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When Hamas turned its guns on us Gazans, the ‘pro-Palestinian’ chorus fell silent

Humanitarian concern is necessary, but without political honesty it becomes another ritual that sustains the cycle. The vision of the Strip governed by civilians rather than militants is not naïve; it is the minimum condition for recovery

October 20, 2025 14:25
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3 min read

A neighbour in Gaza suffers from Alzheimer’s. He has been displaced four times during this war. He no longer remembers the events of October 7 or how it began. Yet one memory survives: the “victories”. Recently he smiled and said, “We’ve won every time – what’s new about this one?”

In a city of ruins, his fading mind holds the clearest thought of all: that every so-called victory ends in the same destruction, the same slogans, the same silence.

Gaza today stands on the edge of exhaustion. Streets once filled with life have become corridors of dust. The last Israeli hostage once held by Hamas has returned home; the movement had claimed their captivity served the dream of a state “from the river to the sea”. What remains instead is a population stripped of safety and shelter still declaring triumph over devastation.

The pattern is familiar. Each round of war brings the same outcome – destruction followed by proclamations of glory. The rhetoric of resistance grows louder as the prospects for ordinary people shrink. In the absence of accountability or reconstruction, the illusion of victory becomes the only product left to sell. Behind this theatre stands a network of regional sponsors that treat Gaza’s tragedy as a means of influence.

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