Thumpalumpacus
Major
Completely, but while the holocaust was truly awful, I suspect it's a bit trite to presume it formed the main impetus for the establishment of the Israeli state. It most certainly sped up the process, but as you mentioned earlier, there are a lot of forces at play in this particular scenario, real or imagined and I reckon it was gonna happen regardless. It might have taken longer though, there was something about several million dispossessed Jews wandering Europe that provided a more immediate need.
As I said, I believe it formed the main impetus for international support of that state once established. It's a different claim than your phrasing.
It was going to happen without the Holocaust, no doubt in my mind on a longer timeline, as you write. However, with the Holocaust, and the immediate Arab attack upon the new state, the fact that the Holocaust had happened almost surely affected international opinion which resulted in various nations giving Israel moral or material support.
Compare it to the current invasion of Ukraine. Very few non-Ukrainian sources mention the Holodomor in analyzing international support, and that's because it happened so long ago -- not to mention it being whitewashed by the Western press at the time, including the New York Times. Only Ukrainians understand that cultural memory as being part of their motivation for fighting so damned hard. We Westerners continually hear about "democratic values" and/or "love of homeland" as the reasons Ukrainians are fighting, but their cultural memory is an aspect most Western reports gloss over. We are giving them the same sort of support as we gave Israel not for their reasons, but for our own. Does that make sense?
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