Published claim files
The World against Israel Case
Evidence archive and research command center for claim files, source chains, public source links, and debunk packs.
Civilian harm proves targeting policy?
The anti-Israel claim infers state policy from casualty counts, destruction patterns, repeated strike allegations and statements by critics, without requiring directives, command guidance or institutional proof.
Civilian harm alone proves indiscriminate bombing?
The anti-Israel claim infers indiscriminate bombing from scale of destruction, dense urban conditions, casualty counts and repeated reports of civilian harm, without requiring strike-by-strike ex-ante targeting analysis.
Do Gaza child deaths prove the IDF targets children?
The claim argues that the sheer scale of child casualties in Gaza is itself proof that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) intentionally target children. It circulates widely in protests, social posts, interviews, and some media commentary, often citing cumulative death tallies to assert intent without incident‑specific targeting evidence.
Gaza hospitals’ legal status under IHL
The claim asserts that Israeli operations that damaged or affected hospitals in Gaza show intentional targeting of hospitals as hospitals. It circulates via press statements by humanitarian groups and Palestinian institutions, social media posts, and some media framing that describes a pattern of attacks on health care as deliberate policy.
Policy vs incidents: ‘official civilian-targeting policy’ not established by incidents alone
After mass-casualty incidents in Gaza (2023–2026), some advocacy and UN special-procedures communications assert that Israel’s attacks on homes and civilian infrastructure reflect a deliberate or ‘policy’ choice to target civilians. The claim often travels by conflating high civilian harm and repeated incidents with proof of an official, ex-ante policy to target civilians as such.
Casualty totals don’t, by themselves, prove genocidal intent
The claim asserts that aggregate Gaza fatality counts and demographic shares (e.g., claims that most of the dead are women and children) are sufficient, on their own, to establish genocidal intent under international law. It circulates in press releases, protests, and social posts that equate casualty levels or ratios with the legal crime of genocide.
Ratios ≠ intent under IHL
After October 7, 2023, widely shared charts and headlines citing Gaza Health Ministry data and later UN tallies emphasized that a high share of the dead were women and children. These ratios are frequently invoked online, in NGO reports, and sometimes in UN communications to argue that Israel’s targeting is unlawful, disproportionate, or even intentional against civilians, treating the aggregate ratio as evidence of intent or illegality.
Do viral emaciated-child photos prove an Israeli starvation policy?
The claim circulates widely on social media and in some headlines/captions that individual images of severely underweight Gaza children, by themselves, prove Israel is intentionally starving civilians as state policy. Some posts explicitly assert that specific children 'starved to death due to an Israeli/U.S.-made famine' or that a photographed child had been 'born healthy' before being deliberately starved. Several outlets later issued corrections or clarifications about pre-existing conditions or miscaptioning, while UN agencies and peer‑reviewed studies have documented real spikes in acute malnutrition and warn/confirm famine conditions in parts of Gaza.
Does Israel intentionally kill Gaza medics and rescue crews?
The claim alleges that Israeli forces deliberately, as a matter of intent or policy, target doctors, nurses, paramedics, civil defense rescuers and clearly marked ambulances in Gaza. It circulates via statements from Palestinian health providers (e.g., PRCS), UN reporting, human rights NGOs, and viral posts after high-casualty incidents near hospitals or during ambulance missions.
Did Israel create mass graves at Gaza hospitals?
After Israeli withdrawals from Nasser Medical Complex (Khan Younis) and Al‑Shifa (Gaza City) in April 2024, Gaza Civil Defense, WAFA, and others alleged that the IDF created mass graves at the hospital compounds, with some bodies reportedly bound or showing signs of execution. The story spread quickly across social media and was covered by major outlets alongside UN calls for investigation.
If Israel knows Hamas combatant deaths, it must know civilian deaths
A recurring media gotcha, used by Piers Morgan and others, that treats targeted combatant battle-damage assessment and total civilian casualty accounting as the same task.
Disputing casualty reports = coverup?
The claim asserts that whenever Israeli officials challenge or question casualty figures (e.g., total deaths, women/children shares, responsibility for specific incidents), this is ipso facto ‘denialism’ or a cover‑up, rather than legitimate contestation pending verification.
NGO/UN/medical claims = neutral & authoritative
A common framing online says that humanitarian, medical, or UN‑system reporting is intrinsically neutral and should be treated as authoritative by default (e.g., on casualty figures or incident attributions).
‘MoH stats prove Israel deliberately kills mostly women/children’
Posts cite Gaza Ministry of Health (MoH) figures—often repeating early claims that ~70% of deaths are women or children—to argue this alone proves deliberate targeting by Israel.
‘Shoot-to-maim’ policy against civilians/children
Common on social media and in activist/academic discourse since 2018, citing knee-shots and mass limb injuries as evidence of an official Israeli ‘shoot-to-cripple’ policy targeting civilians and children.
Israel targets UN facilities and staff
The claim asserts a purposeful Israeli campaign against UN sites (esp. UNRWA schools/clinics/warehouses) and personnel. It draws on repeated strikes on UN‑marked shelters, UNRWA casualty tolls, and attacks on convoys; it is often framed as 'systematic targeting' rather than collateral damage or strikes on embedded militants.
Israel deliberately kills Palestinian children
A high-emotion claim built from child casualty numbers, strike reports, and NGO language about children being targeted.
Gaza Health Ministry casualty numbers are fully authoritative
A source-quality claim behind many casualty, women/children, journalist, hospital, and genocide arguments.
Civilian-casualty ratios prove unlawful targeting
A narrative that turns casualty totals, women/children counts, or civilian-to-combatant ratios into proof of illegal targeting.
The IDF bombs Gaza indiscriminately
A common media/advocacy claim based on scale of destruction, casualty numbers, urban density, and broad descriptions of airstrikes.
Bodies at Gaza hospitals showed executions or headshots by Israel
A high-risk allegation cluster about mass graves, hospital raids, forensic claims, and alleged executions.
The IDF deliberately targets journalists, children, and hospitals
A high-emotion claim family combining casualty counts, journalist deaths, child deaths, hospital attacks, and accusations of intent.