19 March 2026

Open Letter to a Holocaust Denier - The Reverend Lord Biggar, Oxford’s Regius Professor Emeritus of Moral and Pastoral Theology

Those Who Deny the Holocaust in Gaza are No Different to those Who Deny the Nazi Holocaust


The truth about the British Empire and slavery: Mehdi Hasan and Nigel Biggar | Head to Head

I first came across Tory Peer and author of In Defence of War, the Revd. Lord Biggar, when a friend, Adam Waterhouse, sent me a link to an article he had written. Adam’s article was in response to an article Biggar had written, Israel’s acts are not ‘genocidal.’ Biggar had been replying to an article by the Archbishop of York, Stephen Cottrell which spoke of Israel’s actions in Gaza as ‘genocidal acts’.

The Archbishop had visited the West Bank and he was quoted as saying that after his visit the previous week “It gives me no joy whatsoever to use these words,” but that he had been left wondering, “What other words do you use” to describe the situation in the West Bank?

What’s happening in the West Bank is not what happened in South Africa, but you’re left thinking: what other language do I use to describe such a two-tier system, where one group of people is so persistently and systematically denied their human rights and having to live a parallel life? What is happening is deliberate and systematic, persistent, and intentional, and its impact is devastating.

You may wonder why Nigel Biggar even felt the need to respond to the Archbishop’s mild words. We have the horrors of Gaza: the starvation of children, the bombing of hospitals and schools, the Flour Massacre and the shooting of people collecting food, the mass murder of innocent civilians and the genocidal statements of Israeli leaders, to say nothing of the open apartheid in the West Bank, yet the only thing that aroused the ire of our Professor of Morality was the description of what is happening in Gaza 'Genocide'. 


Israeli officials' rhetoric fuelling Gaza genocide through dehumanisation and incitement: B’Tselem

One can only assume that Biggar was doing his best to prevent any expression of solidarity by the Church of England with the Palestinians of Gaza. Not that there had been much anyway. Until he resigned for his role in covering up child abuse in the Church of England, Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby had not only refused to condemn the genocide but had all but supported it.

Biggar is not a historian but an academic engaged in historical revisionism and moral relativism. He is no different from those who downplay the magnitude of the Nazi holocaust.

Although Biggar dresses up his arguments in the clothes of moral theology his mission is political, the rehabilitation of the reputation of the British Empire and its offspring, Israel.

That is why he defends the actions of Israel and minimises the genocide in Gaza. In this he is given enthusiastic support by the same Tory press which turned a blind eye to Hitler's anti-Semitism in the 30s.

Zionism was the product of the late colonial era. He could hardly exculpate British colonialism whilst condemning its bastard child, Israel. That is the impulse which drives Biggar and he is not averse to resorting to every verbal and rhetorical trick in pursuit of that goal even if he plays fast and loose with facts.

The reason why I have penned an Open Letter to Biggar is two fold. Firstly Adam Waterhouse was too polite by half when tackling as devious and dishonest a character as Biggar. Politeness is not one of my faults!

Secondly there are many questions that Adam did not ask concerning Biggar’s motive in writing his turgid essay.

To:  nigel.biggar@theology.ox.ac.ukbiggarn@parliament.uk@NigelBiggar  

Open Letter to the Rev. Lord Biggar

Dear Lord Biggar,

You are the Regius Professor Emeritus of Moral and Pastoral Theology. It is a grand title for such an immoral, (or is it amoral?) man. You are the King’s Professor no less.

I puzzle over what kind of morality and theology leads a person to deny that a genocide is taking place when the evidence to the contrary is so overwhelming?

You state, in the Church Times of 28 November 2025, that Israel’s acts are not ‘genocidal’ in response to the Archbishop of York’s declaration that Israel is committing ‘genocidal acts’. 

Israel bombs school in Gaza killing children and parents under the pretext that they were Hamas

What was it that went through your mind when you read Archbishop Cottrell’s article that impelled you to write in defence of Israel’s genocide? What emotion was it that led you to defend a state that has bombed refugee camps, tent encampments and burnt and buried children alive? A state which has destroyed hospitals and schools, murdered doctors and first responders?

By the most conservative estimate, when your article appeared, 70,100 people had been murdered by Israel in Gaza yet you reduce it to 44,000. Why?

According to a study published in The Lancet, some 83,000 had died by January 2025. If this is true then over 118,000 had died by the time your article appeared.

According to Stuart Casey Maslen, head of the Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights, Gaza’s population had declined by more than 10%, which would suggest roughly 200,000 people had died by February 2026.

In your article you do your best to minimise the number of dead. Morally you are no different from deniers of the Nazi holocaust who also did their best to minimise the number of those killed. You say that ‘the large number of civilian casualties alone — maybe around 44,000 — is not sufficient evidence’ of genocide. Is this what the morality of pastoral Christian theology amounts to?

The definition of genocide owes nothing to numbers. The death of 8,000 at Srbenica was held to be a genocide. ‘Genocide’ refers to the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group. The question is whether Israel had the necessary intent and did it commit any of the acts that constitute genocide, viz. 

Ø    Killing members of or Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group

Ø    Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction, in whole or in part

Ø    Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group

Ø    Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group

Apart from the last category it is clear that the acts of the Israeli state are clearly acts of genocide. It is also clear that you have no expertise in genocide, history or any relevant academic discipline.

Raz Segal, an Israeli and Associate Professor of Holocaust and Genocide Studies does have that expertise. Segal wrote:

Israelis are explicit and unashamed about their genocidal intent because they have imagined and prosecuted a war against people who they see as colonised “savages”.

A survey by Professor Tamir Sorek of Pennsylvania State University showed that 82% of Israeli Jews supported the expulsion of the Palestinians of Gaza and 47% agreed that

when conquering an enemy city, the Israel Defense Forces should act as the Israelites did in Jericho under Joshua's command – killing all its inhabitants.

56% supported the expulsion of Palestinian citizens of Israel. The statements of intent to commit genocide by Israel's leaders are too many to count.

You question why Archbishop Cottrell ‘thinks that his view should carry weight’ when he ‘is an expert neither in the ethics of war nor in Middle Eastern affairs’. But this applies even more so to you, the author of a book In Defence of War?

You also criticise the Genocide Convention because it ‘fails to distinguish the morally different ways in which a people can be “destroyed”.’ For most people there is nothing moral in destroying a people.

You compare the Allies killing of thousands of French and Italian civilians in the fight against the Nazis with Israel’s ‘war against Hamas’. But there is no  comparison. 

Hamas is a resistance organisation waging a guerrilla war against the world’s fourth most powerful army. The Nazis had an army consisting of armed soldiers complete with tanks and aircraft. So too does Israel. It is the IDF not Hamas which is comparable to the Nazis.

It is also noticeable that you avoid mentioning the word ‘Palestinians’. To you they are ‘Arabs’. This too is part of a genocidal mentality whereby indigenous people are invisible.

What is clear is that your morality is not politically neutral. You say that

THERE is no doubt that Hamas intended to kill indiscriminately on 7 October 2023, because we know that they deliberately hunted down the old, the young, and the infant.’

Hamas mass rape a ‘hoax’ and ‘fake news’, says University of Sydney professor

But there is doubt. Israel has waged a war of atrocity propaganda. The first lies were the 40 beheaded babies hoax. Then there was the mass rape hoax. Hamas’ principal aim was to capture Israeli hostages in order to exchange them for Palestinian hostages.

Whereas you attributed to Hamas the worst of motives, you went out of your way to excuse the actions of the Israeli army. You wrote that:

In contrast, the fact that the Israeli military have targeted buildings where they know civilians are present is no proof that they intend to kill them; for it may be that their intended targets are Hamas sites, to which, tragically, civilians are located dangerously close.

So when Israel bombs and attacks hospitals it is because they are Hamas sites? And ambulances? Universities? What about schools?  How about reservoirs and water treatment plants? Was Hamas hiding out in them too? How about the Trades Union Centre? Are bakeries and kindergartens also Hamas bases.

I know that you are an expert in moral theology, but that begs the question of whether moral theology is a genuine academic discipline or an invented and imagined subject. It is entirely subjective and without any means of independent verification.

Everything you have said could justify any and everything that the Nazis did. Your morality seems to depend on which side you take.  Are there any universal principles that can be distilled from your writings?

You say that ‘the Nazi death camps are the paradigm of genocide’. But are they? One of the main characteristics of Genocide is that there is no paradigm except perhaps the presence of colonialism/imperialism/nationalism.

The death of between 12 and 15 million Africans in the slave trade might also be considered paradigmatic but your main concern when it comes to colonial slavery is to oppose reparations by indulging in whatabouttery in your book The Tyranny of Imagined Guilt.

As Professor Alan Lester writes:

Whataboutery seems to me a very fragile ethical edifice upon which to build an anti-reparative argument.

It seems that ethics have no place in your moral theology. Lester writes that you ‘

accuse(s) reparations activists of “the reckless, dismissive brushing aside of concerns about the truth.” One wonders if he was looking in the mirror.

For you there seems to be only one genocide, the Jewish holocaust. Contrary to Zionist propaganda it was no more unique than any other genocide.

Was the Genocide in the Congo  where amputations and the skinning alive of the 10 million Africans were perpetrated, less cruel or paradigmatic? 

Was the Herero/Nama genocide in SW Africa to be disregarded when it was based on the same principles of racial supremacy and even involved some of the same actors who perpetrated the Nazi holocaust, such as Eugen Fischer?

The Nazi genocide of Jews has become an imperialist narrative, shorn of its political and social  roots, as the main rationale for everything that Israel does. It is no surprise that you do not deploy your ‘moral’ arguments against reparations for slavery against the reparations that were paid by the Germans to Israel.

I can only assume that the real reason for your anguish is that as a Christian Zionist you are prepared to justify any atrocity and any war crime that Israel commits because without the ‘return’ of the Jews to the Holy Land Christ will not be returning. In other words the ends justify the means.

When I saw you in the debate hosted by Mehdi Hassan you brought to mind Percy Shelley’s Masque of Anarchy, written in the wake of the massacre at Peterloo in 1819:

I met Murder on the way—

He had a mask like Castlereagh -

Very smooth he looked, yet grim;

Seven blood-hounds followed him.

You are also the author of Colonialism: A Moral Reckoning, which attempts to provide a defence of the British Empire. In your own words it is ‘Empire Without Apology’.

Although you conceded in the debate hosted by Mehdi Hassan that the Empire contained ‘‘elements of racism’ you see the Empire as not having been ‘essentially racist’. On balance it was a force for good.

It is no surprise that you were ennobled by Kemi Badenoch who like most Black people in the Tory Party goes out of her way to prove that she’s politically White. Badenoch is the Black Face of White Supremacism. It is no surprise that she has been called a coconut by Black anti-racists.

Kenan Malik, in his review of your book describes how, in 1919, the architect of British support for Zionism, Foreign Secretary, Arthur James Balfour,

dismissed the idea that the new League of Nations should adopt a statement about equality, insisting it unimaginable “that a man from central Africa could be regarded as the equal of a European or an American

This is the racism that led to Britain’s support of Zionism.

Your real function as an academic was to provide the religious and ideological underpinnings for the new imperialism that we are seeing play out in the wars in the Middle East today. Your academic discipline, Moral Theology, is little more than a religious justification of imperialism and its work. It is political chicanery dressed up in academic jargon.

Virtually every human rights organisation in the world recognises that what has occurred in Gaza is genocide. Organisations as disparate as Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Israel’s B’tselem and the UN’s own Commission of Inquiry. The Association of Genocide Scholars voted by 86% to describe what was happening in Gaza as a genocide.

Perhaps you would like to inform people just what your own qualifications are that enables you to contradict not only every human rights organisation but the testimony of doctors like Dr Mark Perlmutter. In an interview Perlmutter described how, when volunteering at the European hospital of Khan Younis in southern Gaza he "saw two children that were shot twice". He added: "No child gets shot twice by mistake."

Virtually every doctor who has volunteered in Gaza has the same story. Israel is using children as target practice. Does this not tell you something about what has happened in Gaza or does your allegiance to the Tory Party and mammon preclude this?

It seems to me that a far better title for you to use would be the Professor of an Immoral Theology, not forgetting the Regius bit of course!

Tony Greenstein 

14 March 2026

Trump’s War Has No Plan But It Does Have a Goal – To Destroy Opposition to US & Israeli Hegemony in the Middle East - Whatever the Cost

 What the War Exposes is the Underlying Weakness and Brittleness of US Domination & the Complicity of the Arab Regimes With Zionism & Genocide

John Mearsheimer: No Winning in Iran for the U.S.

The war against Iran and Trump’s threat to escalate it are a perfect example of the madness of capitalism and its military-industrial complex, which is based on destruction for its own sake. Having got himself into a war Trump doesn’t have what John Mearsheimer describes as an off-ramp.


Trump and Hegseth’s only strategy is to go yet further up the escalation ramp and to threaten even more devastation unless Iran stops blocking the Straits of Hormuz. This is highly unlikely to work. On the contrary Iran has the ability to take out nearly all of the neighbouring Arab state’s oil facilities, meaning there will be no need to block the straits.

Desalination plants are crucial to the very existence of the Gulf states. In Kuwait, about 90% of drinking water comes from desalination, the figure is 86% in Oman, about 70% in Saudi Arabia, 42% in the UAE, 90%  and about 50% in Israel.

There have already been attacks by the US on a desalination plant on the island of Qeshm, in the Straits of Hormuz and an Iranian attack the next day on a Bahranian plant. Iran is less dependent on desalination but if the US military or Israel is mad enough to attack its plants then Iran could strike back.


It goes without saying that an attack on desalination plants is a war crime but Israel has continually attacked water treatment plants in Gaza. In March 2025 two desalination plants in Deir al-Balah were forced to close after Israeli forces cut electricity supplies.

Before the war broke out I agreed with Mearsheimer that there was a good chance that the US would not attack Iran. Why? Because it was impossible to see what the end game was. But that was to ignore the essential irrationality of US imperialism and its drive for hegemony in the Middle East.

Even Starmer understood that you can’t effect regime change from the air, which is why he initially refused to allow the US to use British bases. This attracted the wrath of Britain’s most notorious war criminal, Tony Blair, for whom war is like a love potion. Starmer then reversed his decision.

It appears that the sole reason for the war is to inflict as much damage on Iran and if possible to make it a failed state. It is blood letting for its own sake. The purported reason for the attack, the issue of nuclear weapons, is a fiction since not only was Iran not building such a weapon but the assassinated President Khameini had issued a fatwa in 2003 prohibiting their development. US intelligence concurred.



 

Nor was the war intended to liberate the Iranian people from an oppressive regime. On the contrary it is inflicting as much pain as it can on them including murdering over 175 people, mainly school girls in Minab, an all-girls elementary school.

This has been verified by Bellingcat among others. Our own miserable ‘Defence’ Secretary John Healey condemned ‘indiscriminate’ Iranian attacks on Bahrain military bases but refused to condemn US attacks on Iran, including the bombing of the school. Trump simply denied US responsibility claiming that Iran had done it.


Why America is Losing the War With Iran (w/ John Mearsheimer) | 

The Chris Hedges Report

The war in Iran is not though simply a war fought on the whim of an incontinent and deranged felon who became President because of the lack of an alternative.

It would also be wrong to describe the war as having been fought on behalf of Israel, despite Secretary of State Marco Rubio having said that if Israel had not given notice that it would attack Iran regardless, there would probably have been no war. Trump apparently feared that the US’s bases would be targeted by Iran in the case of an Israeli attack.

It would however have been quite possible for the US to tell Israel that it was on its own if it attacked Iran. It could even have informed Iran that in the event of an Israeli attack it wouldn’t be joining in or defending Israel from its missiles, which would have meant that Iran would have concentrated solely on Israel. However this would fly in the face of US foreign policy which is to defend Israel at all costs.


John Mearsheimer: U.S. Already Lost Iran War - No Off-Ramp in Sight

There is not surprisingly a deep scepticism and disbelief about the incoherent and contradictory reasons given for the attack on Iran - nuclear enrichment, support for ‘terrorist’ groups and ballistic missiles.

That explains why the belief that Trump is trying to knock Epstein off the front pages is so strongly held. Democrats agreed with this by an 81-14 margin. Even a quarter of Republicans believe that Trump launched the war as a distraction from Epstein.

The irony is that both the US and Israel possess nuclear weapons and Israel has hinted that in the event of a threat to its existence, even from conventional weapons, it would put into operation the Samson Option, i.e. destroy everybody.

It is important to understand that even if Trump didn’t want the war to begin at a time of Israel’s choosing, he was forced to join Israel’s attack, not because of the Lobby but because it can’t allow its rabid attack dog, Israel, which is the projection of US power in the Middle East, to be battered by Iran’s missiles. A defeat for Israel would be a defeat for American prestige and power in the region.

Those who think that Israel and ‘The Lobby’ controls American Foreign Policy, like e.g. David Miller, can’t explain how a tiny country with few natural resources can control a superpower many times its size and power. Which explains Miller’s belief that a Global Jewish Empire has arisen which has successfully captured the US (& British) states!

What the war has done, with Iran’s attack on US bases in the Gulf, is exposed both the complicity of the Arab regimes with US domination of the Middle East and their fragility. Every single Gulf regime harbours US bases, whose main purpose is to protect the regimes against their own people as much as any external enemy. The regimes are junior allies of the Americans in the oppression of their peoples.

Given that Israel is supported to the hilt by the US, and the genocide in Gaza could not have happened without its support militarily, these Arab regimes are fully complicit in both the genocide and the annexation and terror on the West Bank.

Politically what this means for the Palestinian struggle is that the Arab regimes are no less an enemy than Israel and Zionism. Their relationship to US imperialism and therefore Israel is much like that of a prostitute to a pimp.

War on Iran threatens global energy supply

What Trump has also demonstrated is that the US Empire has no rationale or justification beyond its assertion that might is right. There was no logic or rationale in attacking Iran. Trump did not pretend, as Bush and Blair did in 2003 in Iraq, that this was a war for democracy and nation building.

Trump paid lip-service to Iran’s protesters. His promise to protect them was hollow. His only concern was about the interests of the Empire and its main ally Israel. This is not something that an Empire confident in itself would do. It suggests that the days of a unipolar world are coming to an end and that the US Empire is overstretched, militarily and economically.

Trump was accused of trying to effect regime change but even this is doubtful. The killing of Khameini by Israel was an end in itself. It is unlikely that his assassination was seen as likely to cause the regime to crumble. Creating a failed ethnically divided state seems to have been the main objective.

There will be no nation building or pretence that there is anything good likely to come out of the attack on Iran.

Trump is an ideal representative of the decline of US imperialism. He personifies mafia capitalism. Apart from the allegations of rape, child abuse and paedophilia against him he is incapable of telling the truth (a trait Starmer shares), amoral, narcissistic and venal. His corruption, racism and authoritarianism mark him out.

The fact that European leaders  such as Merz, Macron and Starmer do their best to placate and praise him demonstrates that servility, deference and fawning are the main qualities needed in bourgeois politics today.

The US went into Venezuela and kidnapped its President in order to steal its oil. There used to be a fiction that imperialism benefitted those it oppressed. It was the White Man’s Burden. We drained India of its riches on the pretence that we were bringing it civilisation despite the natives’ ingratitude. Trump doesn’t even pretend to be serving a greater good.

The US blew fishermen’s boats out of the water in the Caribbean and then ‘War Secretary’ Pete Hegseth instructed the military to kill any survivors in a ‘double tap’ strike.

Judges of the International Criminal Court are sanctioned as is the UN Rapporteur on Palestine, Francesca Albanese. Trump even threatened to invade Greenland. The attack on Iran is part and parcel of the criminality that Trump has made into an art form. Israel is his ideal partner.

Meanwhile the Zionist state, which should be seen as the United States’ crazy diseased dog in the Middle East is indulging its own blood lust in Lebanon as part of Netanyahu’s Greater Israel fantasy.

Despite the terrorist pager attack last year, Israel has been surprised by Hezbollah’s defence of Lebanon. Hezbollah realises that if it doesn’t strike now then it will suffer later.

Cabinet Ministers such as Clare Short and Robin Cook resigned from Blair’s government at the time of the Iraq War. It says everything you need to know about the Labour government today that not even one of Starmer’s cabinet has anything approaching a backbone.

War demonstrates US weakness in Middle East

What the war also demonstrates is the fundamental weakness of Trump’s policy in the Middle East, its incoherence and the failure to articulate the reasons for the attack on Iran. This is reflected in the fact that the war is unpopular even in the United States, in contrast to the support the Iraq War had. This is compounded by the fear that the attack on Iran has weakened rather than strengthened the US position in the Middle East.

The war is also unpopular in Europe. Only in Israel is the war popular, some 93% of Israeli Jews supporting it. Blood letting is one of the few things that bind Israelis together.

The attack on Iran left America’s Arab allies vulnerable whilst being unable to take out a regime hostile to it. An attack on what you perceive an enemy without a clear aim or goal is not a sign of strength. Trump simply ignored the economic consequences of his war.

Absurdly Trump demanded that he should have a say over who was Iran’s new leader before demanding unconditional surrender. His narcissistic behaviour is more akin to a child who can’t get his own way issuing threats and indulging in bluster.  Trump is a child in charge of a deadly military.

What is amazing is that Iran’s blocking the Straits of Hormuz was not anticipated. Anyone with a cursory knowledge of the region could have forecast that. What is hurting the United States government today are the economic repercussions and the rise in the price of oil above $100. Economists forecast it could go above $150 a barrel.

A War Based on a Lie

Truth is always the first casualty in a war. If you only watched the BBC you’d be forgiven for believing that no Iranian missiles have struck Israel. Israel has strict censorship and the BBC is happy to comply in spirit and deed.

In 2003 we had WMD in Iraq but none is so dishonest as Trump’s claim that he had launched the war in order “to defend the American people by eliminating imminent threats from the Iranian regime.”

No one in their right mind could seriously believe that the United States was under ‘imminent threat’. Yet Trump justified his war of aggression by claiming that:

we sought repeatedly to make a deal. We tried. They wanted to do it. They didn't want to do it. ... They just wanted to practice evil.

But Iran refused, just as it has for decades and decades, they rejected every opportunity to renounce their nuclear ambitions, and we can't take it anymore.

In fact negotiations were in progress when the United States launched its attacks. Trump’s lies are not even convincing.

This after Trump had claimed in the summer that he had ‘obliterated Iran’s nuclear capability.’ In fact a deal had almost been reached, according to Oman’s Foreign Minister, when Trump attacked.  A carbon copy of what happened in the summer.

The claim that Iran was developing nuclear weapons was entirely bogus. Iran’s threat was to Israel’s domination of the region. Slightly more plausible is Iran’s support for resistance organisations in the region – Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis. As for their final demand, to remove their ballistic missiles, this was in effect demanding that Iran render itself defenceless against future Israeli attacks.

Despite Israel’s assertion that Iran is an existential threat to it, in 1985 it behaved very differently. As Peter Beinart writes

Israel sold Iran 100 anti-tank missiles. Israel spent much of the 1980s arming Iran in its war against Iraq, which the Jewish state saw as a much graver threat.... When Iran acquired its first ballistic missile in 1985, in an effort to counter Iraq, Israel supplemented the Islamic Republic’s arsenal with shorter-range missiles of its own. Haaretz has even reported that some of the anti-tank missiles later fired by Hezbollah at Israeli forces were likely sold by Israel to Iran in the 1980s.... (as) Trita Parsi (noted) in his book A Single Role of the Dice, “Throughout the 1980s, no one in Israel said anything about an Iranian threat—the word wasn’t even uttered.”

Beinart goes on to say that

In May 2003, after the Bush administration’s invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, Iran sent the US government a secret message: If the US lifted sanctions, ceased trying to overthrow the Islamic Republic, and accepted Tehran’s right to peaceful nuclear energy, Iran would end its support for Hamas and Islamic Jihad, pressure Hezbollah to disarm, place its nuclear program under international inspection, and support the 2002 Arab Peace Initiative,

In 1996, according to Parsi’s book, Treacherous Alliance, Iran pressured Hezbollah to accept a ceasefire after a 16-day skirmish with Israel. If the claim that Iran poses a grave threat to Israel is far-fetched, the claim that it poses a grave threat to the United States is even more absurd

In other words this is a war fought on lies to defend the indefensible. And contrary to the propaganda of the BBC and other media, support for Iran against imperialism’s attack is not defence of the regime itself.

Tony Greenstein