Torco wrote: ↑Wed Jun 26, 2024 11:40 am
a war *can* be a genocide if, for example, civilian infrastructure is targeted indiscriminately (which israel routinely does)
‘Civilian infrastructure’ is too vague to discuss sensibly, see below for specifics.
if food aid is denied entry to the territories where people need it as a result of acts of war (which israel routinely does) […] if water is denied to those civilians as a result of acts of war (which israel routinely does) […] if 97% of the civilian population of some invaded area don't get enough food as a result of acts of war (which is the case now)
Famine Review Committee: ‘[…] the response in the nutrition, water sanitation and hygiene (WASH) and health sectors was scaled up. In this context, the available evidence does not indicate that Famine is currently occurring.’
Not that the situation is
good, of course, but given that we’re talking about a war zone here, it’s probably about as least-horrifically-bad as possible.
if hospitals and other places where civilians wounded by acts of war are denied supplies or destroyed by a belligerant (which israel routinely does)
And if those hospitals etc. are routinely repurposed by Hamas as headquarters, weapon stores and rocket launch sites?
if people from the dispreferred group are forcibly evicted from their homes so that people from the preferred group can live there instead (which israel routinely does), if children from the dispreferred group are subject to decade-long incarceration for things like throwing stones (which israel routinely does)
Now we’re no longer talking about Gaza, but about the West Bank, where the situation is
very different. For one thing, that’s not where the war is.
In any case, I believe I’ve already mentioned my disagreements with Israeli policy in the West Bank. (And if I haven’t, I’ve mentioned it now.)
if high officials in the government doing those acts explicitly say that the intention of those acts is to achieve a future state of affairs where no members of the dispreferred group remain in a given territory (which routinely happens), or when those same officials state such things as all civilians are valid military targets (which routinely happens), or when the big poobah refers to the dispreferred group as Amalek (you know, the guys god commants the israelites to exterminate fully, and gets angry cause Saul spares some, in the bible, which netanyahu did do)..
Given my previous posts, it should be clear by now that Israeli politics is
very divided, even within the governing coalition itself. And then there’s the fact that the IDF has a certain independence from the government. Lumping them all together as a single entity just doesn’t work.
Or, in other words, just because Ben Gvir says something idiotic, doesn’t make it army policy. You need to look at statements from IDF leadership, which have been noticeably more sane than those from the fringes of the government (or even from Netanyahu himself).
at some point in there the conditions obtain, would say any impartial observer. "that point hasn't been reached" is... well... a position, but there's gotta be some point at which they do, no? is israel just a priori immune from the accusation ?
No, of course Israel is not immune from the accusation. If Netanyahu’s cronies had more influence on the IDF than they already do, then I’d probably be making the accusation myself. But your arguments are either incorrect, or missing the critical context which justifies the IDF’s actions in terms of international law.