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As the US prepares to present the UN Security Council with a ham peace plan for Gaza, Russia just pulled a fast one on them all. Right, so the United States is walking into the Security Council tomorrow pretending it’s about to unveil a peace plan, when everyone who’s read the documents knows it’s a colour-coded land grab dressed up as diplomacy. They’re calling it stabilisation, which is an interesting choice of wording when the map splits Gaza into a green zone Israel gets to rebuild and police, and a red zone where more than two million Palestinians get penned in like cattle with no reconstruction at all. And they’re pushing it fast, hoping to get a vote in before anyone joins the dots between that map and Israeli ministers openly saying there will never be a Palestinian state and that Gaza will be “cleared” indefinitely. Russia’s already thrown its own text into the pile though, it’s own rival peace plan so the whole show is finished before they even file into the room. Tomorrow isn’t a peace discussion. It’s the moment the containment map the US have tried to smuggle through gets held up to the light — and you can see exactly what it is. Right, so the United States is walking into the United Nations Security Council expecting to run the show as usual – it goes their way or it gets vetoed. They are assuming the usual sham is performed once again, that the usual diplomatic choreography will be enough to get their Gaza resolution through, that people won’t read too deeply into the details or ask why the document is being circulated at speed or why the language inside it is thinner than usual on political commitments and thicker than usual on security powers. They think the world will accept the headline that this is about stabilisation, reconstruction, and an orderly post-war transition. They are banking on the idea that people are too exhausted, too frightened of further escalation, too desperate for a ceasefire to become permanent to question the small print. And then the moment the documents leak, the entire frame cracks, because the plan isn’t a stabilisation plan at all. It is a partition architecture designed to entrench Israeli control over the most strategically valuable parts of Gaza, backed by foreign troops, run under Israeli coordination, and wrapped in the thin language of peacekeeping to give it a patina of legitimacy. The leak doesn’t just expose details. It exposes the whole intent. Once you see the map, you understand why they don’t want scrutiny. Once you look at the clauses, you understand why they want a fast vote. This is the part the US never says out loud.
By Damien WilleyAs the US prepares to present the UN Security Council with a ham peace plan for Gaza, Russia just pulled a fast one on them all. Right, so the United States is walking into the Security Council tomorrow pretending it’s about to unveil a peace plan, when everyone who’s read the documents knows it’s a colour-coded land grab dressed up as diplomacy. They’re calling it stabilisation, which is an interesting choice of wording when the map splits Gaza into a green zone Israel gets to rebuild and police, and a red zone where more than two million Palestinians get penned in like cattle with no reconstruction at all. And they’re pushing it fast, hoping to get a vote in before anyone joins the dots between that map and Israeli ministers openly saying there will never be a Palestinian state and that Gaza will be “cleared” indefinitely. Russia’s already thrown its own text into the pile though, it’s own rival peace plan so the whole show is finished before they even file into the room. Tomorrow isn’t a peace discussion. It’s the moment the containment map the US have tried to smuggle through gets held up to the light — and you can see exactly what it is. Right, so the United States is walking into the United Nations Security Council expecting to run the show as usual – it goes their way or it gets vetoed. They are assuming the usual sham is performed once again, that the usual diplomatic choreography will be enough to get their Gaza resolution through, that people won’t read too deeply into the details or ask why the document is being circulated at speed or why the language inside it is thinner than usual on political commitments and thicker than usual on security powers. They think the world will accept the headline that this is about stabilisation, reconstruction, and an orderly post-war transition. They are banking on the idea that people are too exhausted, too frightened of further escalation, too desperate for a ceasefire to become permanent to question the small print. And then the moment the documents leak, the entire frame cracks, because the plan isn’t a stabilisation plan at all. It is a partition architecture designed to entrench Israeli control over the most strategically valuable parts of Gaza, backed by foreign troops, run under Israeli coordination, and wrapped in the thin language of peacekeeping to give it a patina of legitimacy. The leak doesn’t just expose details. It exposes the whole intent. Once you see the map, you understand why they don’t want scrutiny. Once you look at the clauses, you understand why they want a fast vote. This is the part the US never says out loud.