Whose Right? Israel / Gaza War

Date:


by 3 Narratives News | August 2, 2025

Voices of victims, soldiers, and satirists collide in Gaza’s unforgiving landscape


I. A Game of Target Practice

On a scorched afternoon in southern Gaza, British trauma surgeon Nick Maynard returned to Nasser Hospital covered in dust and blood. What he and his colleagues had witnessed in just days shattered their medical detachment.

“Four teenage boys. All shot in the testicles. Not one—four,” he recalled. “Another day, injuries clustered around the chest. Then the neck. Then the abdomen. It wasn’t random. It felt like target practice.”

His words, aired on Sky News and echoed across global headlines, cut through the fog of war with rare clinical precision. He wasn’t there to speak politically. He was just trying to save children’s lives.

Meanwhile, voices like comedian Jon Stewart and Egyptian satirist Bassem Youssef—both self-proclaimed supporters of Israel’s right to exist! Have begun to echo Maynard’s horror, questioning not the legitimacy of Israel, but the morality of its war.


II. The War by Numbers

On October 7, 2023, Hamas militants crossed into southern Israel, killing 1,200 people and abducting over 250 hostages. The brutality was swift, terrifying, and condemned globally.

But Israel’s response, now nearing its second year, has left the Gaza Strip devastated. According to health authorities in the enclave, more than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed. Nearly 19,000 of them are children. The United Nations has warned that famine is “not looming—it is here.”

At the center of this carnage are not just Hamas fighters or Israeli soldiers, but ordinary people—parents, aid workers, teenagers. The dead don’t carry flags. They carry groceries, infants, or nothing at all.


III. Narrative 1: Israel and the Far-Right Government

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has cast the war in apocalyptic terms. “This is a time for war,” he declared, quoting scripture. His defence minister described the conflict as a battle between “children of light” and “children of darkness.”

The government’s position: Hamas started the war, and Gaza must be dismantled to ensure Israeli survival. That includes targeting what they call “terrorist infrastructure” embedded in civilian areas, including schools and hospitals.

Israel insists it warns civilians before strikes. “The only army in history to do so,” Netanyahu told U.S. officials. But Youssef’s sardonic response went viral: “They’re the only military in the world that warns people before bombing them… how cute.”

Even staunch supporters are beginning to flinch.

“So you can’t say this has anything to do with defending yourself against Hamas. America knows this is wrong. What the f*** are we doing here?”
— Jon Stewart, on The Daily Show

Internally, critics in Israel are sounding alarms too. The human rights group B’Tselem recently issued a rare statement accusing the Israeli government of genocide—a charge previously unthinkable from within the country itself.


IV. Narrative 2: Hamas and the Resistance Framing

From Gaza, Hamas presents a familiar justification: resistance to decades of occupation, illegal settlements, and a 17-year blockade that has reduced the region to an open-air prison.

To many Palestinians, the October 7 attack was a breaking point—a tragic but inevitable pushback against systemic dehumanization. But Hamas’s tactics have drawn widespread condemnation. Not only for the massacre, but for firing from densely populated areas and using human shields.

And yet, in the ruins of Gaza City and the tent camps near Rafah, the line between resistance and survival is blurred. For every rocket, there are thousands of civilians enduring bombardment with nowhere to run.

South Africa has brought a genocide case to the International Court of Justice. Hamas, for its part, has endorsed the claim and rejected calls for disarmament unless an independent Palestinian state is recognized.

Meanwhile, casualty counts have become propaganda. Analysts suggest Hamas has inflated death statistics at times. But even accounting for discrepancies, the sheer scale of loss remains staggering.


V. Narrative 3: The Silent Story—Aid as a Death Sentence

While military and ideological narratives dominate headlines, aid workers on the ground tell a different story.

Since May, nearly 800 Palestinians have been killed near food distribution points, according to the UN Human Rights Office. Aid itself has become dangerous. Civilians are shot in food lines. Humanitarian corridors are shelled. Hospitals are operating in basements without anesthesia.

Dr. Maynard, reflecting on his time at Nasser Hospital, said many of his patients were starving.

“Some had lost 20 to 30 kilograms. We’ve seen preventable deaths due to malnutrition in children. This is not collateral damage. This is system failure.”

The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation—co-managed by U.S. and Israeli agencies—was supposed to be a lifeline. But a recent report called it “non-neutral and unsafe,” citing the sheer number of fatalities at their checkpoints.

Even ceasefires, when brokered, have failed to deliver relief. As of last week, over 88 children had died of starvation in July alone.

The World Health Organization calls it “man-made famine.” The question is: made by whom?


VI. Between Allegiance and Accountability

This war has revealed uncomfortable truths for many Western liberals, Jewish progressives, and Arab moderates.

Supporting Israel’s existence and criticizing its conduct are not mutually exclusive. Nor is condemning Hamas’s brutality while demanding Palestinian human rights. And yet, public discourse often forces false binaries: you’re either with us, or with terrorists.

But human suffering defies tribalism. A child dying of hunger isn’t Hamas. A family buried under rubble isn’t a strategic asset.

As Jon Stewart asked: “What moral clarity can you have when you enable this much suffering?”


VII. Can Narratives Reconcile?

Probably not.

But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try. In the vacuum of political solutions, voices like Bassem Youssef’s fill the void—not because they offer answers, but because they ask better questions.

He reminds us that satire is what’s left when truth fails. And right now, both Israel and Hamas are spinning truths with weapons and grief.

“It’s easier to take sides than to sit with the discomfort. But the discomfort is where humanity lives.”
— Yuli Novak, B’Tselem


Key Takeaways

  • The Gaza war began with Hamas’s October 7 attack and escalated into a devastating Israeli offensive.
  • Israel frames its actions as defensive, but its tactics have drawn accusations of genocide—even from within.
  • Hamas defends its violence as resistance but continues to use civilians as shields.
  • Civilians, particularly children, have borne the brunt—many killed near food lines or hospitals.
  • Global voices once unwavering in their support for Israel are now calling for accountability.
  • Humanitarian corridors are collapsing, and famine is being called “man-made.”

Questions This Article Answers

  1. Who is responsible for the majority of deaths in Gaza?
  2. Is there credible evidence of Israeli soldiers targeting civilians?
  3. What does the international legal community say about genocide in Gaza?
  4. How do Hamas and Israel justify their actions?
  5. What do neutral aid workers say is happening on the ground?

External Links (3)


Internal Links (3)


When you write about war, you inevitably pick sides—even if unintentionally. But in this story, the side worth picking is the one too often ignored: the silent majority suffering in silence.

Because in Gaza, the question isn’t “whose side are you on?”
It’s “who’s left?”

Editor
Editorhttps://3narratives.com
I’m a storyteller at heart with a deep appreciation for nuance, complexity, and the power of perspective. Whether it's global politics, social shifts, or television narratives, I believe every story has at least two sides — and it's up to us to find the one that matters most the 3Narrative. 3 Narratives was born from a simple idea: that people deserve more than echo chambers and outrage. Here, I explore two viewpoints and leave the third — the conclusion — up to you. When I'm not writing, you’ll find me spending time with my son, diving into thought-provoking shows like Better Call Saul, or chasing the next layered story that can change the way we see the world. My other passions include photography, skiing, sailing, hiking and more important a great conversation with a human being that challenges my own narrative. 📍 Based in North America | 🌍 Writing for a global mindset

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