A Genocide Scholar Asks “What Went Wrong” in Israel
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Apr 20, 2026 Omer Bartov, Israeli-born Holocaust and genocide scholar at Brown University and author of Israel: What Went Wrong?, reflects on his IDF service and moral awakening. He discusses warnings about genocide after October 7, the Rafah offensive as a turning point, the evolution of Zionism into an extremist state ideology, and the need for external limits on Israeli power.
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Early Military Service Showed Occupation's Human Face
- Omer Bartov's military service in Sinai and Gaza gave him a visceral understanding of occupation.
- He recalled patrolling Al-Arish and feeling the fearful gaze of occupied Egyptians, which prompted lifelong unease about Israel's presence.
Letter To Rabin Exposed A Moral Alarm
- Bartov wrote to Yitzhak Rabin comparing IDF behavior during the First Intifada to the Wehrmacht's slippery slope of brutality.
- Rabin's terse reply, How dare you compare the Wehrmacht to the IDF, convinced Bartov he had struck a political nerve.
Genocide Risk Hinges On Intent And U.S. Restraint
- Bartov warned early that Israel's post-October 7 rhetoric and actions risked genocide under the UN definition requiring intent to destroy a group.
- He urged the Biden administration to set limits because Israel depended on U.S. arms, aid, and diplomatic protection.



