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When the Lie of ‘Genocide’ Becomes an Alibi for Murder

Mourners carry the casket of 10-year-old Matilda the youngest victim of a mass shooting at Australia’s Bondi Beach targeting an event for the Jewish festival of Hanukkah on Sunday, at Chevra Kadisha Memorial Hall, in Sydney, Australia, Dec. 18, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Hollie Adams

Every era has its blood libel. Ours dresses it up in infographics.

After Jews were murdered at a Hanukkah celebration at Bondi Beach, a predictable response emerged from a familiar corner of the political and media ecosystem. Not grief. Not horror. Not moral clarity. Instead, a reflexive incantation: “Oh, but the genocide.”

It is not analysis. It is an alibi.

Across social media, posts circulated insisting that the massacre must be understood — if not excused — because of alleged Israeli “genocide” in Gaza.

One widely shared graphic claimed that Gaza had suffered the equivalent of “42,500 Bondi terrorist attacks” or “212 September 11ths.” It also declares, in block letters over a grayscale image of a crowded mass of people, that “680,000 DEAD, asserting — without evidence — that 380,000 of them were children under five.

The sources cited were not demographic agencies, conflict-monitoring organizations, or peer-reviewed studies, but activist commentators engaging in speculative modeling stacked atop speculative modeling, amplified through repetition until assertion became “fact.”

This is not a mistake. It is how blood libels work.

The structure is ancient. Jews are accused of a uniquely monstrous crime — once ritual murder, later poisoning wells and causing the bubonic plague, now “genocide.” The accusation is presented as so morally overwhelming, so self-evident, that violence against Jews becomes not merely understandable, but provoked. The Jew is transformed from victim into cause.

That is precisely what we are witnessing now.

Another viral post following the Bondi murders lamented that “a small, powerful, and vocal group” was demanding silence about the “genocide we’ve watched for the last two-plus years,” implying that Jewish influence was suppressing truth and accountability.

The phrasing is not incidental. It echoes centuries of antisemitic mythology about Jewish power, repackaged in the language of progressive grievance.

Jews are again cast as manipulators of conscience and distorters of reality. A group that must be “resisted.”

Resisted how? Apparently, with bullets.

The now ubiquitous “680,000 dead” claim is the evidentiary backbone of this moral inversion. It is not a statistic; it is a fabrication — an extreme numerical inflation untethered from census data, excess-mortality analysis, or any recognized conflict-monitoring methodology. No reputable international body endorses it. No demographic baseline supports it. No transparent accounting explains it.

But truth is beside the point. Blood libels are not designed to inform. They are designed to license — to rationalize and justify antisemitic violence.

In the Middle Ages, the accusation that Jews murdered Christian children justified pogroms. In the 20th century, claims of Jewish malevolence justified exclusion, expulsion, and extermination.

In British Mandatory Palestine, the libel that Jews sought to “destroy Al-Aqsa” — first aggressively promoted in the 1920s by Nazi collaborator Haj Amin al-Husseini — became a recurring justification for massacres of Jews. His ideological heirs revived it on October 7, 2023, invoking it as moral cover for invasion, rape, and slaughter.

In the twenty-first century, the charge that Jews — or the Jewish State — are committing “genocide” serves the same function.

That is why Bondi Beach was not an aberration. It was the foreseeable endpoint of a narrative ecosystem that has spent years insisting that Jews are the ultimate criminals of history, that Jewish self-defense is mass murder, and that Jewish suffering is, at best, inconvenient.

Notice what is absent from the “Oh, but the genocide” refrain: facts, intent, proportionality, or law.

Genocide is not defined by vibes, viral videos, or comparative body-count memes. It is a specific legal crime requiring demonstrable intent to destroy a people as such.

The facts in Gaza — however one judges individual Israeli policies — fail that test completely. Population growth in Gaza, evacuation warnings, humanitarian corridors, wartime medical coordination, vaccination campaigns, and battlefield practices demonstrate the opposite of genocidal behavior.

But precision would break the spell and destroy the genocide-libel, so precision must be rejected.

Once “genocide” is asserted as dogma, everything follows. Jewish fear becomes hysteria. Jewish self-defense becomes proof of guilt. Jewish deaths become footnotes — or worse, justified outcomes.

This is how slogans become bullets.

Bondi Beach was not caused by “two years of genocide.” That’s a blood-libel. But it was caused by years of moral corrosion: the normalization of a libel so vast that it renders Jewish life negotiable. The people sharing these graphics may not have pulled the trigger — but they helped write the permission slip.

History has seen this movie before. It never ends well.

Micha Danzig is an attorney, former IDF soldier, and former NYPD officer. He writes widely on Israel, Zionism, antisemitism, and Jewish history. He serves on the board of Herut North America.

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Downed Planes Raise New Perils for Trump as Tehran Hunts for Missing US Pilot

Traces of an Iranian missile attack in Tehran’s sky, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran, in Tehran, Iran, April 3, 2026. Photo: Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS

Two US warplanes were downed over Iran and the Gulf, Iranian and US officials said on Friday, with two pilots rescued and a third still missing and being hunted by Tehran’s forces.

The incidents show the risks still faced by US and Israeli aircraft over Iran despite assertions from US President Donald Trump and his Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth that their forces had total control of the skies.

The first plane, a two-seat US F-15E jet, was shot down by Iranian fire, officials in both countries said.

The second plane, an A-10 Warthog fighter aircraft, was hit by Iranian fire and crashed over Kuwait, with the pilot ejecting, two US officials said.

Two Blackhawk helicopters involved in the search effort for the missing pilot were hit by Iranian fire but made it out of Iranian airspace, the two US officials told Reuters.

The degree of injuries among the crew of the aircraft remained unclear. The status and whereabouts of the missing F-15E crew member was not publicly known.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps said it was combing an area near where the pilot’s plane came down in southwestern Iran and the regional governor promised a commendation for anyone who captured or killed “forces of the hostile enemy.”

Iranians, who have been pummeled by American air power for weeks, posted gleeful messages celebrating the plane downings. Iran’s Parliament Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf said on X that the U.S. and Israel’s war had been “downgraded from regime change” to a hunt for their pilots.

Trump has been in the White House receiving updates on the search-and-rescue operation, a senior administration official told Reuters. The Pentagon and US Central Command did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

NO SIGN OF END TO WAR

The prospect of a US service person being alive and on the run inside Iran raises the stakes for Washington in a conflict with low public support and no sign of an imminent end.

Iran has officially told mediators it is not prepared to meet with US officials in Islamabad in coming days and that efforts to produce a ceasefire, led by Pakistan, have reached a dead end, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday.

The US and Israel opened the campaign with a wave of strikes that killed Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on February 28. The war has killed thousands and threatened lasting damage to the global economy.

So far, 13 US military service members have been killed in the conflict and more than 300 have been wounded, according to the US Central Command.

Iran has rained down drones and missiles on Israel. It has also taken aim at Gulf countries allied to the US, which have so far held back from joining the war directly for fear of further escalation.

In a security alert on Friday, the US embassy in Beirut said Iran and its aligned armed groups may target universities in Lebanon and urged US citizens in the country to leave while commercial flights are still available.

Israel has been waging a parallel campaign against Iran-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon after the militant group fired at Israel in support of Iran.

TRUMP THREAT TO STRIKE BRIDGES, POWER PLANTS

On Friday, as Trump threatened to hit its bridges and power plants, Iran struck a power and water plant in Kuwait, underlining the vulnerability of Gulf states that rely heavily on desalination plants for drinking water.

On Thursday, Trump posted footage on social media showing dust and smoke billowing up as US strikes hit the newly constructed B1 bridge between Tehran and nearby Karaj, which was due to open this year, and said more attacks would follow.

“Our Military, the greatest and most powerful (by far!) anywhere in the World, hasn’t even started destroying what’s left in Iran. Bridges next, then Electric Power Plants!” he wrote in a subsequent post.

On Friday, a drone hit a Red Crescent relief warehouse in the Choghadak area of Iran’s southern Bushehr province.

Kuwait Petroleum Corporation said its Mina al-Ahmadi refinery had been hit by drones. Other attacks were also reported to have been intercepted in Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi. Missile debris landed near the Israeli port of Haifa, site of a major oil refinery.

Oil markets were closed after benchmark U.S. crude prices gained 11% on Thursday following a speech by Trump that offered no clear sign of an imminent end to the war.

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US-Iran: Diplomatic Push Falters as Qatar Steps Back and Pakistan Talks Stall

Qatari Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani speaks after a meeting with the Lebanese president at the presidential palace in Baabda, Lebanon, Feb. 4, 2025. Photo: REUTERS/Emilie Madi

i24 NewsDiplomatic efforts to secure a ceasefire between Washington and Tehran appear to have reached an impasse, as key regional mediators pull back and broader talks stall.

According to reporting by The Wall Street Journal, Qatar has informed US officials that it does not wish to take a central role in mediating between the two sides. Officials familiar with the matter said Doha has made clear it is “not willing” to lead negotiations or act as the primary broker.

At the same time, Pakistan-led efforts to bring Iranian and American officials together have also stalled. Mediators say Tehran has refused to attend proposed meetings in Islamabad, calling Washington’s conditions “unacceptable,” further underscoring the widening gap between the two sides and the growing difficulty of restarting dialogue.

Despite the deadlock, diplomatic channels have not fully closed. Turkey and Egypt are continuing parallel efforts to revive talks, with discussions underway about potential alternative venues, including Doha and Istanbul.

US President Donald Trump downplayed the impact of recent military developments on diplomacy, including the destruction of a US fighter jet during operations in Iran. Speaking in a brief exchange with an NBC News journalist, he said: “No, not at all. It’s war. We are at war.”

He further fueled speculation with a cryptic social media post on Truth Social, writing: “Keep the oil, anyone?” criticising international allies on Friday over rising fuel prices. Trump appeared to mock allies such as the United Kingdom, writing that they should “keep the oil.”

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Report: Iran Retains Significant Missile Capability Despite Weeks of US-Led Strikes

Iranian missiles are displayed in a park in Tehran, Iran, Jan. 31, 2026. Photo: Majid Asgaripour/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via REUTERS

i24 NewsDespite weeks of sustained airstrikes by the United States and its allies, Iran has reportedly managed to retain a substantial portion of its military capabilities, particularly its ballistic missile arsenal.

According to a report by The New York Times citing US intelligence assessments, Tehran has developed methods to mitigate the impact of the strikes, allowing it to preserve and restore key parts of its missile infrastructure.

While the Pentagon has claimed responsibility for striking more than 11,000 targets over five weeks and reducing the rate of Iranian missile fire, intelligence officials now caution that the actual damage may be more limited than initially assessed. Iranian forces are reportedly able to rapidly repair or reactivate missile launchers stored in heavily fortified or underground facilities, sometimes within hours of being hit.

Analysts also point to the widespread use of decoy sites, which may have drawn strikes away from operational assets. Many of the targeted locations are believed to have contained dummy installations, complicating efforts to accurately gauge the degradation of Iran’s ballistic capabilities. Combined with deep underground bunkers and dispersed storage networks, this approach is seen as enabling Tehran to maintain a higher level of readiness than publicly estimated.

US intelligence officials assess that this resilience reflects a deliberate strategy: preserving a credible long-range strike capability as both a deterrent and a bargaining tool in any future negotiations, while ensuring regime survival and continued regional influence.

Despite sustained air dominance claimed by Washington and its allies, Iran’s adaptive tactics continue to complicate battlefield assessments, leaving the true balance of power in the conflict uncertain.

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