The Genocidal Partnership of Israel and the United States
by Norman
Solomon | Jul
29, 2025
For decades, countless U.S. officials have proclaimed
that the bonds between the United States and Israel are unbreakable. Now, the
ties that bind are laced with genocide. The two countries function as accomplices while
methodical killing continues in Gaza, with both societies directly – and
differently – making it all possible.
The policies of Israel’s government are aligned with
the attitudes of most Jewish Israelis. In a recent survey, three-quarters of them (and 64 percent of all Israelis) said
they largely agreed with the statement that “there are no innocent people in
Gaza” – nearly half of whom are children.
“There is no more ‘permitted’ and ‘forbidden’ with
regard to Israel’s evilness toward the Palestinians,” dissident columnist
Gideon Levy wrote three months ago in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.
“It is permitted to kill dozens of captive detainees and to starve to death an
entire people.” The biggest Israeli media outlets echo and amplify sociopathic
voices. “Genocide talk has spread into all TV studios as legitimate talk.
Former colonels, past members of the defense establishment, sit on panels and
call for genocide without batting an eye.”
Last week, Levy provided an update: “The weapon of deliberate starvation is working. The
Gaza ‘Humanitarian’ Foundation, in turn, has become a tragic success. Not only
have hundreds of Gazans been shot to death while waiting in line for
packages distributed by the GHF, but there are others who don’t manage to reach
the distribution points, dying of hunger. Most of these are children and
babies…. They lie on hospital floors, on bare beds, or carried on donkey carts.
These are pictures from hell. In Israel, many people reject these photos, doubting
their veracity. Others express their joy and pride on seeing starving babies.”
Unimpeded, a daily process continues to exterminate
more and more of the 2.1 million Palestinian people who remain in Gaza –
bombing and shooting civilians while blocking all but a pittance of the food
and medicine needed to sustain life. After destroying Gaza’s hospitals, Israel
is still targeting healthcare workers (killing at least 70 in May and June), as well as first responders and journalists.
The barbarism is in sync with the belief that “no
innocent people” are in Gaza. A relevant observation came from Aldous Huxley in 1936, the same year
that the swastika went onto Germany’s flag: “The propagandist’s purpose is to
make one set of people forget that certain other sets of people are
human.” Kristallnacht happened two years later.
Renowned genocide scholar Omer Bartov explained during
an interview on Democracy Now! in mid-July
that genocide is “the attempt to destroy not simply people in large numbers,
but to destroy them as members of a group. The intent is to destroy the group
itself. And it doesn’t mean that you have to kill everyone. It means that the
group will be destroyed and that it will not be able to reconstitute itself as
a group. And to my mind, this is precisely what Israel is trying to do.”
Bartov, who is Jewish and spent the first half of his
life in Israel, said:
“What I see in the Israeli public is an extraordinary
indifference by large parts of the public to what Israel is doing and what it’s
done in the name of Israeli citizens in Gaza. In part, it has to do with the
fact that the Israeli media has decided not to report on the horrors that
the IDF [Israel Defense Forces] is perpetrating in Gaza. You simply
will not see it on Israeli television. If some pictures happen to come in, they
are presented only as material that might be used by foreign propaganda against
Israel. Now, Israeli citizens can, of course, use other media resources. We can
all do that. But most of them prefer not to. And I would say that while about
30 percent of the population in Israel is completely in favor of what is
happening, and, in fact, is egging the government and the army on, I think the
vast majority of the population simply does not want to know about it.”
In Israel, “compassion for Palestinians is taboo
except among a fringe of radical activists,” Adam Shatz wrote last month in the London Review of Books.
At the same time, “the catastrophe of the last two years far exceeds that of
the Nakba.” The consequences “are already being felt well
beyond Gaza: in the West Bank, where Israeli soldiers and settlers have
presided over an accelerated campaign of displacement and killing (more than a
thousand West Bank Palestinians have been killed since 7 October); inside
Israel, where Palestinian citizens are subject to increasing levels of
ostracism and intimidation; in the wider region, where Israel has established
itself as a new Sparta; and in the rest of the world, where the inability of
Western powers to condemn Israel’s conduct – much less bring it to an end – has
made a mockery of the rules-based order that they claim to uphold.”
The loudest preaching for a “rules-based order” has
come from the U.S. government, which makes and breaks international rules at will. During this
century, in the Middle East, the U.S.-Israel duo has vastly outdone all other
entities combined in the categories of killing, maiming, and terrorizing. In
addition to the joint project of genocide in Gaza, and the USA’s long war on
Iraq, the United States and Israel have often exercised an assumed prerogative
to attack Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, and Iran, along with encore U.S. missile
strikes on Iraq as recently as last year.
Israel’s grisly performance as “a new Sparta” in the
region is coproduced by the Pentagon, with the military and intelligence operations of the two nations intricately
entangled. The Israeli military has been able to turn Gaza into a genocide zone
with at least 70 percent of its arsenal coming from the United States.
While writing an afterword about the war on Gaza for
the paperback edition of War Made Invisible, I mulled over the relevance of my book’s subtitle:
“How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine.” As the carnage in
Gaza worsened, the reality became clearer that the Orwellian-named Israel
Defense Forces and U.S. Defense Department are essentially part of the same
military machine. Their command structures are different, but they are part of
the same geopolitical Goliath.
“The new era in which Israel, backed by the U.S.,
dominates the Middle East is likely to see even more violence and instability
than in the past,” longtime war correspondent Patrick Cockburn wrote this month. The lethal violence from
Israeli-American teamwork is of such magnitude that it epitomizes international
state terrorism. The genocide in Gaza shows the lengths to which the alliance
is willing and able to go.
While public opinion is very different in Israel and
the United States, the genocidal results of the governments’ policies are
indistinguishable.
American public opinion about arming Israel is
measurable. As early as June 2024, a CBS News poll found that 61 percent of the public said that
the U.S. should not “send weapons and supplies to Israel.” Since then, support
for Israel has continued to erode.
In sharp contrast, on Capitol Hill, the support for
arming Israel is measurably high. When Bernie Sanders’s bills to cut off some
military aid to Israel came to a vote last November, just 19 out of 100 senators voted yes. Very few of his
colleagues voice anywhere near the extent of Sanders’s moral outrage as he
keeps speaking out on the Senate floor.
In the House, only 26 out of 435 members have chosen to become
cosponsors of H.R.3565, a bill introduced more than two months ago by Rep.
Delia Ramirez that would prevent the U.S. government from sending certain bombs
to Israel.
“Israel is the largest cumulative recipient of U.S.
foreign assistance since World War II,” the Congressional Research
Service reports. During just the first 12 months after the war on
Gaza began in October 2023, Brown University’s Costs of War project found, the
“U.S. spending on Israel’s military operations and related U.S operations in
the region” added up to $23 billion.
The resulting profit bonanza for U.S. military
contractors is notable. So is the fact that the U.S.-Israel partnership exerts
great American leverage in the Middle East – where two-thirds of
the world’s oil reserves are located.
The politics of genocide in the United States involves
papering over the big gap between the opinions of the electorate and the
actions of the U.S. government. While the partnership between the governments
of Israel and the United States has never been stronger, the partnership
between the people of Israel and the United States has never been weaker. But
in the USA, consent of the governed has not been necessary to continue the axis
of genocide.
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