By Seth Mandel
Friday, February 21, 2025
The revelation
that Hamas lied about how and when and by whose hand the Bibas children were
killed has some crucial implications for any remotely intellectually honest
person.
To put a fine point on it: Hamas lies about everything,
and therefore Hamas has lied about everything. Hamas propaganda has
shaped the world’s understanding of this conflict, and every syllable of it has
been false.
One is tempted to interject here that an intellectually
honest person would have already come to this conclusion and therefore perhaps
there are precious few minds left to be changed. But integrity compels us to
say what is true anyway.
Hamas’s lies about the Bibas family were shocking even by
Hamas standards. Shiri and her two sons Ariel and Kfir were taken from their
homes on Oct. 7, 2023 when Ariel was 4 and Kfir was less than a year old.
Throughout the war, Hamas claimed they were killed in an Israeli airstrike.
Yarden, Shiri’s husband and the kids’ father, was also taken hostage but held
separately from his family. Hamas taunted him repeatedly, once even on camera
for a propaganda video, about his family’s fate. Yarden was released this
month.
Yesterday, Hamas returned the bodies of Ariel and Kfir
and a third hostage, Oded Lifshitz, as well as a body they claimed was Shiri
but turned out to have been a random unidentified Palestinian woman.
That wasn’t the only surprise revealed during Israel’s
forensic examination of the bodies. The boys were not killed in an Israeli
airstrike; they were murdered by their Palestinian captors, who strangled the
children with their bare hands and then mutilated their bodies in order to try
and obfuscate their cause of death.
The claim that the Bibases were killed in an IDF
airstrike was believable enough—and therefore was widely believed. Even if that
had been true, it wouldn’t have mitigated Hamas’s responsibility one iota. But
since much of the world, from media to governments to activist organizations,
was looking for any excuse to absolve Hamas and the Palestinians and to cast
Israel’s counteroffensive as overly aggressive and counterproductive to boot,
its underlying assumptions were accepted and repeated and shaped debate over
the war even within Israel itself. And since Israel and the U.S. are
democracies, public debate shapes war policy and outcomes as well.
In this way, Hamas has stage managed the war to an
unprecedented degree.
It’s not as though we hadn’t caught Hamas in lies
throughout the war, of course. After all, there are two kinds of Hamas
statements: lies that have been exposed and lies that have yet to be exposed.
There are the big lies worth briefly recounting but which
are by no means all of them. Hamas managed to get pretty much every major
newspaper and network to double the actual numbers of civilian casualties
(there were about 25,000 all considered) and inflated
the overall casualty figures. Not only was there no genocide in Gaza, there
wasn’t even disproportionate collateral damage.
Hamas and its NGO mouthpieces got the world to repeat the
threat of looming famine, and the International Criminal Court put out a
warrant for Benjamin Netanyahu’s arrest on conclusively
debunked charges of intentional starvation. (It turned out that Hamas,
however, was intentionally starving Israeli hostages.)
Early on, Hamas blamed Israel for an explosion at a
hospital in Gaza and claimed hundreds were killed. By the time it became clear
that a Palestinian rocket was to blame, mob protests against Israel and the
U.S. broke out across the world and President Biden’s meetings with Arab
leaders were canceled.
Hamas has also lied about hostages, announcing the deaths
of captives who were still alive. In one case, the terror group forced a female
captive to participate in the staging of her own death.
Those big lies spawned a thousand little lies. But the
point is that reporting on the conflict, which led to weapons embargoes by
allies against Israel, was based on lies every step of the way. If you got your
news from the New York Times or the Washington Post or the BBC or
any number of others, you followed an entirely different war—one that didn’t
happen.
The only way to have your outlet publish a factual
accounting of the conflict is by assuming every statement by Hamas is a lie
until definitively proved otherwise. If not, you’ll end up with the credibility
of—well, of Hamas.
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