Israel Genocide in Gaza - 2023 to present - Part ll

US is trying to salvage Israel's image and the Abraham's accords. By forcing a 'peace' on Arabs and the entire Middle East by gaslighting the region into accepting Jewish Supremacy as 'peace'. The US government is Satanic.
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President Ahmed Al-Shara: Israel has been occupying the Golan since 1967, and now it wants to take areas in southern Syria to protect the Golan, and it took the Golan to protect northern Israel, and in a few years, it will take central Syria to protect southern Syria, and if things continue like this, it will reach Spain to protect itself. The Israeli justifications are laughable.
 
This doesn't look good. So far Israel has contributed nothing to the ceasefire. It got its hostages back and now the rhetoric to break the ceasefire has started up again.

The hostages were never a leverage either. It's propaganda to hide real intentions of the war. Now that hostages are out the way, the new casus belli is Palestinians have to 'disarm' or be killed.

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It was a trick by Trump
 
Israel also attacking Lebanon

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Brutal clashes in Gaza: Hamas publicly executes eight people​

Brutal clashes erupted in several areas of Gaza between Hamas and rival factions. The incident, which occurred after the withdrawal of Israeli troops, likely ended with the public execution of eight people.
Brutal clashes in Gaza: Hamas publicly executes eight people - CNN

Fierce clashes erupted in several areas of Gaza between Hamas and rival factions, including an incident that allegedly ended in a public execution. CNN reports this, according to UNN.

Details​

It is noted that after the withdrawal of Israeli troops from part of the territory in the enclave, internal tensions are escalating.
 
It is noted that after the withdrawal of Israeli troops from part of the territory in the enclave, internal tensions are escalating.

Sliding back into violence should be stopped by any means effective. The poor suffering people of Gaza deserve better than ongoing violence.
 
Urgent | Al-Qassam Brigades: The resistance has adhered to what was agreed upon, and has handed over all the living prisoners it had, as well as the bodies in its possession that it could access. As for the remaining bodies, they require significant efforts and specialized equipment to search for and recover them, and we are making great efforts to close this file.

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Israel buried them, along with tens of thousands of Palestinians, under rubble with its incessant bombardment of Gaza, and they are inaccessible until Israel allows necessary equipment and international teams to get into Gaza

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A large number of trucks entered the Gaza Strip

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Efforts to open roads and remove rubble do not stop in Gaza

The determination is great and the hope is greater despite the catastrophic situation

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Brutal clashes in Gaza: Hamas publicly executes eight people​

Brutal clashes erupted in several areas of Gaza between Hamas and rival factions. The incident, which occurred after the withdrawal of Israeli troops, likely ended with the public execution of eight people.
Brutal clashes in Gaza: Hamas publicly executes eight people - CNN

Fierce clashes erupted in several areas of Gaza between Hamas and rival factions, including an incident that allegedly ended in a public execution. CNN reports this, according to UNN.

Details​

It is noted that after the withdrawal of Israeli troops from part of the territory in the enclave, internal tensions are escalating.
Those are collaborators/traitors and criminals. What do you expect them to be doing with such people? Pretty sure if something similar was occurring in the US during a civil war or foreign invasion, the military/state/institution with the upper hand, would be applying capital punishment as well. Pretty sure that this remains a part of the military laws of most armies during war time and even peace time. Not pretty though but no war/conflict is.
 
Those are collaborators/traitors and criminals. What do you expect them to be doing with such people? Pretty sure if something similar was occurring in the US during a civil war or foreign invasion, the military/state/institution with the upper hand, would be applying capital punishment as well. Pretty sure that this remains a part of the military laws of most armies during war time and even peace time. Not pretty though but no war/conflict is.

As if they got a fair trial to prove they were. it's a lot easier to shoot first and ask questions later when you are the one holding the guns.
 
US is trying to salvage Israel's image and the Abraham's accords. By forcing a 'peace' on Arabs and the entire Middle East by gaslighting the region into accepting Jewish Supremacy as 'peace'. The US government is Satanic.
..
..

President Ahmed Al-Shara: Israel has been occupying the Golan since 1967, and now it wants to take areas in southern Syria to protect the Golan, and it took the Golan to protect northern Israel, and in a few years, it will take central Syria to protect southern Syria, and if things continue like this, it will reach Spain to protect itself. The Israeli justifications are laughable.
They have the upper hand due to unlimited and almost unconditional US support. This was always the case. Not much a divided region can do, let alone war-torn Syria (that remains de facto divided to this day even after the fall of Al-Assad).

The only solution is greater cooperation and trying to limit the technological and economic gap. Impose your own will on your own region. So far not possible for the region because everyone is being played against everyone. Highly polarized if you notice even online discourse. It is by design I believe.

Arabs/Muslims have become so obsessed about their largely new national identities and borders (that have been changing and shifting 1000 of times throughout history) that they don't see the larger picture. The amount of outright idiotic rivalries in the Muslim and Arab world is unlimited. Same thing in the West, historically even more so, but they have learned to bury the hatched and are now competing economically and in sports. I hope that I will see a day where this happens for us by large.

As for the end goal, as I said, great thing that a ceasefire was created and peace can emerge in Gaza (more so than for the past 2 years at least) but long-term this does not change anything if Israel is not held accountable and if there is no serious push for a political solution to this conflict, either 1 state solution with equal rights for everyone as I wrote or some kind of two-state solution where everyone can be content largely.

Personally I am disillusioned and extremely tired of this conflict that is bogging down much of the region and I can only imagine that Palestinians are that even much more with the added frustration, trauma etc.

One thing that the leaders that spoke during that meeting in Sharm el-Sheikh were right about, is that Trump (USA) holds the cards. Hard to disagree with.

As if they got a fair trial to prove they were. it's a lot easier to shoot first and ask questions later.
Sure, but do you really think that they took 8 random males and decided to execute them in public given all the scrutiny on Gaza right now?

Those are criminals and most likely the Yasser Abu Shabab gangs. That is what local Gazans are saying online.


Now if that is correct or not I have no clue about but neither do you. But is it highly probable that my theory is right and I even think that Trump himself alluded to it when he said that Hamas had the right to deal with criminals or traitors or what he said.
 
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You are asking the wrong question. What I think about why he is doing this is not important, he can be doing it because of the prize, or something else. I am just using an answer to refer to his action. I don't know why he did what he did; I am not him.

But the questions you should ask are

1.) What changes after this deal
2.) What did Trump get in return?

On the other hand, you can try to have a wild guess on what Trump's intention is. He doesn't believe Palestinians should have a state (his word, not mine), he believes Gaza should be razed and build a top-notch seaside resort and run by the American (again, his word, not mine), and as you said, he sends billions and billions of dollars of weapons to Israel, and now what? He suddenly had an enlightenment and tried to do the "right" thing, which wasn't going to solve anything?

Knowing Trump, you don't get him to do something unless there are something in it for him, tell me, what do you think is in it for him to do this?
It's not what trump wants , it's what his Israeli controllers want. The expenditure and financial impact of the attack on Gaza is not sustainable. Israeli economy is down in the dumps and Israel is taking down the US economy with it. In fact the Gaza war is indirectly undermining US security and strengthening US enemies. The more the US redirects weapons and resources to Israel the higher chance that Russia and China will take the opportunity to attack Europe/Taiwan. On the other hand the Arabs who have Trillions invested in the US have finally realised they and their investments aren't secure and they can be next in the firing line. Even though the US who has billions of dollars of hi-tech bases US army failed to either inform or protect the Arabs from Israeli attacks. Most likely the Arabs must have threatened to withdraw their investments which forced Trump to act. Trump has no qualms about blood of Palestinian men, women and children on his hands and has callously looked on at the barbarity he signed off.
 
The world has become a circus of corrupt leaders , who rain praise on the enabler of genocide and bow to the bower.

‘I am the only one that matters’: Trump deals praise and insults at Gaza summit​

Self-styled world’s greatest peacemaker calls Meloni ‘beautiful’ and Erdoğan a ‘friend’, but takes jab at Iraqi and Canadian leaders


Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor
Tue 14 Oct 2025 09.44 EDT
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The chief interest at Monday’s largely pointless Gaza summit in Sharm el-Sheikh lay in whether Donald Trump insulted or feted his fellow global leaders as they approached the self-styled world’s greatest peacemaker to shake hands and pose for a thumbs-up photograph.

As the host of the party, the US president had arrived – unapologetically – more than two hours late, musing to the Israeli parliament before boarding his flight from Tel Aviv that he feared his wealthy guests would already have left, leaving him with only two poor countries remaining.


He need not have worried. First up on the stage to be greeted by Trump was Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the vice-president of the United Arab Emirates. A beaming Trump pointed out Mansour’s “lovely shoes”, then pointed at him, saying: “A lot of cash, bundles of cash.” The Manchester City owner attempted to beam back happily at this self-evident truth.

Trump and Mansour bin Zayed shaking hands
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‘Bundles of cash’: Trump and Sheikh Mansour. Photograph: Getty Images
Another to find favour with the Sun King was Giorgia Meloni, the only woman gatecrashing an otherwise male-only event. Trump turned to the Italian prime minister, saying: “In the United States, it would be the end of your political career. But I’ll take the risk. Do you mind if I say you’re beautiful? Because you truly are beautiful.”

The unqualified compliment stood in contrast to Meloni’s earlier interaction with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who also told her she looked “great”, before adding: “But you should not smoke so much.”

Trump and Meloni shaking hands as he says something in her ear
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‘Truly beautiful’: Trump and Meloni. Photograph: Evan Vucci/AP
Trump had a lot of praise for the Turkish leader, since he was a “tough” guy. The short Trump biography of Erdoğan gave the impression that we were in the presence of a blend of Genghis Khan and Greta Garbo. “Erdoğan possesses one of the strongest armies in the world,” Trump opined. “It is much stronger than it appears. He has triumphed in many conflicts, but he does not want any praise. He wants to be left alone.

“He is a tough person, but he is my friend, and he is always there when I need him. When Nato faces problems with him, they call me. I speak with Erdoğan, and he never lets me down.”

Another tough guy to receive Trump’s seal of approval was the Egyptian president, Abdel Fatah al-Sisi – nominally his co-host. Sitting down alongside Sisi, oblivious to his outstretched hand, Trump delivered his verdict on a man whose government stands accused of wholesale repression. “I am here with my friend, a strong leader, the president … and also a general, and he is good at both,” Trump said. “They have a low crime rate here, unlike the United States, where we have a high crime rate because we have state governors who don’t know what they’re doing … but here in Egypt, they don’t mess around when it comes to crime.”

Trump and Erdoğan posing for a photo together, with thumbs up
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‘He is a tough person, but he is my friend’: Trump and Erdoğan. Photograph: Suzanne Plunkett/PA
The Hungarian prime minister, Viktor Orbán, who had made the guest list for no ostensible reason save his detestation of the EU, was also blessed. Trump said he liked Viktor, rolling the “r” to effect and adding: “I know a lot of people don’t agree with me, but I am the only one that matters.” Trump’s fellow world leaders behind him, including Keir Starmer, looked a little upset at another self-evident truth.

Less fortunate was the Iraqi prime minister, Mohammed Shia’ al-Sudani. Trump described his country as one “with so much oil it does not know what to do with it. That is a big problem if you have so much oil you don’t know what to do with it.” And with this aperçu, Sudani was dispatched.

Trump and Sudani with thumbs up
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‘So much oil’: Trump and Sudani. Photograph: Getty Images
Suddenly it was Starmer’s moment to shine. Trump asked: where is the UK representative? Starmer raised his hand, adding: “Right behind you as usual,” before being asked to step forward to the rostrum. Expecting to say a few words, he was instead thanked for turning up at short notice and directed by Trump to return to the UK’s natural place, in the dark shadow behind the Great Man.

Another European leader to suffer was Emmanuel Macron. Aware of the French president’s ability to appear in summit photography, Trump was taken aback when he discovered Macron had chosen to sit facing him in the audience rather than joining him on the stage. “I can’t believe it, you’re taking a low-key approach today,” Trump said. “I imagined you standing behind me.”

Trump and Macron. Photograph: Yoan Valat/EPA
The Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney, deigned to approach Trump to point out that in his remarks about Canada, Trump had promoted Carney to the post of president. “At least I didn’t say governor,” Trump shot back.

The one man who seemed to know how to handle the host was the Pakistani prime minister, Shehbaz Sharif. Sharif showered Trump with so much praise that Trump stepped forward to try to read the text of his speech, only to be pushed back forcibly by Sharif as he continued his paean.

Sharif speaking at the podium and gesturing towards Trump next to him
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Shehbaz Sharif (right) showered Trump with praise. Photograph: Suzanne Plunkett/AFP/Getty Images
“India and Pakistan are nuclear powers, and had it not been for his and his wonderful team’s intervention during those critical four days, a devastating war might have erupted,” Sharif said. “Who would have survived to tell the tale? History has immortalised his name in golden letters. May God bless you and grant you a long life to continue serving your country and nation with this great spirit.” And so on.

One leader who may have been breathing a sigh of relief is the Iranian president, Masoud Pezeshkian, who sought to protect his dignity by turning down the invitation altogether.
 

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