. The nation’s
leaders are admitting it, without apology. There was barely a pretense
before. But now there’s not even that. And these admissions, combined
with mass killing on the ground, point to something even more horrific:
genocide.
On May 11, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told lawmakers
that Israel’s war on Gaza is intended to render large parts of the
territory uninhabitable, forcing Palestinians to flee: “We are
destroying more and more homes. They have nowhere to return to.” Even
the Trump administration — which is, or at least was, about as
pro-Israel as you can get — understands what is happening. As President
Donald Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff recently said, “Israel
is not ready to end the war. Israel is prolonging the war, even though
we do not see where further progress can be made.”
When
the intent becomes so explicit, we are forced to confront our own
complicity. For Israel’s defenders, the cognitive dissonance is
difficult to bear. I get it. Many Americans have long seen Israel as an
ally, a country that shares our values — a Western, liberal outpost in a
sea of supposed Arab barbarism. But Israel’s actions in Gaza should
shatter that perception.
That
a close ally of the United States would declare its intention to
displace a population is remarkable. But many Israelis, including senior
officials and ministers, have been saying this for a long time. Just
one month into the war, Agriculture Minister Avi Dichter said, “We are now rolling out the Gaza Nakba,”
explicitly referencing the 1948 expulsion of more than 700,000
Palestinians from their land. In December 2023, Finance Minister Bezalel
Smotrich stated that
“what needs to be done in the Gaza Strip is to encourage emigration”
and that having “100,000 or 200,000 Arabs in Gaza and not 2 million”
would allow the desert to “bloom.” This month, Smotrich offered further
clarification. The goal is to leave Gaza “totally destroyed,” he said. These are not opposition figures or fringe elements. These are members of the Israeli cabinet.
This
kind of language has always been central to ethnic cleansing campaigns.
But what is happening in Gaza goes beyond ethnic cleansing and crosses
into genocide. “Ethnic cleansing” refers to the forced removal of
populations from territory, while genocide involves physical destruction
of a group or part of a group. What makes the situation in Gaza so
horrifying is that it is both.
The scale of death and destruction is staggering. Former Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert described the reality starkly in a May 22 op-ed: “What we are doing in Gaza is a war of annihilation: indiscriminate, unrestrained, brutal and criminal killing of civilians.”
As the Economist recently reported,
new research suggests that as many as 109,000 Palestinians have been
killed by Israel — which would represent about 5 percent of the prewar
population. Even the lower-bound estimate — 77,000 killed — is 44
percent higher than the Gaza Ministry of Health’s figure of 53,500 dead.
Palestinians
carry the bodies of their relatives who were killed in an Israeli
airstrike in Deir al-Balah, Gaza, on May 21. (Abdel Kareem Hana/AP)
About 90 percent of Gazans
have been displaced, many multiple times, forced to flee from one “safe
zone” to another as Israel’s military levels entire neighborhoods. More than 90 percent of housing units have been destroyed or damaged.
The engineered humanitarian emergency is equally damning. Israel has weaponized starvation as a method of warfare, blocking food and supplies from entering the territory for 10 weeks. The new Integrated Food Security Phase Classification
report finds that 22 percent of the population faces catastrophic
levels of food insecurity, with 71,000 children younger than 5 facing acute malnutrition.
The
facts fit the definition. Many people think of genocide narrowly as the
attempt to obliterate an entire people by mass murder, but under
international law, the definition is broader. The U.N. Convention on the
Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, ratified by 153
states, including Israel and the United States, defines genocide as
“acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a
national, ethnical, racial or religious group,” including by “killing
members of the group,” “causing serious bodily or mental harm to members
of the group” and “deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of
life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in
part.”
A new consensus is slowly emerging. Numerous genocide scholars
— those who have dedicated their lives to studying this most extreme
form of violence — now concur that what Israel is doing in Gaza meets
the definition. Once-reluctant experts, including Israeli scholars such
as Omer Bartov and Shmuel Lederman, have shifted their position in the
face of mounting evidence. As another professor of Holocaust and
genocide studies, Raz Segal, put it: “Can I name someone whose work I
respect who doesn’t think it’s genocide? No.”
Right-wing
demonstrators gesture at a passing truck during a protest to block
humanitarian aid from entering Gaza at the Kerem Shalom crossing on May
21. (John Wessels/AFP/Getty Images)
A
malnourished 12-year-old Gazan is held by her mother at the Sheikh
Khalifa Medical City, where she receives medical treatment in Abu Dhabi,
United Arab Emirates, on May 19. (Amr Alfiky/Reuters)
We
have also witnessed in Gaza the stages inherent in genocide. First
comes the dehumanization of the targeted population. The historical
pattern is consistent from Rwanda to Bosnia — a process that begins with
stripping away a group’s humanity through rhetoric and symbolism,
segregating them and identifying them as an existential threat. Then
comes the creation of conditions that make life unbearable. Starve the population
and cut off supplies. Create, in other words, an environment where
people cannot survive. Then call their exodus “voluntary.” Of course, in
this case, they have nowhere to go. Gaza isn’t so much an open-air
prison. It’s an open-air killing field.
Israel’s
defenders will argue that it is waging a just war precipitated by
Hamas’s horrific Oct. 7, 2023, attack, which killed more than 1,100
Israelis. They will point to Hamas’s continued rocket fire and its
strategy of operating in densely populated areas. Urban warfare
inevitably produces “collateral damage,” they’ll insist, and Hamas bears
ultimate responsibility for embedding itself within civilian
infrastructure.
These
talking points cannot absolve Israel of responsibility for the scale of
carnage it has unleashed. There must be a limit. Hamas has argued that
everything Israel did to Palestinians before Oct. 7 justified Oct. 7.
Israel argues that because of what happened on Oct. 7, everything it
does in the name of war is justified. They’re not the same, but both
rationales deploy a maximalist logic: that the laws of war are suspended
when you’re dealing with a uniquely barbaric enemy.
Just as Hamas has agency, so does Israel. Israel has not been “forced” to do anything. Israel has made its own choices.
Whatever
legitimacy Israel’s initial response had has been obliterated by the
scale, duration and deliberate brutality of its war on Gaza. No
democratic nation that claims to share “Western values” destroys entire family lines, bombs refugee camps
or shoots at starving crowds seeking food. The destruction of civilian
infrastructure — hospitals, universities, bakeries, water treatment
plants — isn’t what nations do when they’re fighting a “just war.” We
are witnessing the destruction of a people in Gaza — a genocide.
A
woman in a classroom after an Israeli airstrike hit the Mussa bin
Nusseir UNRWA school, serving as a shelter for people who left their
homes in the besieged Palestinian territory, in Gaza City's Daraj
district on May 20. (Omar Al-Qattaa/AFP/Getty Images)
As
the U.N. Genocide Convention states, the most difficult thing to prove
in genocide is intent, which is why there have been relatively few
formally recognized genocides over the past century. But Israeli
officials have declared their intent and are doing so with a newfound
honesty.
Faced
with assault on a population of this magnitude, one might expect
universal condemnation. Yet, when atrocities are committed by a country
perceived as sharing our values, powerful psychological forces activate
to protect our beliefs. Israel can’t be that bad. It’s an
advanced nation, where people speak English, vote in regular elections
and launch tech start-ups. They seem like us. When it comes to
atrocities, psychologist Stanley Cohen identifies three forms of denial: literal denial (it didn’t happen), interpretive denial (it wasn’t what it seems) and implicatory denial (it doesn’t matter).
Confirmation
bias plays a part here, too. Imagine you had a close friend or family
member who was accused of unspeakable crimes. You’d have strong
incentives to explain away their actions — or, better yet, deny that
they committed them in the first place. To admit that someone you love
was capable of evil can simply be too difficult, because in some sense that realization would implicate you as well.
The reality of antisemitism — expressed violently in the May 21 killing
of two Israeli Embassy staff members in Washington — contributes to the
reluctance to speak out with clarity. There’s also the profoundly
uncomfortable reality that a country, Israel, forged in part as a
response to genocide is itself committing genocide. It brings to mind
Edward Said’s famous remark that Palestinians were — and still are, decades later — “the victims of the victims.”
The
reluctance to use the term “genocide” has precedents that should give
us pause. During the Rwandan genocide in 1994, U.S. State Department
officials were instructed
to avoid using the word partly out of concern it would create legal
obligations to intervene. About 800,000 Tutsis were massacred while the
world debated terminology. In Bosnia, it took years for international
courts to officially recognize the 1995 Srebrenica massacre — in which
more than 8,000 men and boys were systematically executed — as genocide,
long after timely intervention might have saved lives.
Words
matter because they determine action. When we avoid naming a genocide
for what it is, we become complicit in allowing it to continue. Terms
like “humanitarian crisis” or even “war crimes” can function as
euphemisms that fall short of triggering the moral and legal imperatives
that genocide demands. The power of naming isn’t some academic
exercise; it’s practical. It determines whether the international
community mobilizes to stop atrocities or simply manages their
aftermath.
There
was a time when I would have cautioned against using a word like
“genocide” too freely, worried about diluting its meaning. But we are
well past that now. Shielding people from uncomfortable truths is
self-defeating. Words have meaning, and they should be used when they
describe reality. Otherwise, we’re in denial, and atrocities at this
scale shouldn’t be denied.
Israel’s
brutalization of the Palestinian population in Gaza has gone on too
long. These are unspeakable — and, more important, indefensible —
crimes. We cannot be complicit in minimizing them or pretending that
they are not happening. Because they are. Enough.