Gaza today is a graveyard of statistics — tens of thousands
of dead, hundreds of thousands displaced, and almost the entire population
dependent on aid. The relentless bombardment has not uprooted Hamas; it has
only deepened the political and emotional trench dividing Israelis and
Palestinians. Far from eliminating militancy, Israeli campaign has turned Gaza
into a permanent symbol of resistance and despair — a living wound in the
conscience of the Middle East.
The Israeli leadership sells this war as a quest for
security. Yet, two years on, Israel is less secure, not more. Its borders
remain tense, international isolation grows, and domestic protests simmer under
the surface of official triumphalism.
The myth of “precision warfare” has collapsed under the
rubble of homes, schools, and hospitals. Even Washington, Israel’s diplomatic
shield, is beginning to show fatigue — forced to defend the indefensible in
every international forum.
Meanwhile, the Arab world’s silence has been deafening. Once
vocal capitals have turned pragmatic, their outrage replaced by quiet
normalization. The Palestinians, once betrayed by borders, are now betrayed by
indifference.
Israel’s war on Gaza is no longer about eliminating Hamas —
it is about maintaining an illusion that military dominance can substitute for
political vision. But wars end; occupations linger; and history has a ruthless
memory.
Two years later, Israel may have won battles, but it is
losing the narrative — and with it, the moral ground that once set it apart
from those it condemns.
Gaza’s ruins are not only a testament to Palestinian
suffering but also to Israel’s strategic and moral decay. The war may still
rage, but the victory, if ever claimed, will be hollow.
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