By Noah Rothman
Wednesday, September 17, 2025
Another day, another United Nations–sponsored report
accusing Israel of engineering a “genocide” in Gaza.
This week, the U.N.’s Independent International
Commission of Inquiry (COI) claimed after a two-year investigation that the Jewish
state is engaged in an effort to “destroy, in whole or in part, Palestinians in
the Gaza Strip as a group.” Israel protested, of course. Jerusalem noted that
the commission’s findings had been previously debunked. They observed that the
commission’s chairwoman, South Africa’s Navi Pillay, had been accused of
anti-Israel bias by many, including U.S. lawmakers, before she resigned her
role. They noted that Pillay wasn’t alone. She was joined in exile by onetime commissioner
Miloon Kothari, who was forced to resign in 2022 after he alleged that social
media was “controlled largely by the Jewish lobby” (remarks Pillay defended).
Other critics of the organization’s findings note that it
relies on flawed inputs from anti-Israel interests. Among them, a joint
investigation by The Guardian and +972 Magazine, which alleged that 83 percent of
fatalities in Gaza — 44,100 — were civilians compared with just 8,900 “militant
deaths.” Critics note that the conclusion, which was derived from an Israeli
Defense Forces database, does not include many Hamas and Palestinian Islamic
Jihad terrorists who were killed but not identified. Nor does it include Gazans
who participated in the fighting but were not members of either group, or Hamas
agents and assets who were not members of its “militant” wing. Indeed, the IDF chided The Guardian for relying on information
relayed to it by unreliable or compromised sources inside the Strip.
But the U.N. ran with it anyway. Of course, they did.
They don’t care.
It’s the same story every time. Whether it’s lurid tales of starving
children mercilessly executed for no other reason than to compound the
indignity of begging for “scraps” with the insult of summary murder, the
widespread deliberate famine in Gaza that media outlets cannot seem to confirm,
or the findings of a commission of “genocide” scholars that has almost no
barrier to entry and seems to exist only to promulgate sordid allegations
against Israel, the pattern repeats. The scandalizing allegation is widely
reported, but by the time it is debunked, there’s another scandalizing
allegation that has hijacked the national conversation.
We’re getting a taste of this tactic on the domestic
level now, as the American left throws all the chaff it can find into the air
in the hope of misdirecting good-faith observers away from the obvious fact of
Charlie Kirk’s alleged murderer’s affinity for left-of-center politics.
It couldn’t be that the shooter left a variety of
ideologically indicative messages on the bullets he left behind in his sniper’s
perch. No, it must be that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives’ agents don’t understand how to read manufacturers’ markings on
bullet casings — not like the sleuths on the internet. The killer had to be
“ultra-MAGA,” a racist “Groyper,” and an aficionado of podcaster Nick Fuentes,
a dogmatic right-winger who hated Kirk not because he was conservative but because
he was “insufficiently radical.” And if you don’t believe that, maybe you’ll
believe that this was a motiveless killing — violence “not driven by any
obvious political ideology.”
It’s exhausting. That’s probably the point of exercises
like this — to exhaust. The claims on offer may not be particularly compelling
individually. But, in the aggregate, they are overwhelming. And if you bother
to dwell on any one of them, well, you’re just a crank. Everyone has already
moved on to the next sensational allegation. Where’ve you been?
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