By Fareed Khan
A version of this can be found on Substack.
For nearly eight decades, the global community has been lectured on
the sanctity of the “international rules-based order.” We were told that
the post-World War Two framework—built upon the wreckage of the
Holocaust and codified through the Geneva Conventions, the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, and the Genocide Conventions—was a shield
for the vulnerable and a leash for the powerful. This order was founded
on the promise of “Never Again,” a solemn vow that the industrial-scale
extermination of a people would never be permitted to recur.
However,
as we enter the 31st month of Israel’s genocide on Palestinians in the
Gaza Strip—with a so-called ceasefire proving illusory and the slaughter
continuing unabated—that shield has been revealed as a sieve, and the
vow as a hollow ethno-specific mantra. Compounding this betrayal is the
US-Israeli illegal war of aggression launched against Iran on February
28, 2026. In both instances, the two nations have flagrantly violated the aforementioned treaties and conventions,
and the fundamental norms of international law. Together, these
atrocities signal the effective collapse of the international
rules-based order and the myth of universal human rights.
The
discrepancy between the “official” reality and the truth on the ground
in Gaza is the first indication of this collapse. As of January 2026,
mainstream Western outlets cautiously cite a Palestinian death toll topping 75,000.
Yet rigorous academic and epidemiological analyses reveal a far more
harrowing reality. Peer-reviewed studies and models, including those by
Australian scholars Richard Hil and Gideon Polya, Israeli academic Yaakov Garb’s analysis published by Harvard, and The Lancet’s projections,
demonstrate that when accounting for bodies buried under millions of
tons of rubble, indirect deaths from the total collapse of healthcare,
starvation, and untreated disease, the true toll exceeds 680,000 lives—primarily women and children—as of April 2025, with the figure climbing further into 2026 as the Israeli assault continues.
If
we accept the figures from these studies—derived from the same
scientific methodologies used in other global conflicts—the scale of the
slaughter rivals or exceeds the 1994 Rwandan genocide.
Yet unlike Rwanda, which the West later lamented as a failure of
intervention, the Gaza genocide is a willful failure to intervene in the
most transparent genocide in human history.
The “rules-based order” is not failing because it’s weak. It is failing
because its architects are the primary financiers of the carnage being
inflicted on the Middle-East.
The
United States has funnelled over $21 billion in military aid to Israel
since October 2023, with billions more arriving from Germany, the United
Kingdom, France, and Canada. These nations, which frequently invoke
international law to sanction adversaries, have simultaneously provided the diplomatic cover
and the weapons required to systematically level 80% of Gaza’s civilian
infrastructure. By weaponizing international law against the powerless
while suspending it for their allies, the Western alliance has exposed
the “order” as a criminal cabal that prioritizes geopolitical hegemony
over human life.
This betrayal is rooted in a
profound, institutionalized anti-Palestinian racism and Islamophobia
that permeates Western institutions and discourse. The systematic dehumanization of Palestinians—who
have endured more than a century of occupation, dispossession, and
Zionist settler-colonialism—has been crucial in sustaining Western
silence and complicity amid the ongoing horrors in Gaza.
A
stark illustration of this double standard emerged in the immediate
aftermath of October 7, 2023. The killing of 1,195 people during the
Hamas-led attacks triggered swift, intense moral outrage across the
Western world, with leaders and media outlets universally condemning the
violence as an atrocity. Yet as the Palestinian death toll in Gaza
climbed to ten, fifty, and eventually hundreds of times that
number—reaching catastrophic scales through relentless bombardment—the
same Western leaders responded with only tepid, “measured” appeals for
restraint, even as they continued supplying Israel with massive
quantities of bombs, missiles and other munitions.
Investigations,
including reports from Israeli sources like Ha’aretz and international
bodies such as the UN Commission of Inquiry, have since revealed that
the October 7 death toll included casualties from Israeli forces’
application of the controversial Hannibal Directive
in multiple locations. This procedure, aimed at preventing captures of
Israeli Jews at all costs (even if it risked or caused the deaths of
Israelis), was invoked during the chaos, leading to incidents that
killed hundreds of civilians and potentially endangered others. Despite
these complexities and the acknowledgement in some accounts that not all
deaths were solely attributable to Hamas, the Western reaction remained
one-sided--unqualified horror at Palestinian-perpetrated violence
contrasted sharply with muted or enabling responses to Israel’s far
deadlier genocidal campaign.
This selective outrage
underscores how deeply entrenched biases allow the West to rationalize
or overlook massive Palestinian suffering while amplifying lesser-scale
violence against Israelis, perpetuating a hierarchy of human worth that
has enabled the ongoing catastrophe.
The moral abyss is further deepened by the “visibility” of this genocide.
Unlike the Holocaust, which the Nazi regime attempted to hide in
isolated camps like Auschwitz, the annihilation of Gaza is the first
live-streamed genocide in human history. We see the emaciated frames of
starving children and the obliteration of entire families in high
definition on our smartphones. We see Israeli soldiers filming their own
war crimes for social media, mocking the ruins of schools and mosques.
The world watches in real-time as a population of approximately 2
million is squeezed into “safe zones” that are then systematically
bombarded.
The fact that this transparency has prompted no
meaningful intervention from the powers that defeated the Nazis is a
devastating indictment of those nations and our era. It suggests that
the “international community” is not a collective of nations bound by
law, but a hierarchy of human value where Palestinian blood is deemed
“lesser” than that of those within the Western sphere of influence.
The invocation of “Never Again” has been particularly perverted. Originally intended as a universal promise to protect all of humanity from the “crime of crimes,” it has been narrowed into a tool of Jewish exceptionalism.
Every year, Western leaders hypocritically stand at Holocaust memorials
and pledge to uphold justice, even as they provide the white phosphorus
and intelligence used to displace 99% of Gaza’s population. This
victim-perpetrator inversion, where the state committing genocide is
shielded from accountability by the memory of a previous genocide, is a
moral perversity that the international legal system cannot survive.
We
are witnessing a repeat of the 1930s, where the League of Nations
collapsed because it could not—or would not—restrain the aggression of
its powerful members. Today, the United Nations and the International
Court of Justice are being rendered obsolete not by their own design,
but by the brazen defiance of the United States and its allies. When the
ICC seeks warrants for war crimes, it is threatened with sanctions by
Washington. When the UN General Assembly votes for a ceasefire, it is
ignored.
The betrayal extends directly to the US-Israeli war
against Iran. On February 28, under President Donald Trump and in
coordination with Israel, the United States launched unprovoked strikes
targeting Iranian nuclear facilities, military infrastructure, and
leadership—including the assassinating Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei and members of his family. A girls’ elementary school in Minab was deliberately hit,
killing at least 165 children, alongside strikes on hospitals and
civilian areas with no military value. These actions constitute a
blatant and criminal war of aggression with no UN Security Council
authorization and no valid claim of imminent self-defence under the UN
Charter. Additionally, diplomatic talks with Iran were making significant progress hours before the strikes, and leaks from within the US intelligence establishment confirmed no imminent Iranian threat or nuclear warhead capability.
Under
the Geneva Conventions, the deliberate targeting of civilians and
civilian objects qualifies as war crimes. Israeli and American hypocrisy
is blatant and staggering in this regard when compared to the war in
Ukraine. The same nations that imposed sanctions on Russia for its 2022
invasion of that nation and condemned it for bombing schools and
hospitals, offered complicity, muted criticism, or outright endorsement
for identical violations against Iran. This selective
enforcement—condemning aggression when committed by adversaries but
exempting allies—lays bare the double standards that have defined the
international order from its inception in the late 1940s.
Both the Gaza genocide and the aggression against Iran directly contravene the foundational principles established by the Judgment at Nuremberg
(1945-1946), the bedrock of all international law created after World
War Two. The Nuremberg Tribunal declared that “to initiate a war of
aggression is not only an international crime; it is the supreme
international crime differing only from other war crimes in that it
contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole.” It
established individual accountability for crimes against peace, war
crimes, and crimes against humanity—principles that directly birthed the
UN Charter (prohibiting aggression), the 1948 Genocide Convention (acts
with intent to destroy a group in whole or in part, as Israel’s
systematic killings, starvation policies, and destruction of life
conditions in Gaza fulfill), the Geneva Conventions (civilian
protections violated in both Gaza’s bombardment and Iran’s school and
hospital strikes), and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. By
committing these crimes with impunity, the US and Israel have not merely
violated these instruments, they have demolished the post-war legal
order built explicitly on Nuremberg’s vow to prevent such atrocities
from recurring.
In his special address at the World Economic Forum in Davos on January 20, 2026, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney
invoked Thucydides’ dictum that “the strong can do what they can, and
the weak must suffer what they must.” He declared that the rules-based
international order was “fading,” a “fiction,” an “illusion,” and no
longer functioning “as advertised.” He acknowledged that nations like
Canada had prospered under it for decades, but “we knew the story of the
international rules-based order was partially false—that the strongest
would exempt themselves when convenient.”
Carney urged
middle powers to accept the reality—a system of intensifying great power
rivalry where the most powerful pursue their interests using economic
and military might as a weapon of coercion. This speech inadvertently
confirms the core truth—that the order Carney described was never
universal or impartial. It primarily benefitted the West and aligned
powers—delivering prosperity and security to Canada, the US, and
Europe—while adversaries and the Global South were its perpetual
victims, subjected to occupation, sanctions, regime-change wars,
economic colonialism, and now live-streamed genocide and unprovoked
aggression.
Carney’s own actions and those of his government
powerfully illustrate the selective nature of the rules-based order he
described in Davos—one that privileges Western powers and their allies
while leaving others to bear the consequences of the actions of the
powerful. In the immediate aftermath of the US-Israeli strikes on Iran
on February 28, Carney quickly voiced support for the actions, framing
them as necessary to prevent Iran from completing construction of
nuclear weapons and to curb threats to regional stability, even as the
UN and international law experts condemned the illegality of the
actions. He has similarly refused to issue any outright condemnation of
Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza, which has been condemned as such by
genocide and Holocaust experts, and respected human rights
organizations.
This pattern of selective outrage extended
further when Canada joined European allies in condemning Iran’s actions
in blocking or threatening the Strait of Hormuz—actions that disrupted
global oil shipments—while remaining conspicuously silent on the
longstanding and intensified US economic measures against Cuba,
including an effective oil blockade that has exacerbated humanitarian hardships
on the island without comparable international push back. Such
inconsistencies reveal the hypocrisy Carney himself stated in his Davos
remarks.
Palestinians and Iranians, positioned as
non-Western and comparatively “weak” actors in this hierarchy, were
always intended to endure the system’s double standards. Exemptions
granted to the powerful—through sustained US arms shipments to Israel,
repeated vetoes of accountability at the UN, selective enforcement of
international norms, and diplomatic or rhetorical endorsement of
aggressive actions like the Iran strikes—have ensured that the order was
intended to serve Western hegemony rather than universal principles of
humanity or equity. The unfolding realities in Gaza and Iran stand as
irrefutable evidence. What was once presented as a principled global
framework was, in practice, a mechanism of power that the dominant
nations of the world discard or bend whenever it suits their interests.
The evidence that the rules-based order is now non-existent
is overwhelming. After 30 months of ongoing genocide in Gaza, the most
powerful nations of the world (primarily the US and NATO nations) have
done nothing to stop Israel’s slaughter, which continues despite a
so-called ceasefire that came into effect in October 2025. Billions in
military aid flowed uninterrupted, International Court of Justice orders
were defied, and UN resolutions vetoed. The same superpower that
frequently lectured the world on abiding by international law enabled
the carnage in Gaza, and then pivoted to fresh aggression against Iran
without justification and without consequence.
The Gaza
genocide and the US-Israeli war against Iran have shattered the illusion
of a global conscience and of the international “rules based order.”
They have shown that “Western humanity” is a bedtime fable, a “sick
joke” told to citizens who want to believe their governments are the
“good guys.” In reality, the “rules” only apply when they serve the
interests of the powerful. For the Palestinian and Iranian people, the
international order has not been a protector, but a jailer, an
executioner, and a propagator of narratives of hate.
As the ruins
of Gaza continue to smoulder and the skies over Iran fill with the smoke
of an illegal war of aggression, these scenes stand as stark monuments
to the end of the post-World War II era. We can no longer speak of
“universal human rights” with any credibility while the world’s most
powerful nations actively underwrite the systematic erasure of entire
peoples. The so-called international rules-based order did not fade away
gradually or die of natural causes—it was deliberately murdered in the
streets of Gaza and the cities of Iran, with the full knowledge,
material support, and diplomatic cover provided by the very nations that
once positioned themselves as its chief guardians and moral exemplars.
Any
hope for a genuine future of global justice cannot be rebuilt on the
shattered, hypocritical foundations of this broken system. The mass
graves in Gaza and the fresh rubble across Iran hold far more than the
hundreds of thousands of victims claimed by US- and Israeli-led crimes;
they also entomb the long-standing pretenses of Western moral authority.
The comforting fairy tale—that a system of international laws applies
equally to all nations—has been exposed as a dangerous illusion. We now
confront a harsh moral abyss, thrust upon the world by the very powers
that long preached restraint and accountability. In this new reality,
the United States and Israel operate like unchecked gunslingers in a
lawless frontier, casting themselves as the corrupt sheriffs determined
to “clean up” the Middle East on their own terms, regardless of the
human cost or the wreckage left behind.
© The View From Here. © Fareed Khan. All Rights Reserved.