This one popped up today.
In World War II, we didn’t provide aid to Nazi Germany, and, likewise, we shouldn’t provide aid to Hamas-controlled Gaza.ANY QUESTIONS?
That’s an interesting analogy, but it does raise some serious questions:
- How is Gaza, a densely populated territory that has been home to over 2 million civilians – mostly children – at all comparable to a sovereign state, with a powerful military, like Nazi Germany?
- Do you recognize the difference between military aid to a regime we’re at war with and humanitarian aid to civilians who are starving?
- Do you believe that the standards of 80 years ago, and our complacency with the atrocities committed during that war, should be used to justify the atrocities we know are happening today?
Gaza, as a territory, lacks formal industrial capacity and large scale weapons manufacturing. While Hamas has some clandestine workshops and improvised methods to produce rockets and other weapons using salvaged materials, this is a far cry from the industrial war machine that Nazi Germany operated. Much of Gaza’s infrastructure has been reduced to rubble, and lacks meaningful ability to sustain any war production.
If World War II was fought today, we would have an obligation to fight under the standards of modern international law, rather than the rules of 85 years ago. If mass numbers of German civilians were starving, we would have a legal and moral obligation to provide humanitarian aid. The very nature of war has changed since the 1940’s, precisely because of the atrocities of that war. The targeting of civilians and the use of starvation as a weapon, helped us to shape these standards. Actions like the bombing of Dresden or the nuclear attacks against Japan would likely be considered war crimes under current standards. The obligation to shield civilians from suffering is not suspended because of war.
This kind of rhetoric dehumanizes the victims of the Gaza conflict. It seeks to blame civilians for the actions of Hamas and proposes that we let them die as punishment. We can oppose Hamas and recognize the suffering of innocent people. We can both condemn terrorism and uphold our obligation to minimize harm to civilians, even when those we fight do not.
These questions aren’t rhetorical and they demand honest answers. If we allow outdated standards and historical complacency to excuse present day suffering, we are repeating the very horrors we claim to have learned from. Gaza is not Nazi Germany and its people are not enemy combatants. They are civilians caught in the crossfire of geopolitics and militant extremism. Our moral compass should not be calibrated by the worst chapters of history and we should uphold the standards what we’ve vowed to stand behind. Humanitarian aid is a reflection of our humanity, even in the face of adversity. To fail in this moment would show that we’re willing to abandon Gaza when compassion becomes inconvenient.
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