When Hamas attacked Israeli civilians on October 7, the world rightly condemned the atrocity in the strongest terms. That moral clarity should not fade when assessing the conduct of the war that followed.
Reports from the Gaza Strip describe widespread civilian deaths, displacement, hunger, and the destruction of homes, hospitals, and schools. Journalists, medical workers, and civilians have been killed with limited transparency or accountability. Developments in the West Bank and cross-border strikes affecting civilians in Lebanon raise further alarm.
The United Nations and human rights groups have documented grave humanitarian consequences, including high numbers of women and children killed. Independent access for foreign journalists is urgently needed so the world can witness events firsthand.
Criticism from organizations like Amnesty International reflects concern that international norms and human rights protections are eroding. Raising these concerns is legitimate criticism of state actions—not hostility toward a people or a faith. Allegations of antisemitism should not be used to dismiss good-faith scrutiny of government policy, just as condemnation of terrorism must never be diluted.
Condemning terrorism must not prevent us from condemning collective punishment. Justice, accountability, and the protection of civilians must be applied consistently, without selective outrage. An Israeli life and a Palestinian life are equal in worth, and our moral clarity should reflect that truth.