Creating a Cover for Genocide
Preventing Criticism of Israel by Defining It as
Antisemitic
by Aviva
Chomsky | Aug
5, 2025
https://original.antiwar.com/Aviva_Chomsky/2025/08/04/creating-a-cover-for-genocide/
Originally appeared at TomDispatch.
In July 2025, the Massachusetts legislature’s
Judiciary Committee heard testimony on a bill to make it the 38th state to follow the federal
government, 45 other countries (almost all of them in the global North), and
more than 50 U.S. local governments in adopting a strange definition of
antisemitism.
In 2016, the International Holocaust Remembrance
Alliance (IHRA), a
group of 35 mostly European countries, drafted what it called a working
definition of antisemitism.
The Alliance had been founded in 1998 to promote Holocaust education and, in
its own words, to “strengthen governmental cooperation to work towards a world
without genocide.” All too sadly, right now, its definition is being used to do
the opposite: it’s helping to criminalize opposition to genocide.
Is It Really About Antisemitism?
Most anti-racist organizations, like the NAACP,
the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination
Committee, the League of
United Latin American Citizens, and Stop Anti-Asian and Pacific Islander Hate, do not, in fact, offer a specific definition of
racism. Instead, they simply work to combat discrimination and fight for equal
opportunity and basic human and civil rights.
Jews in the United States don’t, in fact, face the
same kinds of systemic racism the people that formed the above
organizations face. Unlike them, Jews tend to be disproportionately high
income, highly educated professionals.
So, in the IHRA’s list of examples of antisemitism, not one refers to
inequality or structural discrimination. Instead, they focus mostly on ideas
and speech — and in particular things said about Israel. And what those
examples, in fact, tend to do is turn the definition of antisemitism into a
thinly veiled tool for use in prohibiting criticism of any sort of Israel.
The IHRA’s definition itself appears relatively straightforward, even
if it focuses on thought and speech rather than structures of racism:
“Antisemitism is a certain perception of Jews, which may be expressed as hatred
toward Jews. Rhetorical and physical manifestations of antisemitism are
directed toward Jewish or non-Jewish individuals and/or their property, toward
Jewish community institutions and religious facilities.”
What follows, however, is a confusing and
contradictory amalgam of 11 “examples of antisemitism in public life,” six of
which focus on political debate that raises questions about Zionism, Israel as
an ethnostate, or Israel’s actions.
Creating legal avenues to suppress what would
otherwise be protected political speech about Israel is a major reason that the
IHRA and its allies have felt the need to turn their definition into law. And
advocates for the legal adoption of that definition claim that it’s necessary because antisemitism is on
the rise in this country. But the expansive and confusing examples of
antisemitism that the definition relies on actually make it impossible to know
whether such a statement is, in fact, accurate. The organizations that use the IHRA definition to track
antisemitism won’t tell us whether what is on the rise is actually antisemitism
or simply opposition to Israel and its increasingly unnerving actions in the
Middle East.
In addition, the IHRA text is based on the assumption
that all Jews, by definition, identify fully with Israel and with the nature of
Israel as a Jewish state. And so, for the IHRA, challenging “the state of
Israel, conceived as a Jewish collectivity” is in itself an example of
antisemitism.
Yet the document also denounces as antisemitic the
stereotyping of Jews and, in particular, “accusing Jewish citizens of being
more loyal to Israel, or to the alleged priorities of Jews worldwide, than to
the interests of their own nations.”
Notice a contradiction? While the IHRA claims that
stereotyping or caricaturing Jews, or attributing a particular version of
pro-Israel politics to Jews, is antisemitic, its own definition stereotypes,
caricatures, and attributes a particular politics about Israel to Jews.
Legal and Logical Contradictions: A Double Standard
for Israel
After suggesting that “the state of Israel, conceived
as a Jewish collectivity” must not be challenged, the Alliance then does step
back and agree that “criticism of Israel similar to that leveled against any
other country cannot be regarded as antisemitic.”
However, there is no other country that is conceived
as a Jewish collectivity. To demand that criticism of Israel must be “similar”
to that leveled against other countries to be legitimate is just another way of
saying that no such criticism can truly be legitimate.
The closest example of a country with a diverse
population conceived as the collectivity of a single group might be apartheid
South Africa, which of course was the target of widespread global condemnation.
Another parallel today might be Hindu nationalism in India under Prime Minister
Narendra Modi. But criticism of Hindu nationalism, like that of White
nationalism in South Africa, has never been proscribed or punished for being a
form of discrimination. (No matter that Donald Trump deemed White South Africans an oppressed minority!)
In yet another contradiction, the document denounces
“applying double standards [to Israel] by requiring of it a behavior not
expected or demanded of any other democratic nation” as constituting
antisemitism. In fact, however, its definition applies a double standard to
Israel by proscribing language and criticism that no institution proscribes
with respect to any other country.
The United States imposes no legal prohibitions on
challenging ethnonationalism in other lands. I am free to criticize India,
Hungary, or any other country, democratic or otherwise, that in any way
privileges one race, ethnicity, or religion over others — but I can’t criticize
Israel for doing the same when it comes to Palestinians. I’m free to criticize
racism, discrimination, and racist violence anywhere else on earth — but not in
Israel. If any other country creates the equivalent of concentration camps or
commits genocide, we can denounce it and try to stop it — but if Israel does
that, I will be accused of antisemitism for telling the truth about what Israel
is doing.
According to the IHRA, we can state those truths about
any other country committing war crimes and genocide, but not about what Israel
is doing in Gaza. Given what we are witnessing in Gaza, that is not just a
double standard, it’s impunity for genocide.
Is Accusing Israel of Genocide Antisemitic?
The IHRA further adds that “drawing comparisons of
contemporary Israeli policy to that of the Nazis” is a manifestation of
antisemitism. This prohibition extends not only to direct comparisons, but to any claim that Israel is by its very nature an
ethno-state, or that it is currently engaging in genocide, creating concentration camps, planning for mass expulsions, or engaging in other
war crimes or crimes against humanity.
But what does it mean if a country is granted blanket
impunity against any accusation of racism, war crimes, or human rights
violations? The IHRA would prohibit journalists, human rights organizations,
international organizations, international legal groups, and scholars from
investigating, or denouncing what the country is doing, much less taking action
to restrain it. Indeed, some people
from these groups have
been accused and sanctioned for their investigations, while others self-censor out of fear of being seen as antisemitic.
In short, the IHRA itself commits two of the acts that
it claims to oppose: it creates a double standard for Israel and an
impenetrable cover for committing genocide.
Major human rights organizations like Amnesty
International and Human Rights
Watch have
concluded that Israel is indeed committing genocide in Gaza. Close to two dozen
countries — almost all
from the global South — along with the Non-Aligned Movement, the Arab League,
and the African Union, have joined with South Africa to accuse Israel of
genocidal acts before the International Court of Justice. And all of those
claims have been duly condemned by Israel and its allies.
Israeli genocide historian Omer Bartov proceeded
cautiously with his own judgment. In November 2023, he wrote: “As a historian of genocide, I believe that there is
no proof that genocide is currently taking place in Gaza, although it is very
likely that war crimes, and even crimes against humanity, are happening.” He
believed then that genocide was indeed possible in Gaza and urged the world to
mobilize to prevent it.
Despite global protest, Israel’s assault on Gaza only
continued. In July 2025, Bartov wrote: “My inescapable conclusion has become that Israel is
committing genocide against the Palestinian people. Having grown up in a
Zionist home, lived the first half of my life in Israel, served in the I.D.F.
[Israeli Defense Forces] as a soldier and officer and spent most of my career
researching and writing on war crimes and the Holocaust, this was a painful
conclusion to reach, and one that I resisted as long as I could. But I have
been teaching classes on genocide for a quarter of a century. I can recognize
one when I see one.” Ongoing denial of the genocide, he added, “will cause
unmitigated damage not just to the people of Gaza and Israel but also to the
system of international law established in the wake of the horrors of the
Holocaust, designed to prevent such atrocities from happening ever again.”
In fact, Bartov observes, there is now an overwhelming
consensus among genocide scholars (who study comparative genocide or different
genocides worldwide) that what we are witnessing in Gaza is indeed a genocide.
Holocaust scholars mostly hold the opposite view and many have argued, in line
with the IHRA, that any such accusation against Israel could only be motivated
by antisemitism. “The Holocaust has been… relentlessly invoked by the state of
Israel and its defenders as a cover-up for the crimes of the IDF,” concludes
Bartov, citing an array of publications that accuse genocide scholars of
antisemitism for simply describing what Israel is doing in Gaza and quoting
Israeli officials about their aims.
What About Other War Crimes — Or Any Crimes at All?
Yet another IHRA example of antisemitism refers to
“blood libel,” which it doesn’t define, but which generally refers to the grim
myth that Jews killed non-Jewish children to use their blood in rituals. The
IHRA text cites “using the symbols and images associated with classic
antisemitism (e.g., claims of Jews killing Jesus or blood libel) to
characterize Israel or Israelis” as examples of antisemitism.
And such accusations haven’t just been made against
critics of the present war in Gaza outside of Israel. When Israeli politician
Yair Golan spoke out against Israeli atrocities in Gaza, Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu immediately accused him of “blood libel.” When the Israeli
newspaper Ha’aretz published an
investigative report with
soldiers’ testimonies about being ordered to shoot at Gazans approaching
humanitarian aid sites, the paper was subject to the same accusation. When
Israeli opposition politicians accused Netanyahu of prolonging the war in the
service of his own political interests, the Israeli ambassador to the
U.S. accused them, too, of “blood libel.”
Is it antisemitic for the World Court to hear a case
accusing Israel of the crime of genocide in Gaza? Benjamin Netanyahu has
openly claimed so, as did the Anti-Defamation
League, the American
Jewish Committee, and
the U.S. Combat
Antisemitism Movement. Is
it antisemitic for genocide scholars to study this particular case of mass
killing, just because its perpetrator happens to be Israel? Is it antisemitic
for Israeli journalist Dahlia Scheindlin to point out that “Israel’s plan to herd 600,000 Palestinians
into a special camp at Gaza’s southern border with Egypt” is in fact a plan to
create the equivalent of a concentration camp?
The impunity that such a proscription attempts to
grant Israel is immense.
There’s More: It’s Legally Binding
Although the IHRA originally insisted that its
definition was “non-legally binding,” it is, in fact, becoming so. The group
itself and major Jewish
organizations in
the United States have launched political campaigns to promote their definition
and turn it into law.
By mid-2025, 46 countries had adopted the definition. President Trump implemented it
with an executive
order in 2019,
citing Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that prohibits discrimination
based on race, color, or national origin for any program that gets federal
financial assistance. As a result, Title VI proscriptions can now be applied to
a person who criticizes Zionism, who uses the term genocide to describe
Israel’s slaughter in Gaza, or who advocates the nonviolent Boycott, Divestment, and
Sanctions movement or indeed any withdrawal of U.S. support for what Israel is
now doing.
The Biden administration maintained Trump’s policy and the current Trump
administration, and universities now pressured into following in its footsteps,
have used it to fire, punish, or, in the case of the government, deport people under the guise of preventing
antisemitism. In fact, Harvard
University’s decision
in January 2025 to become the first Ivy League university to join the trend, adopting the
definition (followed by Yale in April), specifically designated “Zionists” as a protected class. Thus, the
policy prohibits “antisemitic, racist, sexist, homophobic, anti-Zionist,
anti-Arab, Islamophobic, anti-LDS, or anti-Catholic” behaviors.
The IHRA document was not written to be turned into
law, and even some of its authors have protested this use. Yet there it is in law and policy
throughout the United States and Europe.
Weaponizing Antisemitism as a Shield to Enable
Genocide
The IHRA’S definition goes far beyond the obvious one,
that of stereotyping, prejudice against, or harm against Jews, and has little
to do with preventing genocide. It is an eminently political definition that
tries to prevent criticism of Israel by defining such criticism as antisemitic.
Turning it into law heavily limits freedom of speech and political debate — and
has nothing to do with antisemitism.
As Israel, in fact, continues to carry out mass
killings of Palestinians, attempting to destroy every institution of
Palestinian life and culture in Gaza, and herding them into militarized camps,
this definition has been mobilized to try to silence any hint that it might be
engaging in war crimes, creating concentration camps, or committing genocide.
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