public

Are there well-founded reasons to believe that Israel is attempting to eradicate the Palestinian population in Gaza?

(A legal-evidence brief, with sources)

Thesis

Yes. There are credible, documented grounds—from the UN Commission of Inquiry, the International Court of Justice’s (ICJ) provisional measures, major human-rights organizations, UN humanitarian bodies, and even Israeli NGOs—that Israel is committing acts enumerated in the Genocide Convention with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, Palestinians in Gaza. Israel rejects this characterization; the ICJ’s merits judgment is pending. But the existing public record already meets the bar for reasonable grounds to believe genocidal intent and conduct are present. (OHCHR)


1) What genocide requires (and what it doesn’t)

Implication: “Trying to eradicate” can be evidenced by policies that make survival impossible (siege, starvation, water denial, healthcare collapse), even if destruction unfolds over months or years—not days. (United Nations)


2) Evidence category A: Official statements indicating destructive intent

These statements are the very type the ICJ and UN bodies examine as direct or circumstantial evidence of genocidal intent. (International Court of Justice)


3) Evidence category B: Pattern of conduct that destroys conditions of life

These are classic examples of Article II(c): deliberately inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about destruction. (United Nations)


4) Formal findings to date


5) Addressing the “If they really intended eradication, they’d do it in two days” claim

This argument mistakes method for intent:


6) What remains contested (and what doesn’t)


7) Bottom line

Given (i) explicit policy declarations constricting life-sustaining aid, (ii) a sustained pattern that engineers starvation, thirst, disease, and medical system collapse, and (iii) authoritative findings (UN COI; ICJ provisional measures; HRW; Israeli NGOs), there are strong, fact-based reasons to believe Israel is attempting to destroy, at least in part, the Palestinian population in Gaza—that is, attempting eradication in the sense contemplated by the Genocide Convention. Dismissing this as a “conspiracy theory” ignores the public record amassed by mainstream institutions. (OHCHR)


Further reading (starter set)


A note on language

This brief uses “eradication” to reflect Article II’sintent to destroy, in whole or in part.” In law, intent + acts suffice; speed or total success does not. That’s why famine engineering, water deprivation, and healthcare destruction—if intentional and group-directed—are genocidal, even when the killing is indirect and protracted. (United Nations)