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Comment: Netanyahu and his right-wing government know full well that states will ultimately act in their own interests, even if it means leaving Palestinians by the wayside, writes Mitchell Plitnick.
In Israel's post-war scenario, carpet bombing is replaced by a matrix of surveillance, separation and control similar to the West Bank, writes Anna Saif.
The West's unwavering support for Israel's war on Gaza has left it isolated on the international stage as the Global South bands together, writes Allia Bukhari.
Israel won't succeed in its goals to ethnically cleanse Gaza due to the heroic steadfastness of Palestinians, says Mustafa Barghouti, but the price is their blood, unless all people of conscience use all possible channels to force Israel to stop.
Riyadh is driving a hard bargain for normalisation, with demands that neither US Congress nor Netanyahu's regime are likely to accept. Despite functional cooperation, official political recognition of Israel is not imminent, writes Imad K. Harb.
For decades after independence, India’s approach to the world was shaped by its historical experience of colonialism. But, as the Israel-Hamas war has shown, the “non-aligned” stance this produced may not be as unassailable as it once seemed.
As Israel states openly its intention to ramp up its brutal bombardment in Gaza and starve the population in revenge for the Hamas' military operation, Dr Azmi Bishara stresses the need to do all possible to stop it carrying out full-scale genocide.
The anti-government Israeli protests that have taken place over the last months highlight an unravelling of contradictions within the Zionist project. But ultimately, they seek to continue flying the colonial flag, writes Tara Alami.
Liberal voices in Israel & elsewhere condemned the recent attacks by Israeli settlers across occupied West Bank villages in Palestine as if these acts were an exception. This violence is the foundation to Israel’s very inception, argues Tara Alami.
The reach and economic impact of the protests continue to propel the movement against Netanyahu's far-right government, but the elephant in the room remains: for Palestinians, there is no democracy to save, writes Richard Silverstein.