Written by Mike Burnard an Analytical Strategist at dia-LOGOS.
Thousands more remain missing, believed to be buried under rubble. The National Committee for Missing Persons warns that this figure could exceed 10,000.
Why is Israel acknowledging the death toll now?
Israel’s announcement on Thursday that it accepts the figure of 70,000 deaths in Gaza comes after more than two years of denying, dismissing, or undermining casualty numbers from the enclave.
Sultan Barakat, senior professor of public policy at Hamad Bin Khalifa University in Doha, told Al Jazeera that the timing is significant. “As always, the devil is in the details,” he said. “Greater access to the field by the UN and other humanitarian agencies—including those from Israel’s allies such as the US, UK, and France—combined with the start of rubble removal in Gaza, made continued rejection untenable.”
Barakat explained that partial acceptance at this stage helps Israel preserve institutional credibility and demonstrate seriousness to key partners, particularly in Washington and European capitals.
He also suggested that Israel may be recalibrating its strategy. “Acknowledging the figures allows Israel to reposition its argument internationally. With recent developments around the ‘Board of Peace,’ global attention has shifted from whether genocide and mass death occurred to questions of reconstruction—reframing the debate around responsibility and the circumstances of those deaths.”
This reframing, he noted, emphasizes Hamas’s conduct, the challenges of urban warfare, and the use of civilian infrastructure.
Finally, Barakat pointed to a possible legal dimension. “Acceptance of the scale of harm does not necessarily mean admitting wrongdoing. But it does help construct a more coherent record in anticipation of future investigations, inquiries, or legal proceedings.
For the Christian observer, this admission must serve as a solemn summons to move from political defense to spiritual lament. If we believe that every human being bears the Imago Dei—the image of God—then the confirmation of 70,000 lives lost forces the faithful to confront the tragedy without the buffer of denial. Truth, however painful, is a divine attribute, and there can be no genuine peacemaking built on a foundation of illusion. This acknowledgment should not be seen merely as a concession of failure, but as a necessary act of moral reckoning—clearing the ground for true justice, healing, and the restoration of integrity.”
[1] The Times of Israel (https://www.timesofisrael.com/idf-believes-70000-gazans-killed-in-war-as-claimed-by-hamas/)
Al Jazeera (https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/1/30/israel-accepts-gazas-70000-death-toll-a-record-of-denialism-lies)
