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<h1 class="gmail-single_title">If Gaza resistance ends: What history tells us about the Palestinian fate</h1>
<div class="gmail-article-author"><h3><a href="https://english.palinfo.com/authors/ramzy-baroud"> <i class="gmail-fa-solid gmail-fa-quote-left"></i> Ramzy Baroud
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<p class="gmail-single_date">Thursday 11-December-2025</p><div class="gmail-post_content">
<p>US President Donald Trump\u2019s \u2018Board of Peace\u2019 is reportedly set to be
announced before the year\u2019s end. This news coincides with increasing
reports that the US administration is serious about pushing forward the
second phase of the Gaza ceasefire.</p>
<p>However, many critical questions remain unanswered. How can a
governing council be superimposed on Gaza when Palestinians are unified
in their rejection of any new form of Western mandate over their lives?</p>
<p>Furthermore, how can the proposed \u2018International Stabilization Force\u2019
(ISF) operate in Gaza without total clarity regarding its mission? If
the ISF ends up serving primarily as an Israeli line of defense, the
entire project will collapse before it begins.</p>
<p>Neither Arab nor Muslim countries will seriously engage in subduing
Palestinians on behalf of Israel. Any other participating force will
inevitably be treated by Palestinians as an occupation force.</p>
<p>The main obstacle, however, is the fact that Israel has never truly
respected the first phase of the ceasefire, which began, in theory, on
October 10. Since that date, Israeli forces have killed over 360
Palestinians and wounded hundreds more, while demolishing thousands of
residential structures, according to satellite images verified by the
BBC.</p>
<p>Worse, Israel has habitually bombed targets beyond the \u2018Yellow Line\u2019,
which was designated as the Palestinian area where humanitarian aid is
allowed to flow and people are meant to return to some kind of normalcy,
despite Gaza\u2019s near-total destruction.</p>
<p>Israel is hoping to make the first phase of the agreement a permanent
one. This intent is evident in the continued bombings, the prevention
of life-saving supplies and aid, and the constant, unsubstantiated
accusations that Palestinians are the ones violating the ceasefire.</p>
<p>It is expected that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will
make the disarmament of Gaza the main sticking point, knowing in advance
that Gaza will not surrender its weapons. He has made this clear and
repeatedly so, including on 15 November, when he stated that \u201cHamas will
be disarmed \u2014 either the easy way or the hard way\u201d.</p>
<p>But what if Gaza agrees to surrender its weapons? Will Israel leave
the Palestinians alone? Will the prospects of a just peace and
Palestinian freedom increase exponentially? To address this question,
let\u2019s delve very quickly into three experiences, two from history.</p>
<p>Palestinian and even some Israeli historians have argued that, during
the ethnic cleansing of historic Palestine, the Nakba, Israel had the
intention of depopulating the country regardless of whether Palestinians
resisted or not.</p>
<p>The implementation of Plan Dalet, the operation aimed at expelling
the Palestinian population, was in no way related to the method or
intensity of Palestinian resistance to Zionist militia violence.</p>
<p>In fact, the framework of that expulsion was predicated on the use of
war as a pretext, as opposed to war as a response to Palestinian
resistance. \u201cThe Arabs will have to go, but one needs an opportune
moment for making it happen, such as a war,\u201d wrote Zionist leader and
Israel\u2019s first prime minister at the time, David Ben-Gurion.</p>
<p>Though some Mukhtars (village leaders) assumed that no resistance
meant that they would be spared the same fate as those who resisted,
they were wrong. Israeli historian Ilan Pappe writes: \u201cWhereas the
official Plan Dalet gave the villages the option to surrender, the
operational orders did not exempt any village for any reason\u201d.</p>
<p>The same pattern was repeated throughout history. In 1982, after a
US-brokered agreement to evacuate Palestinian PLO forces out of Lebanon,
the assumption was that their departure would keep the Israeli army
from attacking Palestinian civilians.</p>
<p>Indeed, on 21 August 1982, PLO factions began leaving the country,
leaving the camps undefended and their Lebanese allies vulnerable.
However, Israeli violence in West Beirut had grown, not subsided,
leading in September 1982 to the Sabra and Shatila massacre, which
killed up to 3,500 Palestinian refugees and Lebanese civilians.</p>
<p>All the promises by Washington, the supposed \u2018guarantees\u2019, and the
diplomatic language of US envoy Philip Habib, who acted as the
President\u2019s Special Envoy, meant absolutely nothing, as Israel helped
facilitate one of history\u2019s most brutal massacres.</p>
<p>And, of course, there is the ongoing saga of the West Bank itself,
which, unlike Gaza, lacks armed resistance infrastructure and is
administered by the Palestinian Authority (PA), which operates based on
an Israeli-US-Western mandate.</p>
<p>Yet, even before the Gaza genocide, the West Bank\u2019s suffering had
grown, its land confiscated, entire communities ethnically cleansed,
whole refugee camps destroyed, and hundreds of residents killed.</p>
<p>Between 7 October 2023, and late 2025, UN and human rights reports
indicate that Israeli forces and settlers killed over 1,000 Palestinians
in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem (more than 200 children).
Thousands more were injured, and Israeli authorities destroyed or
confiscated thousands of Palestinian-owned structures, displacing many.
Additionally, an estimated 10,000 Palestinians from the West Bank were
arrested between October 2023 and August 2024.</p>
<p>If Israel\u2019s genocide in Gaza is entirely motivated by the desire to
crush the armed groups, then why the continued crushing of the West
Bank?</p>
<p>Those who continue to entertain the Israeli narrative regarding Gaza
must confront this historical record and acknowledge two crucial,
enduring realities. First, Israel\u2019s violence is fundamentally driven by
its settler-colonial ambitions, not merely by Palestinian resistance.
Second, Palestinian resistance is a deeply rooted historical imperative \u2014
the native population\u2019s determined struggle for self-liberation from
foreign occupation.</p>
<p>Only by abandoning the reductionist language that frames Israeli wars
as simple responses to armed groups can we arrive at a profound
understanding of events in Palestine, Israel\u2019s true motives, and the
legitimacy of the Palestinian struggle.</p>
<p><em>-Dr. Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and the Editor of The
Palestine Chronicle. He is the author of six books. His forthcoming
book, \u2018Before the Flood,\u2019 will be published by Seven Stories Press. His
other books include \u2018Our Vision for Liberation\u2019, \u2018My Father was a
Freedom Fighter\u2019 and \u2018The Last Earth\u2019. Baroud is a Non-resident Senior
Research Fellow at the Center for Islam and Global Affairs (CIGA).</em></p></div>
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