By Seth Mandel
Thursday, December 04, 2025
The bad news is, lots of Americans said Israel was committing genocide during the Gaza war. The good
news is, it turns out they didn’t actually believe Israel was committing
genocide.
What seems to have happened is the following. The media
spent two years shouting that Israel was committing genocide and the public
obliged when asked to regurgitate what had been shoved down their throats.
But genocide has a specific definition. And the Institute
for Governance and Civics at Florida State University has now polled Americans
using more specific questions that get us closer to what Americans mean when
they say “genocide.” Spoiler: They mostly don’t mean genocide.
The IGC gave
respondents five possible answers:
-
Israeli policy seeks to harm civilians in Gaza;
-
Israeli policy is indifferent toward civilian
casualties but doesn’t intentionally target them;
-
Israel tries to avoid civilian casualties but
Hamas’s presence in civilian areas makes that difficult;
-
None of the above;
-
I’m not sure.
Of the general population, 24 percent said they believed
Israel sought to intentionally harm civilians. The same percentage said Israel
tries to avoid civilians but Hamas makes it difficult. Another 12 percent said
Israel is indifferent, 13 percent had views not reflected in the choices, and
the largest response—27 percent—said they didn’t know.
IGC also polled Floridians, who were more willing to give
Israel the benefit of the doubt than the general population.
The key here is that genocide requires intent to destroy
not just civilians but the specific population, and to judge something as
genocidal requires one to determine that genocide is “the only inference that
could reasonably be drawn from the acts in question.”
This is part of why the claim that Israel committed
genocide was so unserious: Definitionally, a genocide did not take place. There
are plenty of other words that can be used to describe the war, but “genocide”
has been indisputably ruled out unless one changes the definition of the word,
as some NGOs tried to do. But again, that would also be an admission that
Israel was innocent of the charge.
Israel’s civilian-to-combatant fatality rate was
unprecedentedly low for urban warfare, and the intent issue becomes absurd when
you remember that Israel sent its military into Gaza to rescue hostages that
Hamas refused to return.
But back to the poll. Even the response that Israel
intentionally harms civilians doesn’t necessarily meet the definition of
genocide. So if about 8 in 10 don’t think Israel is intentionally
harming civilians, it’s likely that about 9 out of 10 don’t think Israel
committed genocide.
That doesn’t mean there aren’t warning signs for Israel
and its supporters, even in the IGC poll. Just because respondents don’t
believe Israel committed genocide doesn’t mean they approve of Israel’s
actions. As one can see, the poll shows plenty of criticism of Israel’s
prosecution of the war.
Moreover, in the IGC poll—as in virtually every such
survey—the trend is clear: Younger Americans of either party are tougher on
Israel than their elders. But there is still a wide partisan gap: The farther
left one goes on the spectrum, the more likely are respondents to assume ill
intent on Israel’s part.
Another notable aspect of the poll is that there is a ton
of uncertainty among respondents, so presumably a fair number are persuadable
in one direction or another. Uncertainty regarding Israel’s intent is
incompatible with a finding of genocide.
Two lessons. One, by definition the people who accuse
Israel of genocide are feigning a certainty they almost surely don’t or can’t
possess, at least from afar and during the war. As a rule, beware such people,
especially when they are rewarded professionally for their dishonesty.
Two, anti-Israel activists have killed the concept of
genocide. They have turned it into just another descriptive term meaning one
side lost the war badly. There will continue to be victims of actual genocide
in the world, and they will all be harmed by the “genocide” fraud perpetrated
by professional anti-Zionists.
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