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.
‘Hannibal’ used to kill Israeli hostages in Gaza after Oct 7
Online posts and commentary allege that after Hamas abducted Israelis on October 7, Israeli forces invoked the Hannibal Directive inside Gaza—i.e., intentionally using fire that would kill Israeli captives to prevent their use as bargaining chips. The claim often cites Israel’s admitted friendly‑fire killing of three hostages in Gaza on December 15, 2023, and media reporting that Hannibal‑type orders were issued on October 7 at border areas.
Claim: Israel caused hostage deaths by refusing ceasefires/deals
Advanced by Hamas spokesmen and some commentators, especially after failed negotiation rounds or friendly‑fire incidents, asserting Israel’s refusal to accept ceasefires or swaps directly caused hostage deaths.
Claim: Hamas treated hostages humanely; abuse stories were fabricated
Circulates via interviews with some released hostages (e.g., Yocheved Lifshitz) and commentary alleging Israeli/Western media amplified unproven abuse narratives. Used to argue there was no systematic mistreatment or sexual violence during captivity and that reports were propaganda.
“Attacking Israeli civilians is lawful resistance”
This assertion appears in statements framing ‘settlers’ or all Israelis as non‑civilians, or invoking UNGA language on ‘all available means’ for self‑determination. It circulates in activist commentary and some officials’ interviews, often eliding that IHL absolutely prohibits intentional attacks on civilians and hostage‑taking by any party.
“Hostage rescues prove deliberate civilian massacre”
Following the Feb 12, 2024 Rafah rescue (2 hostages) and the June 8, 2024 Nuseirat operation (4 hostages), many posts and statements labeled the actions ‘massacres’ and argued that the outcomes prove Israel’s intent to kill civilians, not to rescue hostages. Some assert the rescues were a pretext for mass killing.
“Gaza war is revenge, not self‑defense”
Following Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attacks, some NGOs, commentators and officials described Israel’s response as ‘revenge,’ citing rhetoric (‘mighty vengeance,’ ‘complete siege’) and alleged unlawful tactics. Others stress Israel’s Article 51 self‑defense right and war aims (remove Hamas threat, free hostages). The claim often treats ‘revenge’ as the sole or primary motive, discounting legal self‑defense framing and ongoing hostilities.
Does Israel kidnap Palestinian children as ‘hostages’?
The claim equates Israel’s detention of Palestinian minors (mainly from the West Bank/East Jerusalem, and some from Gaza post–Oct. 7) with ‘kidnapping’ and ‘hostage‑taking’. It circulates in speeches, social posts, and advocacy framing around prisoner exchanges.
Israel killed its own civilians on October 7 under the Hannibal Directive
A high-risk October 7 inversion claim that uses friendly-fire/Hannibal reporting to minimize or displace Hamas responsibility for massacres.
Hamas sexual violence on October 7 was fabricated or unproven
A denial/minimization claim that uses corrected anecdotes, evidentiary difficulty, political silence, or source attacks to erase the broader record of Hamas sexual and gender-based violence.