Plot twists in hell
That Hamas has accepted the conditions of Trump's peace plan (starting with the release of the hostages and continuing with the acceptance of a temporary independent government; they cannot be blamed for not wanting Tony Blair) and that Trump has accepted this response and declared that "Hamas is ready for peace" has been a sequel. Is there not just fine print, but hidden, on the part of Trump and Hamas? And on the part of the Israeli government? Hamas's positive response has come in the midst of the invasion of Gaza City and the imprisonment of members of the Global Sumud Flotilla, an episode that Netanyahu and his executive may consider minor but which has finished off the extremely high reputational cost that it has had and will have in the future for Israel, which much of Gadi can no longer prevent.
Trump's extreme volatility and Hamas's history do not invite any optimism, but at the same time, their movements represent a hope, however timid and fragile, of putting an end to the bloodbath with which Israel has been lashing out at Palestine for two years. Now it's the Israeli government's turn to make its move: at the time of writing, it has announced the halt of the invasion (they call it "conquest") of Gaza City, pending the development of the negotiations on the peace plan. But this is just that, an announcement, because the troops have not withdrawn. As a curiosity, we note that this situation exposes the argument of the Nostrat Zionists as what it is: a war-mongering delirium that bears no relation to reality, and which they only know how to defend with lies, insults, and the occasional threat.
Money (mountains of money) and egotism (a mountain of egotism): it's important not to forget that these will be the two parameters within which the negotiations for a peace agreement will unfold. Tuesday will mark exactly two years since the attacks, another bloodbath, by Hamas against the Israeli civilian population that marked the beginning of this war. The response of the far-right, ultra-religious government led by the cynical Netanyahu has been a war of ethnic cleansing and a campaign of victimhood that has backfired and caused them to completely lose sight of what is known as the narrative of the conflict. What is being perpetrated in the Gaza Strip (even now, as I write this article and as you read it) is genocide. And war crimes and crimes against humanity have been and are being committed there, crimes that must be judged in international courts.
But what the Zionist extremists haven't given up on is taking control of the Gaza Strip or enriching themselves by rebuilding what they themselves have destroyed. Nor has Trump, who at the same time covets, more than anything else right now, "his" Nobel Peace Prize, just to indulge his megalomania. Based on these premises, all the twists and turns, even the most contradictory, are still open, and everything is possible. Even, hopefully, peace.