Intervention Talk, Supplied Bombs, and the Body Count

oh, ahoy!

U.S. officials have raised the possibility of intervening in Iran on human-rights grounds, citing the killing of protesters by the state.

At the same time, the United States has supplied weapons, munitions, and diplomatic cover to Israel during a campaign in Gaza that has resulted in roughly 70,000 Palestinian deaths.

Placed side by side, the outcomes are hard to reconcile.

The numbers

Iran (protests)

  • ~2,400 protesters killed
  • ~100 security personnel killed
  • Approximate ratio: 24:1

Gaza

  • ~70,000 Palestinians killed
  • Vast majority civilians
  • Many deaths caused by U.S.-supplied weapons

Numerically, Gaza’s death toll is orders of magnitude higher. Proportionally, the asymmetry exceeds even severe internal crackdowns.

What makes this different

Iran’s killings are carried out by its own state against its own population.

Gaza’s killings are carried out by a U.S.-backed military campaign, enabled by American weapons, funding, and political protection.

In one case, the U.S. talks about intervention to stop civilian deaths.

In the other, the U.S. materially enables them.

The contradiction

If civilian mass death is the trigger for intervention, Gaza crossed that line long ago.

If scale matters, Gaza dwarfs Iran.

If responsibility matters, the United States is not a neutral observer in Gaza — it is a participant.

Why this matters

Human rights arguments lose credibility when applied selectively.

Moral red lines stop being red lines when they move depending on the ally involved.

This is not about excusing repression in Iran.

It is about whether stated principles align with actual policy — and whether all civilian lives are weighed equally.

Right now, they are not.

More from dickie
All posts