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[🇧🇩] Israel and Hamas war in Gaza-----Can Bangladesh be a peace broker?
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US-Israeli scheme to partition Gaza and break Palestinian will

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CounterPunch/Dylan Shaw

UNITED Nations Security Council Resolution 2803 is destined to fail. That failure will come at a price: more Palestinian deaths, extensive destruction, and the expansion of Israeli violence to the West Bank and elsewhere in the Middle East.

The resolution, passed on November 14, 2025, was a consolation prize to Israel after failing to achieve its ultimate objective from the two-year Gaza genocide: the ethnic cleansing of the population and the complete takeover of the Gaza Strip.

Gaza shattered a core Israeli doctrine: the absolute certainty of its military supremacy to subdue the Palestinian people using far superior US and Western-supplied technology. Though the occupation was never expected to be easy — as Israel’s history of violence in the Strip attests — the complete takeover was, in the mind of the Israeli leadership, a certainty. In August, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated with total confidence that Israel aimed to ‘take control of all of Gaza.’ That proved to be wishful thinking.

How Israel has failed to subdue an impoverished and besieged population of 2 million people, subjected to a blockade, a famine, and one of the world’s most horrific genocides, is a question for future historians. The immediate consequence, however, is political: Israel and its Western backers, especially the US, understand that an utter Israeli failure in Gaza would be interpreted by Israel’s victims as a pivotal sign of the times.

In fact, the notion of Israel’s implosion and the end of the Zionist project has moved from the margins of intellectual conversation into the centre. These ideas are bolstered by the Israelis themselves and are a recurring topic in Israeli media. Such a headline in Haaretz on November 15 is hardly shocking: ‘At a Secret Harvard Site, a Massive Archive of Israeliana Is Preserved – in Case Israel Ceases to Exist’.

Thus, US President Donald Trump’s so-called ‘Comprehensive Stabilization Plan for Gaza,’ signed in Sharm el-Sheikh on October 30, 2025, was the official start of the American scheme to save Israel from its own blunders. That supposed ‘ceasefire’ was meant to give Israel the chance to manoeuvre. Instead of occupying all of Gaza and pushing Palestinians out, Israel would now use social and political engineering to achieve the same goal.

The first phase of the plan, which placed most of Gaza under Israeli military control in anticipation of a gradual withdrawal, is already proving to be a sham. As of the time of writing this article, Israel, according to the Gaza government media office, has violated the agreement nearly 400 times, killing over 300 Palestinians. Israel continues to systematically demolish Palestinian areas and has increasingly begun operating west of the Yellow Line, which separates Gaza into two regions.

Worse still, according to Gaza authorities, Israel has been expanding its share of Gaza, estimated at approximately 58 per cent, westward. The ‘ceasefire’ has effectively enforced a new mechanism that allows Israel to carry out a one-sided war — with further territorial expansion, destruction, assassination, and occasional massacres — while Palestinians expect nothing but the mere slowing down of the Israeli death machine. This is not sustainable, especially since Israel has also violated the most basic principle of the imaginary ceasefire: allowing vital aid to enter Gaza.

UNSC 2803 endorses the ‘Comprehensive Stabilization Plan for Gaza’ without placing any legally binding expectations on Israel. It establishes a Transitional Administration and Oversight Council (TAOC), which entirely excludes Palestinians, including the Western-supported Palestinian Authority.

The executive branch of this TAOC would be the International Stabilization Force (ISF), whose sole job is to ‘stabilize the security environment in Gaza’ on behalf of Israel, notably by disarming Palestinian groups. The ISF, according to the resolution, operates ‘in close consultation and cooperation,’ meaning the force is tasked with achieving Israel’s military objectives, thereby allowing Israel to determine the timing and nature of its supposed gradual withdrawal.

Since Palestinians refuse to disarm – as unconditional disarmament without meaningful international guarantees would surely lead to the full return of the Israeli genocide – Israel will certainly refuse to leave Gaza. Netanyahu made that clear on November 16, when he stated that ‘Israel would not withdraw’ without disarming Hamas, ‘either the easy way or the hard way’.

The partition of Gaza is a US-led attempt to change the nature of the challenge for Tel Aviv, but ultimately aims at achieving the same original objectives. The resolution has served Israel’s interests fully, hence Netanyahu’s enthusiasm, yet Israel is still refusing to respect it, making it clear there will be no phase two of Trump’s original plan.

The entire political scheme, however, is doomed to fail. Though Palestinian suffering will certainly worsen in the coming months, the US-Israeli gambit is fundamentally flawed: it is built on trickery and coercion, resting on the false assumption that Palestinians, fearing genocide, will accept any plan imposed on them. This premise ignores history. Palestinians have consistently defeated such sophisticated mechanisms designed to break them, meaning this new arrangement is equally unsustainable.

Ultimately, the failure of UNSC Resolution 2803 confirms one enduring truth: the Israeli war on Gaza has not stopped. It has simply changed form. It is crucial that people around the world understand this next phase for what it is: a diplomatic manoeuvre designed to facilitate the ongoing Israeli plan to control the Gaza Strip and ethnically cleanse its population.

CounterPunch.org, December 2. Dr Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and the editor of The Palestine Chronicle.​
 
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Netanyahu's coalition skips parliamentary vote backing Trump's Gaza plan

REUTERS
Published :
Dec 03, 2025 21:02
Updated :
Dec 03, 2025 21:02

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during a press conference at the Prime Minister’s office in Jerusalem, August 10, 2025. Photo : ABIR SULTAN/Pool via REUTERS/Files

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's governing coalition skipped a parliamentary vote on Wednesday endorsing US President Donald Trump's plan to end the two-year war in Gaza.

The vote, proposed by opposition leader Yair Lapid, was largely symbolic as Netanyahu had already publicly backed the plan after Israel agreed to a ceasefire with Hamas in October.

Less than a third of the parliament's 120 lawmakers participated in it with 39 in favour and none against.

Lapid, a former prime minister, posted on X: "Israel now officially endorses and adopts President Trump's plan" alongside an image of himself with the president.

The non-binding vote potentially risked embarrassing Netanyahu if some of his coalition partners who have criticised Trump's plan had voted against it. The plan alludes to Palestinian statehood, which Netanyahu's government opposes.

A lawmaker from Netanyahu's Likud party who did not take part in the vote repeatedly interjected during the proceedings. Another member of Likud was also present but did not vote.

Trump received a standing ovation when he addressed the Knesset, Israel's parliament, in October, days after the ceasefire took effect. Two weeks after the address, a preliminary parliamentary vote passed, with 25 in favour and 24 against calling for the annexation of the occupied West Bank after Trump had said Israel would not annex the territory.

US Vice President JD Vance, who was visiting Israel at the time, called the vote stupid and said he took it as an insult.​
 
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5 killed in Israel strike: Gaza civil defence
AFP Gaza City, Palestinian Territories
Published: 04 Dec 2025, 10: 32

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People look for salvageable items in the rubble of a building hit in an Israeli strike in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip on 15 May, 2025. Fighting has raged in Gaza, where civil defence officials told AFP 80 people were killed by Israeli bombardment on 14 May, including 59 in the north. AFP

Gaza’s civil defence agency told AFP on Wednesday that an Israeli strike on the Palestinian territory killed five people including two children.

The Israeli military said it had struck a “Hamas terrorist” in southern Gaza in response to a clash with Palestinian militants in the area that wounded five soldiers.

“Five citizens, including two children, killed and others injured, some seriously, as a result of an Israeli missile strike” in Al-Mawasi, west of Khan Yunis, civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP.

The agency said the strike hit near the Kuwaiti Field Hospital in Khan Yunis and “targeted” a shelter camp.

The hospital also reported that five people, including two children aged eight and 10, were killed and another 32 were wounded.

A fragile US-brokered ceasefire that came into effect on October 10 has largely halted the fighting between Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas, but both sides have accused each other of violating its terms.

The Israeli military said earlier on Wednesday that during an operation in the area of eastern Rafah, soldiers encountered several militants “who emerged from an underground terrorist infrastructure”.

“During the encounter, an (Israeli) combat soldier was severely injured, two additional combat soldiers and a non-commissioned officer were moderately injured,” the military said in a statement.

It added that the soldiers were evacuated to hospital for treatment, and their families had been notified.

The second Israeli army statement announcing the air strike did not provide details about the fifth injured soldier.

The office of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu expressed his “wishes for a speedy recovery to our heroic soldiers”, accusing Hamas of violating the ceasefire agreement.

A security source in Gaza told AFP that at around 4pm local time (1400 GMT), “very heavy artillery shelling took place from occupation vehicles east of Rafah city, along with heavy gunfire from warplanes”.

The source added that an Israeli helicopter had also landed in the area.

The military said on Sunday that it had killed more than 40 militants over the past week in operations targeting tunnels near Rafah, where dozens of Hamas fighters are holed up beneath areas controlled by the Israeli military.

Multiple sources told AFP last week that negotiations were underway regarding the fate of the fighters still in south Gaza’s tunnel network.

On Thursday, a prominent Hamas member in Gaza told AFP that the group estimated their number to be between 60 and 80.

The Gaza war was sparked by Hamas’s 7 October 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,221 people.

Israel’s retaliatory assault on Gaza has killed at least 70,117 people, according to figures from the territory’s health ministry that the United Nations considers reliable.

The ministry says since the ceasefire came into effect, 360 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire. Israel’s military has reported three soldiers killed during the same period.​
 
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Gaza talks at critical moment, ceasefire not complete, Qatar's prime minister says

REUTERS

Published :
Dec 06, 2025 19:26
Updated :
Dec 06, 2025 19:26

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Palestinian women walk among piles of rubble and damaged buildings, in Gaza City, November 24, 2025. Photo : REUTERS/Dawoud Abu Alkas

Negotiations on consolidating the US-backed truce in the war in Gaza are at a "critical" moment, Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani said on Saturday.

Mediators are working to force the next phase of the ceasefire forward, al-Thani, whose country has been a key mediator in the war, said during a panel discussion at the Doha Forum conference in Qatar.

Violence has subsided but not stopped since the Gaza truce took effect on October 10.

"We are at a critical moment. It's not yet there. So what we have just done is a pause," al-Thani said.

"We cannot consider it yet a ceasefire. A ceasefire cannot be completed unless there is a full withdrawal of the Israeli forces - (until) there is stability back in Gaza, people can go in and out - which is not the case today."

Talks on achieving the next stages of U.S. President Donald Trump's plan to end the two-year war in the Palestinian enclave have been continuing.

The plan calls for an interim technocratic Palestinian government in Gaza, overseen by an international "board of peace" and backed by an international security force. Agreeing on the makeup and mandate of that force has been particularly challenging.

On Thursday, an Israeli delegation held talks in Cairo with mediators on the return of the last hostage held in Gaza, which would complete an initial part of Trump's plan.

Since the truce started, Hamas has returned all 20 living hostages and 27 bodies in exchange for around 2,000 Palestinian detainees and convicted prisoners.

Although fighting has diminished, Israel has continued to attack Gaza and demolish what it says is Hamas infrastructure. Hamas and Israel have traded blame for violations.

On Saturday, the Israeli military said that its forces, deployed behind the so-called yellow line of withdrawal agreed in the ceasefire, had opened fire on Palestinian militants who had crossed the line, killing three.

There were no immediate details from Gaza health authorities on the incident or the identities of those killed.​
 
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Qatar, Egypt call for next steps in Gaza truce
Agence France-Presse . Doha, Qatar 07 December, 2025, 00:26

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A Palestinian girl carries a bag of bread as others, many of whom are part of displaced families, gather in the yard of the UNRWA Deir al-Balah Joint School, west of Deir al-Balah, in the central Gaza on Saturday. | AFP photo

Qatar and Egypt, guarantors of the Gaza ceasefire, on Saturday called for the withdrawal of Israeli troops and the deployment of an international stabilisation force as the necessary next steps in fully implementing the fragile agreement.

The measures were spelt out in the US- and UN-backed peace plan that has largely halted the fighting in the Palestinian territory, though the warring parties have yet to agree on how to move forward from the deal’s first phase.

Its initial steps saw Israeli troops pull back behind a so-called ‘yellow line’ within Gaza’s borders, while Palestinian militant group Hamas released the living hostages it still held and handed over the remains of all but one of the deceased.

‘Now we are at the critical moment... A ceasefire cannot be completed unless there is a full withdrawal of the Israeli forces, [and] there is stability back in Gaza,’ Qatari PM Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani told the Doha Forum, an annual diplomatic conference.

Qatar, alongside Egypt and the United States, helped secure the long-elusive truce in Gaza, which came into effect on October 10 and has mostly halted two years of fighting between Israel and Hamas.

Under a second phase of the deal, which has yet to begin, Israel is to withdraw from its positions in the territory, an interim authority is to take over governance, and an international stabilisation force is to be deployed.

‘We need to deploy this force as soon as possible on the ground because one party, which is Israel, is every day violating the ceasefire,’ said Egypt’s foreign minister Badr Abdelatty, also speaking at the Doha Forum.

Arab and Muslim nations, however, have been hesitant to participate in the new force, which could end up fighting Palestinian militants.

Turkey’s foreign minister Hakan Fidan told the forum that talks on the force were ongoing, with critical questions remaining as to its command structure and which countries would contribute.

But its first goal, Fidan said, ‘should be to separate Palestinians from the Israelis’.

‘This should be our main objective. Then we can address the other remaining issues,’ he added.

Abdelatty seconded the idea, calling for the force to be deployed along ‘the yellow line in order to verify and to monitor’ the truce.

There have been multiple deadly incidents of Israeli forces firing on Palestinians in the vicinity of the yellow line since the ceasefire went into effect.

Hamas is supposed to disarm under the 20-point plan first outlined by US President Donald Trump, with members who decommission their weapons allowed to leave Gaza. The militant group has repeatedly rejected the proposition.

Turkey, which is also a guarantor of the truce, has indicated it wants to take part in the stabilisation force, but its efforts are viewed unfavourably in Israel, which considers Ankara too close to Hamas.

Fidan later said at the Doha Forum that the disarmament of Hamas should not be the main priority in Gaza.

‘That cannot be the first thing to do in the process, the disarming. We need to put things in [their] proper order, we have to be realistic,’ he said.

He also urged the US to intervene with Israel’s Prime Minister Netanyahu to ensure the plan succeeds. ‘If they don’t intervene, I’m afraid there is a risk the plan can fail,’ Fidan said.

‘The amount of daily violations of the ceasefire by the Israelis is indescribable at the moment and all indicators are showing that there is a huge risk of stopping the process,’ he added.

Sheikh Mohammed said Qatar and the other truce guarantors were ‘getting together in order to force the way forward for the next phase’ of the deal.

‘And this next phase is just also temporary from our perspective,’ he said, calling for a ‘lasting solution that provides justice for both people’.

The ceasefire plan calls for Gaza’s vital Rafah crossing on the border with Egypt to be reopened to allow in aid—a goal shared by humanitarian actors.

Israel this week said it would open the checkpoint, but ‘exclusively for the exit of residents from the Gaza Strip to Egypt’.

Egypt swiftly denied that it had agreed to such a move, insisting the crossing be opened in both directions.

Israel’s announcement drew expressions of concern from several Muslim-majority nations, who said they opposed ‘any attempts to expel the Palestinian people from their land’.

Abdelatty insisted on Saturday that Rafah ‘is not going to be a gateway for displacement. It’s only for flooding Gaza with humanitarian and medical care’.​
 
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