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.

Main dossiers first.Component evidence tracks are hidden from the default list so the archive reads as headline dossiers plus evidence modules, not hundreds of disconnected accusations.

Status rule

Verdicts apply to the public accusation; component tracks stay attached below parent dossiers.
bundled claim
DebunkedMisleadingLegally inaccuratePartly supported / context needed
Debunked: misleadingAssessment confidence: high0 pack(s)1 high-authority
Strategic / technical reference
October 7

Is the Lebanon front just Israeli aggression?

A Lebanon-front claim that erases Hezbollah's armed activity and treats Israeli operations as unprovoked aggression.

Debunked: misleadingAssessment confidence: high1 pack(s)4 high-authority
ICJ / state legal recordCasualty methodologyFact-check / watchdog record
October 7Detainees / prisonsMedia / journalistsUN / NGO chains

“Israel uses torture as state policy”

The allegation asserts that Israeli authorities authorize or systematically direct torture of Palestinians and other detainees as an official policy. The claim circulates via NGO reports, activist statements, and press coverage—especially after October 7, 2023—citing historical authorization (e.g., 1987 Landau Commission) and recent abuse allegations at Sde Teiman and within prisons.

DebunkedAssessment confidence: high1 pack(s)5 high-authority
Casualty methodologyAntisemitism / Holocaust reference
October 7Media / journalistsCampus / BDS

Are post–Oct 7 antisemitism claims mostly manufactured?

After Oct 7, some activists and commentators argued that reports of surging antisemitism were exaggerated or concocted to divert attention from Gaza and to suppress pro‑Palestinian protest, often framed as a “manufactured panic” or “weaponization” of the antisemitism label. This narrative has circulated in op‑eds, campus statements, and social posts, sometimes citing instances of misreporting or conflation of anti‑Zionist speech with antisemitism.

Debunked: misleadingAssessment confidence: medium1 pack(s)3 high-authority
Strategic / technical reference
October 7HostagesMedia / journalists

‘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.

DebunkedAssessment confidence: high1 pack(s)6 high-authority
Strategic / technical referenceCasualty methodologyFact-check / watchdog record
October 7

“Oct. 7 was an Israeli false flag/inside job”

A conspiracy narrative claiming Israeli services staged, enabled, or executed the massacres and kidnappings to manufacture a casus belli. It spreads via influencer videos, blogs, and social posts, often citing friendly‑fire incidents and disinformation corrections to argue the attacks were staged.

Debunked: misleadingAssessment confidence: medium1 pack(s)3 high-authority
Military / LOAC expertsStrategic / technical referenceCasualty methodology
October 7

“Israel knew and let Oct. 7 happen”

The allegation asserts foreknowledge plus intentional non-prevention (a LIHOP—‘let it happen on purpose’—theory). It circulates via speeches, social posts, and commentary that cite reports of prior warnings (e.g., Egypt’s cautions, Israel’s ‘Jericho Wall’ plan) to argue malice or a pretext for invasion rather than intelligence failure.

Debunked: misleadingAssessment confidence: medium1 pack(s)10 high-authority4 evidence track(s)
Genocide / ICJ critiqueStrategic / technical referenceICJ / state legal record
LawfareOctober 7HostagesUN / NGO chains

“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.

DebunkedAssessment confidence: high1 pack(s)4 high-authority1 evidence track(s)
Fact-check / watchdog recordICJ / state legal record
October 7

Israel fabricated the 40 beheaded babies story to exaggerate October 7

A claim that falsely attributes the exact '40 beheaded babies' merger to Israel and uses that attribution to imply broader Israeli fabrication of October 7 atrocities.

Debunked: misleadingAssessment confidence: high1 pack(s)19 high-authority
Military / LOAC expertsCasualty methodologyFact-check / watchdog record
October 7Hostages

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.

DebunkedAssessment confidence: high1 pack(s)3 high-authority
Casualty methodologyStrategic / technical reference
October 7HostagesSource laundering

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.