Again and again, across media channels and news outlets, the message was clear—Israel must create a new political reality in Gaza. That requires thinking ahead about post-war governance and viable alternatives. Yet Netanyahu systematically blocked every diplomatic effort because almost all included a role for the Palestinian Authority.
This wasn’t due to security concerns. He knows, like everyone else, that among all the bad options, the Palestinian Authority is likely the least bad. He blocked those efforts for political reasons—to avoid reaching a ceasefire that would inevitably lead to the formation of a state commission of inquiry and likely force him into new elections. His far-right coalition partners, Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben Gvir, had already threatened to topple the government if he pursued such a path.
So Netanyahu refused. And now Israel finds itself at a dead end. In Gaza, soldiers are injured and killed nearly every day. Hostages remain captive. Famine spreads. And the international community—including the United States—now views Israel as dangerously close to regimes like Iran and Assad’s Syria. Israelis can no longer travel safely abroad. They are targets almost everywhere.
The military and its leadership likely understood long ago that the IDF has no strategic purpose left in Gaza. But the political leadership—led by Netanyahu and Minister of Defense Israel Katz—continues to order them forward. They recycle empty slogans about “total victory” (no longer fashionable) or “opening the gates of hell”—as if anyone in Gaza still believes paradise was ever an option.
IDF soldiers are dying and being maimed—and for what? Meanwhile, Hamas is gaining global legitimacy, fed by images of f humanitarian crisis. For the organization, every day of growing civilian suffering is a win. It knows that as the humanitarian disaster deepens, Israel will be forced to allow more aid into Gaza, without receiving anything in return, not even the release of hostages.

Israel tried to apply pressure by creating a joint U.S.-Israel mechanism to distribute aid directly to civilians without Hamas involvement. But that move backfired. It ended up digging its own grave, allowing massive aid to enter Gaza without oversight, control, or any reciprocal concessions from Hamas.
This is no longer simple negligence. It’s not just political foolishness. It’s a prolonged, massive and historic failure that began on October 7 and hasn’t stopped since. And it’s seeping into the public consciousness. It’s reaching the troops.
The Nahal Brigade soldiers who refused to return to Gaza won’t be the last. They, too, understand they’re being sent to the front—not to change reality in southern Israel, not to eliminate Hamas—but to preserve Netanyahu’s rule. Nothing more.