An analysis of how the Israeli regime exploits Holocaust memory and religious narratives to justify occupation, warfare, and a politics of fear in West Asia.
Since the mass immigration of European Jews to West Asia, the Israeli occupation regime has killed and maimed tens of thousands with impunity.
The Israeli regime has depended on a carefully crafted narrative in order to justify its wars, occupation, ethnic cleansing, and its position as a politically exempt entity that doesn't comply with existing international norms.
Central to Tel Aviv's composition is its strategic use of historical trauma and twisting religion, which, when blended, create a strong narrative that makes it difficult for others to question or intervene, or else they will be labeled as enemies of the Jews as a whole.
Israeli leaders, since the entity's forced inception, have invoked imagery of the Holocaust and religious symbolism not as a means to remind others of a shared troubled past, but to manufacture legitimacy and twist the humanity and spirituality of man to garner sympathy for the zionist military method.
The Nazi Holocaust is something that has floated off the tongues of Israeli officials when seeking to bring an emotional aspect to justify military attacks against neighbouring nations. Since the entity’s imposition on West Asia, Israeli officials have kept the Holocaust and genocide against the European Jews as a central diplomatic rhetorical point when facing the international community. (more...)
How Israeli rhetoric weaponizes history and faith to justify violence

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