The art of deception: How Israel uses ‘hasbara’ to whitewash its crimes

The Israelis have long relied on a public diplomacy strategy to dominate the arena of narrative control and information manipulation.

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As Israel conducts its latest round of aggression against the Palestinians, the prevailing narrative often peddled in mainstream western media outlets continues to be implicitly framed to favour the Israeli narrative.

Under the guise of neutrality, media discourse has been to describe the conflict flaring up in occupied East Jerusalem as “clashes” between “both sides”. Israel’s ruthless bombardment of Gaza leading to the deaths of hundreds of civilians is rationalised as an act of “self defence” in response to Hamas’ indiscriminate rocket attacks and their use of “human shields”.

The Israeli state is deeply aware that perception shapes reality. While it commits alleged war crimes with impunity, it can only do so if there is a powerful enough propaganda machine it can deploy to counter inevitable public condemnation and international solidarity with Palestinians.  

Enter ‘hasbara’ – Israel’s primary messaging tool.

Hasbara – Hebrew for explanation – is a public diplomacy technique which links information warfare with the strategic objectives of the Israeli state. Public diplomacy is to be strategically conceived as a foreign policy priority, whereby a positive image of Israel is cultivated on the world stage, especially considering the image challenges Israel has continuously faced since its creation in 1948.

While rooted in earlier concepts of agitprop and censorship, hasbara does not look to jam the supply of contradictory information to audiences. Instead, it willingly accepts an open marketplace of opinion. What it seeks to do in this context is to promote selective listening by limiting the receptivity of audiences to information, rather than constricting its flow.

To accomplish its mission, hasbara targets diplomats, politicians and the public through mass media. It is also accomplished through numerous institutes and government agencies, as well as in research centres, universities, NGOs and lobbying firms.

Israel even offers hasbara fellowships, scholarships and grants to foster pro-Israeli advocacy, while a number of individuals from journalists to bloggers work to spin a positive image of the country.

Pro-Israeli media

Hasbara 2.0

Following the 2006 Lebanon war and ‘Operation Cast Lead’ two years later, both of which seriously damaged Israeli’s international reputation, there was a gradual shift between 2008 to 2012, to what the scholar Miriyam Aouragh called “Hasbara 2.0”: an assertive digital diplomacy that accounted for web 2.0 technologies like social media and YouTube.

Soon, hasbara-styled initiatives from the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) were being synchronised into a new online branch, with a permanent team operating in liaison with the Ministry of Strategic Affairs in 2008.

In 2012, Israel would announce its war against Gaza on Twitter. During ‘Operation Pillar of Defense’, as Israeli-funneled talking points saturated the US and European media landscape, hasbara made heavy use of the more distilled communication channels of social media. It further exploited browser functions, search engine algorithms, and other automated mechanisms that controlled what content were presented to viewers.

In the process, Israel designed a narrative of itself as the innocent victim of Palestinian terrorism, one that was accorded with the sovereign right of defense against existential assault. This, despite the fact of having initiated the escalation, possessing advanced aerial power against an adversary without one, and unloading more than one thousand times as many tons of munitions on Gazans.

In 2014, Israel’s war in Gaza under ‘Operation Protective Edge’ prompted a much greater pushback to its media narrative, clearly underestimating the extent of the global outrage to their actions in Gaza.

As images of destruction and dismembered bodies of innocent civilians flooded social media, hasbara proponents were forced to re-double their efforts in well-orchestrated PR campaigns that attempted to reframe war crimes with talking points to whitewash any disproportionate use of force – which even ended up being ineffective back in Israel.

Desperate measures

In the event this posturing fails, there are a few well-worn strategies in their arsenal that hasbara engineers have resorted to.

One has been to force the public to make a choice between Israel and Hamas. Today, we continually see this dichotomy played out on international broadcast segments; in doing so, Israel is framed as a rational and innocent actor provoked by an irrational terrorist threat, making any criticism of Israel’s actions de facto apologia for terrorism.

While a number of western governments have designated Hamas a terror organisation including the US and the European Union, Norway and Switzerland, they still maintain diplomatic ties with the group. Australia, New Zealand and the UK only consider its military wing a terrorist organisation. A number of other states outside of the West do not label it a terrorist organisation, and the UN in 2018 rejected a US resolution to condemn it as a terror organisation.

Probably the most common tactic has been to link any criticism of Israeli policies, whether its human rights violations or illegal colonisation of Palestinian land, to anti-Semitism.

One of the strategic threats in recent years has been the growing Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement. Israeli officials have attempted to smear those who support BDS as anti-Semitic and claim it is linked to terrorism, while anti-BDS laws have been passed in the US. 

Online, it has translated into pushing prominent social media companies to adoptthe International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance working definition of anti-Semitism, which widens potential accusation of anti-Semitism to criticism of Israel.

The weaponisation of social justice issues and appropriation of ‘woke’ language is another frequently adopted strategy. For example the narrative of how Israel is the “only democracy” in the Middle East is repeated ad infinitum; indicating its the lone country which respects human rights and the rule of law in an otherwise regressive and hostile region.

Pinkwashing” – cynically exploiting LGBTQ+ rights to amplify a progressive veneer and conceal Israeli crimes – has been added to the hasbara repertoire, along with the support for animal rights to “veganwash” occupation.

Ultimately, this discourse is meant to operate in juxtaposition against the “backward” Palestinian – to further dehumanise them among western audiences and soften criticism of Israel.

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America’s Role in Enabling Israeli Terrorism in Palestine 

Voice of Palestine, 31/03/24

In recent years, the United States has garnered criticism for its seemingly unlimited support of violence abroad. From providing licenses for lethal weaponry to extending taxpayer-funded loans, America’s involvement in global conflicts has raised significant ethical concerns.

One of the most troubling aspects is the free pass America seems to give to certain actors like illegal Israeli occupation , shielding them from international scrutiny and accountability. This is evident in its use of the veto power within the United Nations Security Council, effectively protecting illegal occupation accused of deliberate starvation of Gaza population, genocide and ethnic cleansing.

The American PR machine works tirelessly to deceit  public perception, often twisting the truth to justify its actions or shield its criminal allies from condemnation. This manipulation of information further complicates efforts to hold Israeli perpetrators accountable and seek justice for Palestinians.

Perhaps most concerning is the free license America grants to Israeli occupation leaders allowing them to perpetrate violence with impunity. This has led to accusations of complicity in acts of genocide, ethnic cleansing, and other atrocities.

Moreover, American taxpayers unknowingly contribute to this cycle of violence through loans and financial support provided to Israel engaged in continuous atrocities against Palestinians. This raises serious questions about the ethical implications of using public funds to fuel warfare and bloodshed.

Despite calls for accountability and justice, America continues to wield its power to protect those accused of egregious human rights violations. This unchecked authority not only undermines efforts to promote peace and stability but also perpetuates a cycle of violence and suffering in regions around the world.

As the global community grapples with these issues, it is essential to confront the uncomfortable truth about America’s role in enabling Israeli terrorism in Palestine. Only by acknowledging and addressing these systemic failures can we hope to build a more just and peaceful world for future Palestinian generations.

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Meet The Gazan Who Designed The Martian Rover ‘Perseverance’ !

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How Israel killed hundreds of its own people on 7 October

Asa WinstanleyThe Electronic Intifada7 October 2024

A woman takes a selfie in front of a stack of crushed cars and an Israeli flag
Taking a selfie at the Tekuma “car cemetery.” Israel says that more than 1,000 vehicles were destroyed — often with Israeli captives inside — on and soon after 7 October 2023. But the evidence shows that many of these bombings were carried out by Israel itself, under its deadly “Hannibal Directive.” Jim HollanderUPI

One year ago today Palestinian fighters led by Hamas launched an unprecedented military offensive out of the Gaza Strip.

The immediate goal was to inflict a shattering blow against Israel’s army bases and militarized settlements which have besieged Gaza’s inhabitants for decades – all of which are built on land that Palestinian families were expelled from in 1948.

The bigger goal was to shatter a status quo in which Israel, the United States and their accomplices believed they had effectively sidelined the Palestinian cause, and to bring that struggle for liberation back to the forefront of world attention.

“Operation Al-Aqsa Flood,” as Hamas called it, was, by any objective military measure, a stunning success.

It was said at Israel’s military headquarters that day that “the Gaza Division was overpowered,” a high-level source present later recalled to Israeli journalists. “These words still give me the chills.”

Covered from the air by armed drones and a barrage of rockets – which opened the offensive at 6:26 am exactly – Palestinian fighters launched a lightening raid over the Gaza boundary line.

The army bases were conquered for hours. Some of the settlements still had an armed Palestinian presence two days later.

The military communications infrastructure was instantly smashed. Simultaneous attacks took place by land, air and sea.

Palestinian drones took out tanks, guard posts and watchtowers.

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What atrocity would Israel have to commit for our leaders to break their silence?

Owen Jones

Owen Jones

To avenge 7 October, crimes of all kinds are condoned. But politicians should take note: the British public disagreesThu 3 Oct 2024 17.38 BSTShare

Consider these two parallel universes. One is Gaza, the scene of some of the worst atrocities committed in the 21st century, as Israel’s genocidal rampage offers a new reminder of our species’ capacity for depravity. According to research by Oxfam, more women and children have been killed by the Israeli military in the last year “than the equivalent period of any other conflict over the past two decades”.

What makes this all the more disturbing is that the figures are conservative: the 11,355 children and 6,297 women listed as violently killed are only those who have been officially identified. Many of the dead have not been recorded in this way, not least the thousands buried under rubble, listed as missing, or incinerated by Israeli missiles, leaving not a trace. Israel’s destruction of Gaza’s hospitals, too, has laid waste to the system of reporting fatalities. Those caveats notwithstanding, in no 12-month period were so many women and children butchered in the killing fields of Iraq and Syria, despite those populations being much greater than Gaza’s.

Then there is a fresh revelation about Israel’s deliberate attempt to starve Gaza’s population. Last week the US investigative outlet ProPublica reported that the US Agency for International Deveopment (USAid) – a government department – had delivered a detailed assessment to the secretary of state, Antony Blinken, concluding that Israel was intentionally blocking the deliveries of food and medicine to Gaza. The agency described Israel “killing aid workers, razing agricultural structures, bombing ambulances and hospitals, sitting on supply depots and routinely turning away trucks full of food and medicine”.

In a particularly egregious example, food was stockpiled less than 30 miles across the border at an Israeli port, including sufficient flour to feed most Gazans for five months; it was deliberately withheld. The state department’s refugee agency also concluded Israel was deliberately blocking aid, and recommended the use of US legislation that mandates the freezing of weapons shipments to states blocking US-backed aid. But Blinken rejected these assessments, and the US government has just approved another military aid package, worth $8.7bn, to a state its own agencies have concluded is deliberately starving the population of Gaza.

Now transport yourself to another universe: that of the British political elite. Two Tory leadership candidates have proposed making loyalty to Israel a central feature of Britishness. The frontrunner, Robert Jenrick, declares the Star of David should be displayed at every point of entry to Britain to show “we stand with Israel”. Kemi Badenoch declares she is struck “by the number of recent immigrants to the UK who hate Israel”, adding: “That sentiment has no place here.” Meanwhile, after Iran’s ballistic missile attack – with no reported Israeli casualties – the UK’s prime minister, Keir Starmer, passionately declares, “We stand with Israel”, in an official Downing Street address. Here is a man who has not mustered the tiniest fraction of that emotion for the tens of thousands of Arabs slaughtered by Israel, from Palestine to Lebanon. What word is there for that disparity in response, other than racism?

Fortunately, these are not the universes inhabited by the British public. Two thirds of voters now have an unfavourable view of Israel, compared with 17% opting for favourable: a record low. Seven in 10 believe it likely that Israel has committed war crimes (just 8% dissent), while 54% believean arrest warrant should be issued for Benjamin Netanyahu for war crimes and crimes against humanity (with 15% dissenting).

But this devotion to Israel among our rulers has survived both unspeakable atrocities and ever more repulsed public opinion. In a rational world, advocating a heartfelt alliance with a state engaged in such murderous mayhem would leave you driven from public life in disgrace; here it is the mainstream, respectable position, with those dissenting demonised as hateful extremists.

What exactly is Israel supposed to do to shake this? It has conducted the worst massacre of children in our time, from reported sniper shots to the heads of infantsto butchering terrified families in their cars, and now it is clear it deliberately starved an entire population. It stands accused of raping male and female detainees alike, while Save the Children condemns Israeli soldiers for sexually abusing Palestinian children in prisons. It has killed at least 885 healthcare workers, and left women having caesarians and children having amputations without anaesthetics. Its soldiers push Palestinian bodies from roofs in scenes reminiscent of Islamic State. Meanwhile, Israeli ministers, politicians, army officers, soldiers and journalists compete overbloodcurdling murderous and genocidal rhetoric.

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Genocide continues in Gaza despite the ICJ’s decisions …

Voice of Palestine , 29/03/24

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Normalised Carnage 

S.T. Salah, 5/04/26

This audit reviews patterns of international diplomatic, media, and institutional response to major Israeli wars against Palestinians from 1948 to 2026. It assesses the timing, intensity, and durability of external reactions, including public statements, emergency sessions, investigative mandates, sanctions debates, and enforcement measures, in order to evaluate how global actors responded to successive escalations across different historical periods.

Normalization began with the Nakba. Between 1947 and 1949, Zionist militias and then Israeli state forces carried out expulsions and attacks that produced hundreds of thousands of Palestinian refugees according to contemporary UN assessments, while hundreds of Palestinian localities were depopulated and many were destroyed or repopulated under new names. The international system did not reverse the dispossession. It converted it into an indefinite refugee administration, with UNRWA created by the General Assembly in 1949 and operations beginning in 1950, turning mass expulsion into a managed file rather than a restituted crime.

After 1967, permanent Israeli rule over an occupied civilian population became an accepted administrative regime rather than a temporary wartime condition. Land seizure for Israeli settlements, residency control in Jerusalem, military orders governing civilian life, and mass detention operated as a durable system with no enforcement trigger. Duration itself became the substitute for legality, and the absence of consequences trained states and institutions to treat structural violations as background governance.

In the First Intifada and afterward, Israeli lethal force and mass injury in policing contexts was repeatedly processed as “security” rather than as unlawful violence against a protected population. The threshold moved again during the Second Intifada, when Israel escalated to heavy battlefield methods inside civilian areas, including air-delivered munitions and armored assaults, while the international response remained largely declaratory and time-limited. Each cycle ended with statements and “concern”, not enforceable interruption, teaching that escalation would be absorbed.

Gaza accelerated normalization into a repeatable rhythm. From 2007 onward, Israel’s blockade and closure policy locked a civilian population into an enclosure where food, fuel, medical supplies, construction material, and movement were structurally dependent on Israeli permission, with periodic large-scale assaults in 2008–09, 2012, 2014, and 2021 destroying homes and civilian infrastructure. Each offensive produced brief global attention, then disengagement while the siege architecture persisted and recovery was obstructed, converting mass civilian harm into an expected recurrence rather than an intolerable breach.

The Great March of Return in 2018–2019 removed another boundary. Israeli occupation forces used live fire at scale against demonstrators near the Gaza perimeter, including journalists and medics, producing mass killing and life-changing injuries documented by UN mechanisms. The political consequence was consistent with the earlier pattern: condemnation without enforcement, a further raising of what the system would tolerate as “normal” conduct.

The Israeli war on Gaza during 2023–2026 marked the most extreme phase. Israel announced a “complete siege” in October 2023, and the campaign combined mass displacement orders with relentless bombardment and the collapse of food, water, and health systems. On 26 January 2024, the ICJ indicated provisional measures after finding that South Africa’s genocide claim was plausible and that there was a real and imminent risk of irreparable prejudice to Palestinian rights under the Genocide Convention, ordering steps including prevention of genocidal acts and enabling humanitarian assistance. The Israeli war against besieged civilians continued, and the pattern hardened: even an ICJ genocide warning could be processed as administratively survivable by the states with leverage that refused to use it. 

Normalization is measurable in destruction thresholds. Satellite-based damage assessments by UNOSAT, operating under UNITAR, documented by 3 May 2024 that a very large share of Gaza’s structures had been damaged or destroyed, with the count of affected structures running into the tens of thousands, and with damage rapidly expanding across all governorates. What would once have been treated as a catastrophic breach demanding coercive intervention was instead shifted into “humanitarian planning” and “reconstruction scenarios” while the causal machinery remained active. 

Normalization spread geographically. In the West Bank, the post-2023 period saw lethal operations, raids, and settler attacks treated as routine crisis management rather than as an escalating apartheid enforcement campaign. Practices once described as exceptional became daily operations with negligible diplomatic cost, reinforcing the lesson that extension of force into new arenas would not trigger rupture.

Normalization also operates through narrative handling, but here the mechanism is not persuasion. It is institutional processing: press cycles, diplomatic language, and procedural delay that turn mass death into “updates” rather than consequences. Outrage is converted into commentary. Commentary replaces enforcement.

Legal findings have repeatedly described the underlying structure as apartheid, a system designed to make domination durable through time. Under apartheid logic, escalation does not break the system. It expresses it.

The audit concludes that from 1948 to 2026 a consistent pattern has prevailed: when Israeli crimes against Palestinians are not sanctioned, they recur; when recurrence meets no decisive rupture, it becomes routine; routine hardens into governing order, and order becomes normalized. The material consequences for Palestinians have been sustained displacement without return, uninterrupted siege, and the repeated destruction of civilian life systems without enforcement. Over time, delay and repetition have recalibrated international tolerance, enabling even genocide-level warnings to be processed as administratively manageable rather than as triggers for decisive intervention.

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Stop the Killing: End the Occupation, End the Cycle of Violence

Phalapoem editor, 16/10/25

For seventy-seven years, Palestinians have lived — and died — under the shadow of an occupation that refuses to end. Not a single day has passed since 1948 without Palestinian blood being spilled, homes being demolished, or families being driven from their land. The killing never stops because the system itself depends on it — a machinery of control that feeds on fear, humiliation, and the denial of basic human rights.

The Israeli occupation government continues to claim it seeks peace, yet its actions reveal a brutal truth: this is not self-defense, it is domination. The illegal occupation has become permanent. The blockade of Gaza — the world’s largest open-air prison — turns daily life into slow suffocation. Food, medicine, and clean water are withheld as tools of punishment. Starvation is used as a weapon, collective suffering turned into political leverage.

Even during declared ceasefires, the violence does not truly end. Palestinians continue to die — from sniper fire, from airstrikes, from the collapse of hospitals and homes, from the deliberate strangling of aid. Israel’s military control has become inseparable from Palestinian despair. It cannot stop because it has never been held accountable.

To speak of “returning to the status quo” before October 7, 2023, is to speak of returning to occupation, blockade, and humiliation — the very conditions that breed endless conflict. Real peace will never come from rebuilding walls or deepening segregation. It will come only when Palestinians are treated not as enemies to contain but as human beings with equal rights to safety, land, and dignity.

The world must stop accepting endless war as inevitable. It must stop funding and excusing apartheid policies that create starvation and displacement. Gaza does not need more bombs or empty promises — it needs open borders, aid, and the freedom to live.

The killing of Palestinians must end — not paused, not reduced, but ended. Justice, equality, and accountability are the only foundations on which Israelis and Palestinians can ever share true peace.

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Matar’s Gallery 1

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Semantic Warfare

S.T. Salah, 1/04/26


This audit examines how Israeli occupation authorities used official language as a tool of governance over Palestinians from 1948 to 2026. It evaluates how terminology in military orders, administrative regulations, media briefings, and diplomatic communications shaped the description and justification of violence, dispossession, detention, and territorial control, and how language was used to normalise and sustain these policies.

The designation “Israel Defense Forces” functioned as a legitimizing label rather than a descriptive one. The term implied civilian protection, while documented practice showed routine coordination with violent settlers, enforcement of dispossession, demolition of homes, and the application of lethal force and mass detention against a civilian population in Gaza, the West Bank, East Jerusalem, and within Israel itself across different periods. Operations that killed large numbers of civilians or destroyed entire neighborhoods were described as “defensive”, “precision”, or “surgical” strikes, even where independent investigations documented wide area bombardment and foreseeable civilian carnage.

Geographic renaming functioned as a mechanism of erasure. The territory internationally recognized as the West Bank was officially redesignated in Israeli state discourse as “Judea and Samaria”, anchoring it in a Biblical narrative and presenting it as inherently and exclusively Jewish space. This terminology appeared in government ministries, legal texts, and public maps, while the phrase “occupied Palestinian territory” was pushed to the margins or recast as “disputed territories”. The effect was to detach the land from its original Palestinian inhabitants and to present permanent control and settlement as restoration rather than colonization.

The same logic applied to the separation apartheid wall. Israeli authorities and much of the international press were encouraged to adopt the term “security fence” or “security barrier”, even in urban areas where the structure is an eight metre concrete wall that cuts through Palestinian neighborhoods, farmland, and refugee camps. By contrast, the International Court of Justice in its 2004 advisory opinion described it as a wall built in occupied Palestinian territory that violated international law. The choice of “fence” instead of “wall” softened perceptions of permanence, scale, and illegality, turning a massive annexation project into a neutral sounding security installation.

Palestinian identity was routinely diluted through generic labeling. Palestinians were described as “Arabs” or “Israeli Arabs”, collapsing a specific indigenous people into a broad regional category and obscuring their particular legal claims to land, return, and self determination. Within Israel, this terminology was used alongside laws and practices that defined the state as the nation state of the Jewish people alone. In the occupied territory, the phrase “Arab rioters”, “Arab youth”, or “Arab mobs” was applied to Palestinians facing settlement expansion, home demolitions, or military raids, presenting resistance to dispossession as ethnic disorder rather than political protest.

Religious language was operationalized to reframe land seizure as fulfillment rather than violation. References to a “promised land” and to God given rights were invoked in political speeches and settler discourse to justify permanent control over the West Bank and East Jerusalem. This theological framing was used to override or marginalize existing international legal standards on occupation, annexation, and the prohibition of acquiring territory by force. Where law required withdrawal or equality, religious claims were presented as higher authority.

Custodial language was also inverted. Israeli soldiers captured by Palestinian armed groups were almost universally described in Western media and official statements as “hostages”, a term that rightly connotes grave criminal abuse. Palestinians captured by Israeli forces, including children and civilians held without charge in administrative detention, were labeled “security prisoners” or “detainees”, even when they had never been tried, charged, or convicted. The asymmetry presented Israeli captives as victims of crime and Palestinian captives as objects of justified control, normalizing the mass incarceration of Palestinians under military orders.

Technical legal terms were used to conceal the severity of violations. Practices that amount to extrajudicial execution were described as “targeted killings”. Collective punishments such as genocide in Gaza were framed as “operations” with names like “Protective Edge” or “Cast Lead”, masking the mass killings and destruction of entire residential districts under neutral operational branding. Repeated large scale attacks on Gaza were defended in Israeli and allied discourse using the metaphor of “mowing the lawn”, a phrase used by Israeli officials and commentators to describe periodic pogroms intended to “cut back” resistance rather than resolve underlying injustice.

Dehumanising language accompanied these policies. Senior officials and media figures repeatedly described Palestinians as “beasts”, “animals”, or “human animals”, most visibly in October 2023 when the Israeli Defence Minister used the phrase “human animals” in reference to people in Gaza while announcing a “complete siege” that cut off food, water, fuel, and electricity. Such language was echoed in calls to “erase” Gaza or to treat the population as an enemy collective. This was not fringe rhetoric. It was issued from positions of  executive authority and broadcast widely, providing ideological cover for policies that inflicted mass civilian death.

Administrative terminology neutralised control. Areas where protests or home demolitions occurred were designated “closed military zones”, immediately criminalising Palestinian presence and allowing dispersed gatherings to be treated as security offences. Aerial bombardment zones inside Gaza were described as “kill boxes” in military planning but translated into public language as “evacuation zones” or “areas of operation”. Large swathes of Gaza’s farmland were declared “buffer zones”, meaning that any Palestinian entering could be treated as a legitimate target even when unarmed and on their own land.

At the level of individual designation, the label “terrorist” was applied expansively and often without transparent evidentiary standards. Palestinians killed at checkpoints, during night raids, or under rubble were routinely described as “terrorists” or “militants” in initial Israeli statements and media reports, with civilian status acknowledged, if at all, only after external investigation. The same vocabulary was used against Palestinian civil society organisations: in 2021, six prominent NGOs including Al Haq, Addameer, and Defence for Children International – Palestine were declared “terror organisations” by the Israeli Defence Ministry, a move condemned by UN experts and European states as an attack on human rights work rather than a genuine security measure.

Complexity language functioned as postponement. Calls for “context” and “balance” were used to delay moral judgment on clear power asymmetries and well documented crimes. The occupation was presented as a “conflict” between two equal sides. Israeli state crime was framed as “self defence” while Palestinian resistance, including non violent protest and legal advocacy, was described as incitement or extremism. Each demand for more context pushed the moment of conclusion further away, even as documented harm accumulated.

Finally, omission operated as a form of speech. Terms such as apartheid, ethnic cleansing, and genocide were largely absent from official Israeli discourse and much of Western media coverage, even as major human rights organisations concluded that Israeli rule from the river to the sea met the legal definition of apartheid and as UN bodies warned of a serious risk of genocide in Gaza. Where such terms were used by Palestinian voices, UN rapporteurs, or human rights groups, they were attacked as inflammatory or antisemitic rather than engaged on their legal merits.

The review finds that language did not fail through inaccuracy. It succeeded through function. It reassigned victimhood and perpetration, presented racial supremacy and apartheid as security, erased Palestinian presence from land and law, and absorbed urgency into endless discussion. The system remained permanently discussable without becoming politically unacceptable.

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EU’s Values and their Support of the Apartheid State of Israel or Always Being on the Wrong Side of History?

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Sing for Palestine

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‘Israel makes it less safe for everyone’

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