Gaza Ceasefire Is About To Collapse – Netanyahu Has Made Sure of It
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Benjamin Netanyahu has found a way to scupper the Gaza ceasefire completely and he won't even have to say no to anything to do it. Right, so we’re being told the Gaza ceasefire is fragile, as if it’s some delicate ornament wobbling on the edge of the table. That’s generous. Fragile implies it might accidentally break. This hasn’t been left unattended. It’s being held exactly where it is, by design, with just enough life in it to stop anyone declaring it dead and just enough paralysis to ensure nothing actually changes. No withdrawal, no transition, no rebuilding, just meetings, conditions, and the solemn promise that progress is coming later, once the impossible has been satisfied first. This is not diplomacy struggling. It’s power working as intended. Israel hasn’t walked away from the ceasefire. It hasn’t needed to. It has learned that you don’t have to say no if you can say yes in a way that guarantees nothing happens. And as long as that trick holds, Gaza stays suspended between war and peace, and the people inside it pay for the privilege. Right, so the Gaza ceasefire is still being described as fragile, which is doing a lot of dishonest work. Fragile suggests something delicate, something at risk of breaking because events get in the way or tensions rise. That is not what this is. What is happening now is controlled non-implementation. The ceasefire is being kept alive just enough to avoid formal collapse, and kept inoperative enough to prevent anything from changing on the ground. That suspended state doesn’t happen by accident. It exists because one actor has effective veto power over every step that would move the ceasefire beyond a pause in killing and into an actual transition. That actor is Benjamin Netanyahu. On paper, the structure is simple. Phase one pauses open hostilities. Phase two is where anything real happens: Israeli forces withdraw, an interim security arrangement replaces direct occupation, Palestinian governance is put in place, reconstruction begins.