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Notes -
I don’t know. I also don’t think it’s necessarily a %. If the US killed 2% of the Iraqi civilian population or we could use Japan with nukes I don’t think I would call it a genocide. In the case of the Nakob the purpose of civilian deaths was to get the civilians to leave. So not purely military/political control. In the case of Japan we didn’t drop bombs on civilian populations with the goal of replacing Japanese people. The goal was to get them to militarily surrender. So 2% with geographic removal seems like genocide to me.
So with the Nakob it feels like genocide to me because it seems like their undocumented evidence that Israel was willing to kill as many civilians as possible until they removed themselves from their land.
I guess it’s a fair question that you can argue well you have to kill x% of a group to call it a capital letter GENOCIDE instead of something like cultural genocide but I think it’s also fair to put the Nakob in the category of genocide. It was still state led violence and murder against civilian population for specifically demographic change. Germans didn’t want to live with Jews; Jews didn’t want to live with Arabs.
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