The bare minimum expected of a leader of the American left, and a democratic socialist, should be a willingness to say āI endorse the conclusion of mainstream human rights organizations.ā Why wouldnāt Sanders be willing to do that? He says that it doesnāt really matter āwhat you call it,ā because itās horrific. But clearly it does matter to Sanders, because he is making a choice not to use the same language as the human rights organizations. Why is he making that choice? He has not explained.
Sanders is right that the more important debate is about actions rather than language. But genocide is also the supreme crime against humanity, and it is so unanimously reviled that it makes a difference whether we use the term. For instance: there might be a debate over whether we should cut off weapons to a state that has āengaged in war crimes.ā (How many? Are they aberrations or policy?) The Allied powers in World War II engaged in war crimes, and many Americans think war crimes can be justified in the service of a noble end. But there can be no debate over whether we should ever arm a state that has engaged in genocide. Genocide has no justification, no mitigation. If a state is committing it, all ties should be cut with that state.
Actually, we can see the difference in Bernie Sandersā own policy response to Israelās crimes. He told CNN that āyour taxpayer dollarsā should not go to support a āhorror.ā This is true. Sanders, to his credit, has repeatedly proposed a bill that would cut off a certain amount of weapons sales to Israel. Democratic opinion has so soured on Israel that Sandersā bill attracted a record amount of Democratic support (27 senators, more than half the caucus.) But notably, Sandersā bill only cuts off āoffensiveā weapons to Israel, leaving ādefensiveā weapons sales intact.
We might think that itās perfectly fine to sell ādefensiveā weapons. Israelās āIron Domeā system, which U.S. taxpayers help pay for, protects the country against incoming missiles, and protection against incoming missiles is surely a good and noble thing. But notably, we have not bought Hamas its own āiron dome.ā Or Iran. Or Russia. This is because we do not support the causes for which they fight. We understand in these cases that to help the ādefenseā is to help the āoffense.ā If Russia is protected from Ukrainian missiles, it will fight Ukraine more effectively. Likewise, if Israel is protected from Hamas rocket fire, but Gaza is not protected from Israeli missiles, the balance of arms is tilted toward Israel, and they can pulverize Gaza without Hamas being able to inflict similar damage in response.
Who made the mess? Israel? Egypt? The UK and France? The UN? The Ottoman Empire? By now certainly Hamas itself has contributed to āthe messā.
Assinging responsibility to one party is failing to engage with a complex problem.
Not everything about it is complex: itās simple to see that Israel has been committing war crimes for a long time, and we can now see clearly they are committing a genocide, and should be called out as such. That doesnāt mean it is in any way legitimate to lose sight of the complexities of the situation. It does not give you or anyone the right to say āwell, we should just erase Israelā. That makes a mockery of the supposed morals you want to uphold for the Palestinian people.
Nothing complex israel is the occupier, palestine the occupied. Israel made the mess. Nobody forced zionists imigrants to force a state on local populations. Nobody forced them to occupy gaza and the west bank in 67 and expand illegal settlements to make a two state solution hard to accomplish. Hamas wouldnāt exists without israel occupation.
You donāt see people still talk about nana sahib in india being responsible for the occupation after he did a similar retaliation to 7 of october against british civilians for the hate he get towards british people for occupation. You donāt see people blaming Nate Turner for slavery to continue after he killed kids during his revolt.
Fucking hell.