The New Yorker Radio Hour

A Genocide Scholar Asks “What Went Wrong” in Israel

35 snips
Apr 17, 2026
Omer Bartov, Israeli-born historian of Holocaust and genocide studies at Brown University, questions how Zionism shifted toward militarism. He recounts his military past, warns how policies in Gaza crossed into genocidal territory, traces the evolution from occupation to ethnic cleansing, and argues for drastic political change and limits on American support.
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ANECDOTE

Firsthand Wakeup Call From Military Service

  • Omer Bartov described how his IDF service in Sinai and Gaza first made him feel the weight of occupation.
  • He recalled patrolling El Arish and feeling that occupying another people was wrong, a seed for later political awakening.
ANECDOTE

Postcard That Provoked The Defense Ministry

  • Bartov recounted writing a postcard to Defense Minister Yitzhak Rabin during the First Intifada comparing IDF behavior to the Wehrmacht.
  • He received a terse official reply, which signaled to him that his critique had hit a nerve in the establishment.
INSIGHT

Rhetoric Combined With Operations Signals Intent

  • Bartov warned early that rhetoric from Israeli officials and military leaders showed genocidal content and could incite reservists.
  • He argued genocide requires intent, and that public statements plus mass operations suggested that intent might be emerging.
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