There he was — Marco Rubio, U.S. Secretary of State, standing shoulder-to-shoulder with Benjamin Netanyahu, nodding along like a junior courtier rehearsing lines from the script handed down by His Majesty. The message? Forget peace, forget justice, forget the humanitarian catastrophe. What matters is reaffirming the sacred bond: Israel bombs, America applauds.
Rubio’s press conference could have been written by the Israeli Prime Minister’s speechwriters. Hamas, he told us, are “barbaric terrorists” who must be eliminated. Negotiations? Ideal, but unrealistic, because “savage terrorists don’t normally agree to things like that.” Very moving. And in case anyone wondered, Rubio reassured us that America will continue to pursue diplomacy — right up until the next “concise military operation” flattens another city block.
Netanyahu, of course, smirked through it all. Critics accuse him of dragging out the war to extend his political career. And why not? Every bomb dropped buys him more time in office, every Palestinian body buried under rubble is another political shield against accountability. Gaza’s agony is Netanyahu’s lifeline.
And the United States? Let’s be honest: it is not an honest broker. It is Netanyahu’s quartermaster, banker, and political bodyguard. U.S. taxpayers bankroll the bombs. U.S. diplomats veto accountability at the U.N. U.S. officials provide the moral fig leaf that dresses genocide up as self-defense. Rubio may call Hamas “barbaric,” but the barbarity of state-sponsored starvation and mass slaughter somehow merits only euphemisms.
Meanwhile, 300,000 Palestinians flee Gaza City under Israeli evacuation orders, cramming the coastal road, hungry and terrified, as aid groups warn there is literally nowhere safe to go. Hospitals are rubble, children starve, and the Gaza Strip has been reduced to a wasteland — but in Jerusalem, Rubio assures us that America’s alliance with Israel has “never been stronger.” Translation: the killing will continue with full U.S. blessing.
This is not diplomacy. This is theater — bloody theater, staged for domestic politics in both Tel Aviv and Washington. Netanyahu plays the embattled warlord, Rubio the faithful messenger. And the people of Gaza? They are cast as extras, expendable props in a performance of endless war.
Rubio says Hamas won’t surrender. Netanyahu says Israel will never stop. Washington nods. And Gaza burns.
But don’t worry — it’s all in the name of peace.
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