Gaza’s destruction is not a natural disaster but a political crime, obscured by humanitarian framing that enables global inaction and erases accountability.
Browsing: Gaza
Trump’s Gaza ceasefire faces major hurdles: Hamas survives, the PA is weak, and international forces remain reluctant to deploy.
Israel freed hostages and holds buffer zones, but Hamas survives, governs half of Gaza, and gained diplomatic stature—making victory ambiguous.
The Gaza Stabilization Force faces stalled progress and unresolved questions on mandate, composition, and U.S. role, risking its viability.
Gaza’s $25 billion reconstruction plan requires ending the blockade, governance reform, and Palestinian self-determination to provide hope and jobs for youth.
Hamas remains the key obstacle to lasting peace; defeating it requires parallel U.S.-led efforts on Palestinian security, PA reform, and Arab normalization.
Israel blocks Gaza’s governing committee, empowers proxy gangs, and pre-plans ceasefire collapse while projecting a facade of diplomatic progress.
Trump’s expanded Board of Peace aims to replace UN conflict resolution but faces major legitimacy issues and Western rejection.
Israel’s admission of killing 70,000 in Gaza met with global silence, underscoring complicity in obscuring genocide.
Each option for Hamas fighters carries major risks—from local security collapse to creating a global militant diaspora.
