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.
Nuseirat hostage‑rescue supporting strikes (June 8, 2024)
Israel conducted a complex daytime raid to free four hostages from two nearby buildings in Nuseirat. The operation triggered intense supporting fires. Gaza’s health authorities later reported 274 Palestinians killed and 698 injured. OHCHR said actions by both sides (holding hostages in dense areas; the raid’s conduct) may amount to war crimes. Israel and CENTCOM denied claims that the U.S. humanitarian pier or aid cover were used; allegations about a disguised aid truck circulated via PRCS statements and some media. The core dispute: target‑specific rescue with heavy incidental harm vs. indiscriminate assault.
Did Israel cut power/fuel to kill civilians?
After Oct. 7, 2023, Israeli officials announced a “complete siege” and halted electricity and fuel to Gaza. Activists and some NGOs framed these measures as deliberate killing by deprivation, circulating quotes by Defense Minister Yoav Gallant (“no electricity, no food, no water, no fuel”) and Energy Minister Israel Katz (“no electric switch will be turned on… until hostages are returned”) as proof of purpose. The claim travels in reports, social media threads, and legal advocacy that interpret the cuts as starvation or mass-lethality measures by design.
Do Israel’s Gaza electricity/fuel restrictions equal collective punishment?
After 7 October 2023, Israel cut electricity it supplied to Gaza and blocked fuel for a period, later allowing limited fuel deliveries under conditions. UN bodies, major NGOs and some officials characterized these measures—especially statements like a “complete siege… no electricity, no food, no fuel”—as collective punishment of Gaza’s civilian population. Israel argues the measures aimed at degrading Hamas’ military capacity, preventing diversion of fuel, and pressuring for hostage release, while coordinating humanitarian relief and later permitting fuel for essential services. Whether the policy amounts to unlawful collective punishment turns on intent, military necessity, and humanitarian allowances under IHL, not solely on civilian effects.
Senior-official wartime rhetoric
The claim holds that top Israeli leaders framed the 2023–2026 Gaza war with rhetoric suggestive of retaliation or collective punishment. Cited examples include: Defense Minister Yoav Gallant’s “complete siege”/“human animals” remarks (Oct 9, 2023); Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Oct 28, 2023 biblical injunction to “remember what Amalek did to you”; President Isaac Herzog’s comment that “it’s an entire nation out there that is responsible”; and Energy Minister Israel Katz’s vow of no utilities to Gaza until hostages are freed. Such language circulated widely in media and legal filings to argue the war was revenge rather than self‑defense.
Do siege moves prove a standing ‘make Gaza uninhabitable’ policy?
Advocates and commentators cite early-war ‘complete siege’ statements and utility cuts, plus recurring crossing closures, to argue Israel is pursuing a fixed policy to make Gaza unlivable. The claim spreads via news clips of the Oct. 9, 2023 ‘complete siege’ pledge and Oct. 12 vows to keep water/electricity/fuel off until hostages are released, then generalizes from severe incidents to an asserted overarching policy objective.
Power/fuel cuts ‘to kill civilians’
After October 9–12, 2023, Israeli officials publicly announced a ‘complete siege’ of Gaza—no electricity, food, water, or fuel—and said utilities would not be restored until hostages were freed. The strong-form claim extrapolates that the purpose of these cuts was to kill civilians.
‘Israel refuses ceasefires because it wants genocide’
Posts and op-eds assert that Israel systematically rejects ceasefire/hostage deals because its true aim is genocide in Gaza. The narrative circulates alongside slogans that negotiations are theater and that US/UN plans mask genocidal intent.
Al‑Shifa: ‘No Hamas use; Israel faked it’
The claim categorically denies any Hamas military use of Gaza’s Al‑Shifa Hospital and alleges that Israel staged or fabricated all presented evidence (weapons, tunnels, CCTV of hostages). It spread via partisan outlets, social posts and commentary challenging IDF briefings in Nov–Dec 2023 and after the March 2024 raid.