By Malik Mukhtar — ainnbeen.blogspot.com
Two years after Gaza was first set on fire, the war that began with biblical vengeance has stumbled to an exhausted ceasefire. On October 9, 2025, Israel and Hamas — after endless carnage, famine, and rubble — have signed the first phase of a ceasefire agreement mediated in Sharm el-Sheikh.
Trump called it a “historic peace plan.” History may call it a truce of attrition — a war that collapsed under the weight of its own hubris.
What the Ceasefire Says — and What It Doesn’t
Under the agreement, Israeli forces are to pull back to a designated “yellow line” within 24 hours of cabinet ratification.
Hamas, in turn, will release all remaining hostages — alive or dead — within 72 hours after the withdrawal.
Israel will free about 2,000 Palestinian prisoners, though it made sure to exclude political figures like Marwan Barghouti, whose freedom would remind the world that Palestine still breathes.
Humanitarian convoys — food, medicine, and fuel — are promised entry into Gaza, a strip that has become a graveyard of children and dust.
The deal is not a peace treaty; it’s a pause — a ceasefire of necessity, not of repentance.
It doesn’t guarantee Israel’s full withdrawal. It doesn’t dismantle the buffer zones that have devoured 20% of Gaza’s land. It doesn’t address the ruins of Rafah, the famine of Deir al-Balah, or the bodies buried beneath UN shelters.
It merely stops the clock — after two years of hell that even the world’s most militarized democracy could no longer afford.
Why the Ceasefire Happened Now
Wars do not end when morality prevails. They end when the cost of cruelty outweighs its profit.
Israel, the “start-up nation,” has bled itself into a paradox — a superpower of drones and despair.
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Economically, the war has cost Israel over $60 billion, swallowing up nearly 10–12% of its GDP.
Growth has plunged from 6.5% to below 2%. Debt and deficit are soaring.
Even Tel Aviv’s glass towers, once symbols of resilience, now shimmer with nervous vacancy.
Hundreds of thousands of reservists pulled from their jobs — engineers, teachers, tech workers — left industries crippled and investors fleeing. -
Militarily, the war stretched into Israel’s longest conflict since 1948.
Over 466 soldiers dead, thousands maimed or psychologically shattered.
Commanders whisper of fatigue, shortages, and moral collapse. One officer admitted:“We fight ghosts. Gaza is rubble. The people are gone. But somehow we keep shooting.”
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Socially, the war has fractured Israel’s soul.
Hospitals fill with soldiers suffering from PTSD, suicides rise, and families ask what victory looks like when children come home with empty eyes.
Far-right ministers preach divine conquest, while the middle class counts mortgage extensions and rationed power.
The economy falters, the conscripts burn out, and the moral fabric unravels.
A nation born from trauma is now devouring itself with trauma.
The Ceasefire as an Admission of Limits
Israel did not suddenly discover compassion. It discovered exhaustion.
For two years, it turned Gaza into a wasteland — then discovered that wastelands cannot be governed, nor erased from conscience.
This is not diplomacy — it’s damage control.
A superpower on U.S. life support, trapped in an unwinnable war against a starving enclave, has simply run out of soldiers, money, and global patience.
Even Washington’s political cover now flickers with fatigue.
Trump’s “peace plan” isn’t peace — it’s a campaign photo-op stitched together from geopolitical triage.
But for the people of Gaza — for mothers who bury their children with bare hands — even a fragile silence is sacred.
The sky, for the first time in two years, may echo not with jets, but with prayer.
The War That Devoured Its Master
This ceasefire exposes a deeper truth:
You cannot bomb your way to security, nor starve your way to peace.
Israel’s greatest enemy was not Hamas — it was the illusion that military supremacy guarantees moral immunity.
Every empire reaches this point — when the cost of maintaining dominance exceeds the illusion of control.
For America, it was Vietnam.
For the Soviets, Afghanistan.
For Israel, it is Gaza — a place where drones meet defiance, and where even the ashes whisper, “We are still here.”
What Comes Next
The ceasefire may hold, or it may crumble.
Phase Two promises “negotiations over Gaza’s future governance.”
That means more bargaining over rubble, aid convoys, and who gets to administer what remains of a place one called home.
Yet beneath the diplomacy lies a quiet, trembling question — one Israel’s leaders cannot ignore:
What has all this blood bought?
If the goal was deterrence, Gaza has not forgotten.
If it was annihilation, resistance still breathes.
If it was security, Israelis now live under the shadow of perpetual mobilization.
Perhaps, after all the smoke and sanctimony, the only thing this war achieved was to prove — again — that occupation is not sustainable, and that no wall can keep out the moral collapse that comes from within.
Epilogue: The Pause Between Wars
For now, the guns are silent.
The rubble still smolders.
And in the silence, the ghosts of Gaza whisper through the dust:
“You can stop the war,
but can you silence what the world has seen?”
Written by Malik Mukhtar
Blog: ainnbeen.blogspot.com
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