Saturday, October 11, 2025

The Israeli Genocide, what is likely to stop it, and what is the devastation left in Palestine

 https://substack.com/app-link/post?publication_id=277657&post_id=175888425&utm_source=post-email-title&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=rovhk&token=eyJ1c2VyX2lkIjo0NjUxMDE4NCwicG9zdF9pZCI6MTc1ODg4NDI1LCJpYXQiOjE3NjAyMDI0OTEsImV4cCI6MTc2Mjc5NDQ5MSwiaXNzIjoicHViLTI3NzY1NyIsInN1YiI6InBvc3QtcmVhY3Rpb24ifQ.-w-YcpFW3krvQ0tukCnVdueFj8VkXAjajnaMnxF19q0

https://substack.com/app-link/post?publication_id=2510348&post_id=175852154&utm_source=post-email-title&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=rovhk&token=eyJ1c2VyX2lkIjo0NjUxMDE4NCwicG9zdF9pZCI6MTc1ODUyMTU0LCJpYXQiOjE3NjAxOTE3MTMsImV4cCI6MTc2Mjc4MzcxMywiaXNzIjoicHViLTI1MTAzNDgiLCJzdWIiOiJwb3N0LXJlYWN0aW9uIn0._QbXbf1NIIcgE4sw-CD8kDPtFJJrrutqq4ATdFMI_XI

~~ recommended by newestbeginning ~~


🌍 The One Thing Most Likely to Stop Israel From Restarting the Genocide

Not speeches. Not hashtags. A large-scale international presence in Gaza — peacekeepers, journalists, medics, clergy, parliamentarians — that makes renewed bombing politically impossible.

 

What They Fear Most Isn’t Your Tweet — It’s Your Passport

Family, I want to say something plainly. It’s a theory I’ve believed for the entire genocide, but it’s more relevant now than ever before.

We all know why Israel has tried to seal Gaza off from the world — blocking journalists, squeezing out international NGOs, denying visas, corralling the few reporters it lets in under military control. The obvious reason is control of the narrative.

But here’s the deeper, more dangerous truth: it’s far harder — politically, diplomatically, militarily — to restart a genocide when thousands of foreign citizens are physically there to witness it. Not ten. Not a hundred. Thousands. Doctors. Journalists. Parliamentarians. Pastors and imams. Legal observers. Students. The world in the flesh.

Killing Palestinians hasn’t stopped this government. Killing French nursesBrazilian journalistsSouth African MPsJapanese clergyAmerican doctors — on live video — would trigger a global crisis that even Washington couldn’t control.

That’s the deterrent.


Proof From History (That They Hope You Forget)

I’ve studied this pattern my whole adult life.

  • Where access is open and international presence is dense, atrocities become harder to scale. Sarajevo’s foreign press corps; UNIFIL’s effect along Lebanon’s border; the now-closed TIPH observers in Hebron; even the messy presence of OSCE, ICRC, and human rights monitors in Eastern Europe and the Balkans — none of it perfect, but all of it constraining.

  • Where access is sealed, mass killing accelerates behind the curtain. Rwanda in ’94. The first Grozny siege. Syria’s early sieges. And Gaza — especially these last two years — when Israel simply refused the world entry.

International presence is not a magic shield. But it raises the direct political cost of every strike and transforms each “mistake” into a diplomatic incident with a flag attached. That’s exactly what Israel is trying to avoid.


Why Israel Keeps the Door Shut

It’s not just about hiding rubble.

  1. Liability management. If you keep internationals out, you keep the war “domestic.” If you let them in, every blast risks becoming an attack on Country X. That can trigger sanctions, recalls of ambassadors, treaty questions — even defense consultations.

  2. Narrative control. Embedded press is content; independent press is evidence. They don’t want evidence.

  3. Operational freedom. The fewer foreign eyes and passports on the ground, the wider the latitude for “security necessity” to mean whatever the military wants.

This is why flotillas get blocked, visas dragged, permits denied, corridors closed. They understand the calculus perfectly.


The Thesis: The People Are the Brake

If you remember anything from this piece, remember this: a sustained, large-scale international presence inside Gaza is the single most likely non-military factor to stop Israel from resuming genocide. Not because Israel will grow a conscience, but because the risk of killing scores of foreign nationals turns a domestic war-crime into an international crisis — and makes third-party governments co-owners of whatever happens next.


So What Do We Do? (The One List for This Post)

  • Open Gaza to the press — now. Demand universal, non-embedded access for international media with safe-passage guarantees, not IDF chaperones.

  • Greenlight mass humanitarian entry. Coordinated intake for thousands of foreign medics, trauma surgeons, neonatal teams, water/sanitation engineers, and logistics staff — badged, tracked, and distributed across hospitals and camps.

  • Send official delegations. Continuous rotations of parliamentarians, city mayors, bar association leaders, clergy, and medical colleges. Make their physical presence impossible to ignore.

  • Stand up a protective presence. Whether under a UN or Arab-led umbrella, move rapidly toward an international protective mission — not “occupation in new clothes,” but a narrowly mandated civilian-protection and aid-facilitation presence with transparent ROE and independent reporting.

  • Guarantee corridors in law. Push for binding, enforceable humanitarian corridors with automatic penalties for obstruction — aid conditionality, asset freezes, travel bans — baked into the deal, not tacked on after.

  • Put cameras on everything. Satellite time, secure livestreams, body-worn cams for medics/monitors — a live chain of custody that makes denial impossible.

None of this is exotic. Variations exist in Lebanon, Kosovo, Sinai, even in the West Bank before they were dismantled. The difference now is scale and urgency.


Objections — and the Answers

“Isn’t this risky for the internationals?”
Yes. So is silence. And the risk calculus flips when the number and national diversity are high enough. Killing one foreign doctor is a tragedy. Killing dozens from 18 countries is a crisis. That’s the point.

“Won’t Israel just ignore them?”
Israel has ignored world opinion. It does not ignore state-on-state consequences. That’s why they keep the door shut.

“Isn’t this just a backdoor occupation?”
Only if we allow it. The model is civilian protection + aid facilitation + press access, with no governance mandateand clear exit conditions. The people of Gaza must choose their future. The world’s job is to stop the killing and let them live to make that choice.



Why I’m Writing This Now

Because a cease-fire on paper is not peace on earth. And because the fastest way to make it real is to physically internationalize Gaza’s safety with people who can’t be bombed without consequence.

You know I don’t say this lightly. I’ve seen too much. But I believe this is the pressure point. Not another hashtag. Not another speech. Bodies. Cameras. Credentials. A wall of human accountability that forces this government to choose peace — or choose catastrophe with the world watching from ten feet away.

Let them choose. But make them choose in front of us.

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX


Displaced Palestinians returning to Gaza City on October 10, 2025. (Screenshot of video by Abdel Qader Sabbah.)

GAZA CITY—Nizar Daghmash, the 56-year-old head of the Daghmash family council, stood in front of the ruins of his family home in Gaza City on Friday after making the journey back to the north following a ceasefire that went to effect earlier that day at 12 p.m. His house was still standing but only barely—more of a broken concrete shell surrounded by rubble.

“As you can see, the scene speaks for itself,” Daghmash told Drop Site. “The stone, as a stone, has no material value to us. But the emotional value—these stones, we placed them one by one, me, my father, my brothers, and my sisters. A flood of memories runs through my mind now—not about the stones or the house itself, but because this house represents our history.”

Tens of thousands of displaced Palestinians returned to the north on Friday, making their way along Al-Rashid road. Like Daghmash, many had fled Gaza City following Israel’s brutal military offensive on the city that began in mid-August in a stated campaign of ethnic cleansing. They returned to find many of their neighborhoods unrecognizable.

Video of displaced Palestinians returning to north Gaza on Al-Rashid road on October 10, 2025. (Video by Abdel Qader Sabbah.)

“We fled under fire wearing only the robe you see on me. We left at night, my whole family and I. We didn’t take a single item from the house. I left just as I am now. I believe nearly all the people of Gaza are going through the same suffering—no shelter, no home, no housing, no clothing, no food or drink. We ended up in the streets—in the streets,” Daghmash said. “God willing, the war won’t come back after this. There’s nothing left for them to destroy. You can see that Gaza has been annihilated completely.”

The Israeli military pulled its troops back to lines agreed upon under the ceasefire deal that was signed by Palestinian factions on Wednesday evening and approved by the Israeli cabinet late Thursday night. The initial troop withdrawal line is well within Gaza, with the Israeli military still controlling 56% of the enclave. At least 17 Palestinians were killed by Israel over the previous 24 hours, according to Gaza’s ministry of health, and 71 wounded, bringing the confirmed toll over two years to over 67,200 dead and 169,961 injured. Untold thousands remain buried under the rubble. At least 116 bodies were recovered across Gaza on Friday, according to the health ministry, including 99 in Gaza City alone.

An Israeli military spokesperson issued several warnings to Palestinians on Friday not to come near Israeli troops. In the north, the spokesperson warned on X that approaching the areas of Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahia, and Al-Shujaiya is “extremely dangerous.” In the south, he said it is “highly dangerous to approach the Rafah Crossing area, the Philadelphia Axis area, and all areas where forces are stationed in Khan Younis.” Along the coast, he said there is “significant danger in engaging in fishing, swimming, or diving, and we warn against entering the sea in the coming days.” Across Gaza, it is “forbidden to approach Israeli territories and the buffer zone,” he added.

Immediately after the ceasefire took hold on Friday, Al-Rashid road that runs along Gaza’s coastline was packed with men, women and children making the long trek north. They piled onto cars and trucks, bicycles, motorbikes, and motorized rickshaws. The majority made their way on foot carrying few belongings or nothing at all. The devastation along the way was total. When they reached Gaza City, they found neighborhoods turned into wastelands of rubble. In many areas, every structure was either demolished or barely standing and the streets were torn up by Israeli bulldozers and tanks. Sporadic fires burned close to the few trees still standing that were clinging to life.

Video of displaced Palestinians in Gaza City on October 10, 2025. (Video by Abdel Qader Sabbah.)

“You can see the devastation around you,” Omar Junaid, who was displaced from Jabaliya, told Drop Site. “Zarqah, Al-Nazha, and Al-Ghubari—all of these areas—including Jabaliya Al-Balad and Jabaliya Al-Nazla, have been completely wiped out.” He added, “As citizens of the north, we pray to Almighty God that people look upon us with compassion and that they start with the reconstruction of the northern Gaza Strip. Because without services, where are we supposed to live? Where can we go?”

Under the terms of the ceasefire agreement, Hamas has a 72-hour window to release the 20 living Israeli captives with the understanding that the bodies of dead captives could take more time to locate. Israel will release nearly 2,000 Palestinian captives—including 250 serving prison sentences and 1,700 detained from Gaza during the war—with the exchange expected to take place on Monday or Tuesday, according to President Donald Trump. The White House confirmed Trump will travel to Israel and Egypt, arriving in the region on Monday to sign the official ceasefire agreement.

While a deal was reached on “phase one” of a ceasefire, details of how the plan will advance beyond that remain murky. Senior Hamas negotiator Khalil al-Hayya said in a televised address on Thursday the U.S. and Arab mediators had provided guarantees on a permanent end to the war.

“We returned after hearing about the implementation of a truce that will lead to a permanent end to the war in the Gaza Strip,” Saed Abdel Aal told Drop Site as sat on the rubble of his home in Gaza City. “We came back to our homes to explore what had become of them, and we found that ruin had surrounded everything.” He added, “Nothing remains for us except memories amid the rubble. Everything is destroyed: neighborhoods, infrastructure, sanitation systems. There are no means of life left. Streets and houses have been completely destroyed, sadly. There are the dead and the wounded. Everything was systematically obliterated.”

Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu threatened a return to the genocide, saying in an address on Friday that “Hamas will be disarmed and Gaza will be demilitarized … If this is achieved the easy way, so much the better. And if not, it will be achieved the hard way.”

Along with the rubble and buried bodies are thousands of unexploded munitions dropped by Israel. In a statement on Friday, Gaza’s police force warned people “to be extremely cautious and vigilant when returning to their homes and residential areas for the presence of suspicious objects, hazardous waste, and unexploded bombs.”

Under the agreement, five border crossings are expected to reopen, including the Rafah crossing between Gaza and Egypt. The World Food Program said it expects about 600 aid trucks to enter Gaza daily in the coming days. Israel’s months-long siege and starvation campaign has triggered a famine in Gaza, with at least 463 Palestinians, including 157 children, dying of starvation and malnutrition.

Over the past two years of Israel’s genocidal assault, 92% of residential buildings in Gaza and over 500 schools, along with every university, have been damaged or destroyed. Only 1.5% of cropland is still accessible and suitable for cultivation. Nearly every Palestinian in Gaza—95% of the population—has been displaced, most of them multiple times.

“We lack the basic necessities of life. We have no food, we have many wounded, many injured, many dead,” Abdel Aal said. “We need everything, all the essentials of life. There is nothing here that can be called life. We remain alive, struggling and enduring only for the sake of survival—nothing more. We have nothing.”

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