Comment

On Gaza Body Counts and the Numbers Game: A double standard between Israel and Gaza, Israel and the world

11
kristina3711/29/2012 5:11:43 pm PST

re: #7 philosophus invidius

Goldberg’s claim is correct—to a point. Lopsidedness of civilian causalities is not itself proof of criminal behavior, and for just the reasons he gives. But it is still a worrisome sign.

Unintended but foreseeable civilian deaths are permissible only when they are the by-product of an action that is justified by “military necessity,” or when the deaths are “proportionate” to the military advantages of the action. But since Hamas seems mostly impotent at carrying out their (murderous) plans, it is n)ot obvious that the deaths of innocents in Gaza can be justified in those terms.

One rough test for this would be: would Israel be willing to carry out the same actions with the same foreseeable civilian deaths if Hamas were hiding their rockets and fighters in Tel Aviv (assuming they posed the same threat in other respects)? Would the civilian deaths there still be “worth it” to create a deterrence and kill a few Hamas leaders?

Actually, there’s another factor at play here. And that is another highly significant reason why casualties in Gaza are so much higher than those in Israel. (And its something that is never or infrequently mentioned in the politically correct mainstream media): Why Israel had many fewer civilian casualties than Gaza