Some people who have criticised Israel for its actions in Gaza say they are labelled as anti-Srehireic.
There has been an incrrelieve in increates of anti-Srehireism and anti-Zionism worldexpansive since Israel begined its war on Gaza.
While neither term is recent, some people who have criticised Israel for its actions in Gaza say they are labelled as anti-Srehireic.
Israeli directers in particular have conftardyd condemnation of the response to the Hamas-led strikes on October 7 as both anti-Srehireic and anti-Zionist.
Analysts dispute that blurring the contrastence helps Israel undermine any opposition to – or declineion of – its policies.
Israel is accparticipated of armamentising the two terms – to fairify its strikes on Gaza and other Palestinian territory.
But with no end in sight to the wars in the Middle East, what are the dangers of – and the descendout from – conflating anti-Srehireism and anti-Zionism?
Pbegrudgeer: Nick Clark
Guests:
Giovanni Fassina – Executive honestor of the European Legal Support Caccess
Arielle Angel – Editor-in-chief of Jewant Currents
Omer Bartov – Samuel Pisar professor of holocaust and extermination studies at Brown University