By Sardar Khan Niazi
The Middle East is no stranger to conflict, but the ongoing Israeli aggression against Gaza has taken a shape that goes far beyond self-defense or military retaliation. What we are witnessing is an attempt–deliberate, strategic, and brutal–to redraw the region’s geopolitical map. Israel’s actions are not just about defeating Hamas; they are about erasing Palestinian identity, altering borders, and securing permanent dominance over a fractured and exhausted region. Since October 2023, Israel’s military campaign in Gaza has displaced over two million people, killed tens of thousands, and razed entire neighborhoods. International law is clear: collective punishment, forced displacement, and indiscriminate bombing of civilian areas constitute war crimes. Yet the Israeli leadership continues to justify its onslaught in the name of security. Nevertheless, how secure is a state that needs to annihilate other people to feel safe? This campaign is more than a war–it is a demographic and territorial project. Statements from senior Israeli politicians, including some in Netanyahu’s far-right coalition, make no secret of their ambitions. Calls for the voluntary resettlement of Gazans to Egypt, the expansion of illegal settlements in the West Bank, and the annexation of more Palestinian land are part of a coherent, dangerous vision. The aim is to shrink the space for Palestinian sovereignty until it no longer exists, effectively eliminating the two-state solution. Historically, the idea of a Greater Israel has floated on the fringes of Zionist thought. Today, it has moved to the center of policy. What was once whispered in ideological circles is now loudly declared in parliament and implemented through bombs and bulldozers. The current war has provided the Israeli leadership with the perfect storm–international distraction, U.S. backing, and Arab states too divided or dependent to intervene meaningfully. But Israel’s ambitions do not end with Palestine. By fragmenting neighboring states–Lebanon, Syria, even Jordan–and aligning itself with new regional powers through the Abraham Accords, Israel seeks to position itself as the undisputed hegemon of the Middle East. It is no coincidence that its military strategy often overlaps with American goals in the region: regime change in Syria, weakening Hezbollah in Lebanon, and containing Iran. In this context, the silence–or worse, complicity–of Western powers becomes deafening. The United States, Israel’s primary backer, continues to arm and shield it from international accountability, vetoing resolutions at the United Nations and treating Israeli war crimes as justified acts of self-defense. The UK and Germany follow. Meanwhile, global institutions designed to uphold human rights appear toothless in the face of Israeli impunity. The Muslim world’s response has been equally disappointing. While public outrage burns across Arab and Muslim capitals, their governments remain largely passive. Petrodollar politics, security dependencies, and fears of destabilization have silenced voices that once championed Palestinian rights. But history is not written by the powerful alone. Palestinian resistance–political, cultural, and yes, military–persists despite unimaginable suffering. Around the world, civil society is awakening. From student protests on American campuses to boycotts across Europe, ordinary people are reclaiming the narrative. They see that this is not a war of equals, but a systematic attempt to erase a people and redraw the map in blood. If the international community fails to act, it risks setting a terrifying precedent: that borders can be changed through bombs, that occupation is a path to legitimacy, and that genocide can be sanitized with the language of national security. The map of the Middle East is under attack–not just its geography, but also its humanity. The world must decide: will it stand with those redrawing maps through war–or with those trying to survive under them?
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