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Middle East Crisis: Diplomacy or Just a Fancy Vacation?

 


So, Secretary of State Marco Rubio is off to Israel—aboard a government plane, naturally—to discuss the latest Israeli military adventure in Gaza City. This comes hot on the heels of an audacious Israeli airstrike in Qatar. Yes, Qatar—the same U.S. ally hosting a major American airbase. No big deal, right?

President Trump, apparently playing the role of frustrated referee, says he’s “very unhappy” about the strike. But don’t worry—the U.S. is still committed to ending the war… eventually. Somehow. Between calls to “get all the hostages back” and letting Israel do its thing, the administration seems to think diplomacy is a spectator sport.

Meanwhile, the Gaza offensive marches on. Civilians? Evacuate if you can. Aid? Sure, but only enough to prevent mass famine. And the U.S.’s response? A carefully neutral, media-friendly shrug: “The president wants this to be finished with.” That’s right—words so comforting, they almost make you forget tens of thousands of lives are at stake.

Mr. Rubio’s mission: discuss Israel’s “goals and objectives” for the operation, defend Netanyahu’s hard-line stance, and politely nod at the rest of the world that condemns the Qatar strike. And if anyone dares suggest recognizing a Palestinian state? Prepare for another round of moral posturing and lectures on why Hamas mustn’t be rewarded.

The Netanyahu playbook is simple: keep going, annex a bit more, escalate where convenient, and hope the Abraham Accords survive long enough for a photo-op anniversary. The Trump administration? Cheerleading with a side of Nobel Peace Prize dreams.

Gaza burns, hostages remain, regional alliances tremble, but hey—at least diplomacy looks very busy from 35,000 feet.


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