More than two weeks have passed since the “Al-Aqsa Flood” war; Israel has not achieved any goal. Recent Zionist polls show that 75% of its colonial settlers hold Netanyahu primarily responsible for the “October 7” operation, and 66% said that he should resign at the end of the war, while 64% support holding early elections. A clear division that would definitely lead to an actual civil war. With a large percentage of the occupiers being expelled from their settlements by the resistance throughout the occupied Palestinian lands, any possible scenario can only be translated to the imminent collapse of the Zionist dysfunctional colonial entity.
Historically, when Quraysh attempted to dissuade Prophet Mohammed from calling to Islam failed, they unanimously agreed on besieging him in “Abu Talib’s Valley,” where he and his followers were subjected to a complete boycott and siege. Quraysh thought that the companions of the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) would not be patient, and that they would surrender, but after 3 years, the siege ended, and the Muslims emerged victorious.
The same thing is happening currently in Gaza. The Zionist enemy has failed to curb the Palestinian resistance, so it decided to besiege the already “besieged” Gaza. It is preventing food and water, while slaughtering women, children, and the elderly. Even if they survive and hospitalised, this does not protect them from being bombed again in the hospital. The enemy stupidly believes that his criminal method will push the Palestinians to surrender and flee to the Sinai desert.
Two weeks of steadfastness and resistance; the enemy is continuing its collective punishment with an American green light. What the Western media is doing is granting the enemy the absolute right to kill Palestinians, ignoring all the compelling circumstances that prompted the Palestinian resistance to carry out the heroic operation on October 7.
The provided aids to the Gazans are a small bandage for a wide wound; Since before the current war, Gaza has been suffering from stifling humanitarian conditions, poverty, unemployment, etc.
During the 15th century BC, the Canaanites founded the city of Gaza. Then it was occupied by the Pharaohs, Greeks, Romans, Byzantines, Ottomans, and others. Under Ottoman rule, the first municipal council was established there in 1893. During World War I, it was occupied by the British until 1948, when it was administered by Egypt. After the 1967 victory and until 1993, the occupying entity controlled the entire Gaza Strip and confiscated large areas of land to establish its settlements. Then, in 1987, it witnessed the outbreak of the first Palestinian Intifada, and the enemy took repressive measures such as mass arrests, closing schools, curfews, etc. On September 13, 1993, an agreement was reached between Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin to withdraw from Gaza, to be administered by the Palestinian Authority.
In August 2005, the occupation withdrew completely from Gaza, but the strip remained besieged by land, sea, and air. In June 2007, Hamas achieved a landslide success in the Palestinian legislative elections, which angered the occupation and prompted it to launch an aggression in November 2008 and prevent supplies of electricity, fuel, and medicine, which increased the suffering of the population. Several attempts were made to send ships loaded with humanitarian aid and break the siege, but the enemy prevented them. On May 29, 2010, the “Freedom Flotilla” set off for the Gaza Strip, but on May 31, it was subjected to an Israeli naval attack, which prevented the flotilla from arriving. In 2012 and 2014, the enemy launched two attacks on Gaza, but the Palestinian resistance failed them.
The image of the Zionist army cannot be restored as the Palestinian resistance has accumulated its experiences, and has become stronger and more capable of deterring the enemy. It has increased the level of coordination between other resistance forces. More than two weeks and not a single Zionist occupier has set foot in the Gaza Strip, and the most they can do is continue the aerial genocide; A path that puts us before two general possibilities: either the battle expands into a regional war, or a ceasefire, but according to the conditions of the resistance. In both cases, the people of Gaza will emerge victorious.
By Sondoss Al Asaad