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Gaza: It’s not a War

Language is never neutral. The words we use shape what the world sees and what it is prepared to tolerate. To call Israel’s ongoing campaign in Gaza a “war” is to disguise a one-sided campaign of extermination as a legitimate conflict. By every legal and moral measure, what is happening is not war but a series of war crimes against a besieged civilian population, culminating in the crime of genocide.

Wars are fought between combatants, governed by rules of engagement, and subject to international humanitarian law. Gaza, however, has no army to meet Israel’s overwhelming force. What has unfolded since 2007 under siege - and with catastrophic escalation since 2023 - is the systematic destruction of a people’s capacity to live, carried out with some of the world’s most advanced weapons.

This essay will demonstrate why Gaza cannot be described as a war: first, by clarifying the definition of war and combatant; second, by documenting the scale of devastation inflicted on Gaza; third, by exposing the vast imbalance of Israeli military power and its external resupply; fourth, by analyzing the siege as a weapon of extermination; fifth, by applying the Genocide Convention; and finally, by stressing why language itself matters in the face of atrocity.

1. What Counts as War?

The Geneva Conventions and customary international law define wars as armed conflicts between organized combatants. A combatant is a person lawfully entitled to fight - typically members of a state’s armed forces, or organized armed groups under a responsible command structure. Combatants may be targeted in battle, but they are also entitled to protection if captured as prisoners of war. Civilians, by contrast, may never be directly targeted.

This distinction is not academic - it is the cornerstone of the laws of war.

Gaza does not meet these criteria. It has no standing army, navy, or air force. Resistance groups exist, but they are fragmented, poorly equipped, and dwarfed by Israel’s unmatched military capacity. The overwhelming majority of those killed are civilians. To describe this as war is therefore a categorical error: the framework of war assumes parity of combatants, yet in Gaza we see one of the most advanced militaries on earth attacking an unarmed and besieged population.

2. Gaza’s Devastation

Civilian Deaths and Injuries

By September 2025:

Housing and Displacement

By mid-2025, 92% of homes in Gaza were damaged or destroyed, leaving nearly the entire population displaced. Families survive under tarpaulins and tents among the rubble. Cities like Gaza City and Khan Younis have been reduced to wastelands.

Water and Sanitation

Food and Agriculture

Healthcare

Education and Future Generations

The cumulative effect is the dismantling of an entire society’s capacity to exist.

3. Israel’s Overwhelming Military Power

Personnel

Israel maintains one of the world’s largest and most sophisticated militaries relative to population:

Air Power

Ground Forces

Nuclear Arsenal

External Resupply

Against this unmatched arsenal, Gaza has no tanks, no jets, no navy, and no nuclear deterrent. The asymmetry is absolute.

4. Siege as a Weapon of Extermination

Since 2007, Gaza has endured a blockade - the longest siege in history. Since October 2023, it has tightened into total blockade.

Conventional sieges aim to force surrender of an opposing army. Gaza’s siege aims to destroy civilian life.

5. Genocide, Not War

The 1948 Genocide Convention defines genocide as acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group. These include:

  1. Killing members of the group – tens of thousands of Palestinians, mostly women and children, killed.
  2. Causing serious bodily or mental harm – mass amputations, trauma, starvation, untreated disease.
  3. Inflicting conditions of life calculated to destroy – destruction of homes, farms, water, healthcare, and shelter.
  4. Imposing measures to prevent births – starvation, medical collapse, and destruction of maternity care obstruct reproduction.
  5. Forcibly transferring children – teleologically, consigning children to mass graves achieves the obliteration of the next generation.

This is not speculation. The International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS), Amnesty International, Médecins Sans Frontières, and Israeli human rights groups such as B’Tselem have all declared Israel’s actions in Gaza genocide.

6. Why Language Matters

Calling this a war is not just inaccurate - it is complicit. War implies two sides fighting under laws of engagement. But Gaza is no battlefield. It is more like an armed man attacking an unarmed child. No one would call that a “fight.”

To persist in calling Gaza a war is to sanitize atrocity, to normalize genocide, and to betray the victims.

Conclusion

Israel’s actions in Gaza are not a war. They are a series of war crimes against a besieged civilian population, sustained by one of the world’s most advanced militaries and continuously resupplied by its allies. The campaign meets the legal definition of genocide and exceeds any plausible understanding of war.

This is not war. It is genocide - a war of extermination.

References

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