
Gaza Conflict Two Years Of Israel's Genocide In Gaza And Dim Prospects Ahead: More Than 67,000 Palestinians Murdered
Over the past two years, what began as a cross-border attack by Hamas has, under the weight of political brinkmanship and superpower indulgence, snowballed into one of the world's deadliest conflicts in recent memory, adding yet another open wound, to a region already scarred by conflicts and grievances.
Despite the ongoing peace talks, analysts warn that, as long as the core rights of the Palestinian people are sidelined, enduring peace in the Middle East will remain little more than a pipe dream.
“A WAR WITH NO WINNER”
From the moment Hamas crossed the Israeli border on Oct 7, 2023, cracking open a geopolitical Pandora's box, Israel has waged war in the name of vengeance – unleashing its military might from the shores of the Mediterranean to the Persian Gulf.
As the epicentre of this regional earthquake, Gaza has suffered most acutely.
According to Gaza-based authorities, over 90 percent of Gaza's infrastructure has been destroyed by the Zionist Israeli airstrikes. More than 67,000 Palestinians have been murdered – the vast majority of them being civilians, women and 20,000 children – and 169,000 more wounded.
The enclave has become a“living hell,” as UN Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, described it.“The scale of death and destruction are beyond any other conflict in my years as secretary-general.”
But the reach of the Israeli“war of revenge” has not stopped at Gaza's edge. As the assault on the strip continues, Israel launched direct military strikes on targets in Yemen, Lebanon, Iraq, Iran, Syria, and Qatar, entangling itself in a multi-front conflict across the region.
Though Israel appears to have chipped away at what it deems threats in the region, analysts say, the“war of revenge” has also taken a heavy toll on the regime.
According to official Israeli figures, thousands of Israelis have been killed since the conflict began. Dozens of hostages taken by Hamas, during its initial assault remain in captivity, despite recalcitrant Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu's early promise, to bring every one of them home.
Meanwhile, the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Gaza has drawn mounting international condemnation. Sympathy for Palestinians, coupled with disillusionment over Israeli policies, has fueled a growing wave of countries formally recognising a Palestinian state.
Last month, Britain, Canada, Australia and France, among other Western nations, announced their recognition of the State of Palestine, a diplomatic move widely interpreted as a rebuke to Israel's prolonged military campaign.
“The war in Gaza grinds on, the humanitarian catastrophe deepens, Israel's legitimacy erodes, and the region braces for further instability,” Roee Kibrik, head of research at Mitvim, the Israeli Institute for Regional Foreign Policies, told Xinhua.“This is a war with no winner.”
POLITICAL CALCULATIONS & SUPERPOWER INDULGENCE
At the heart of the Gaza conflict's protraction, analysts say, lie two powerful forces: Israel's own domestic political calculus, and the extensive support by President Trump of the United States.
From the earliest days of its“war of revenge,” Israel laid out three primary objectives: the return of all hostages, the dismantling of Hamas' military and political apparatus, and ensuring that Gaza can never again threaten Israel.
Two years on, Gaza lies in ruins and yet none of those goals have been achieved.
Experts suggest, this is no accident, as the declared objectives were never truly the priority. According to Eyal Zisser, vice rector of Tel Aviv University and a Middle East affairs expert, the“war of revenge” has actually been used by Netanyahu to shore up his political position and preserve his far-right governing coalition.
In Aug, when asked, in an interview, whether he felt connected to the“Greater Israel” vision, Netanyahu responded:“Very much.”
The so-called“Greater Israel” refers to an expansionist vision that lays claim to not only the occupied West Bank and Gaza, but also parts of Lebanon, Syria, Egypt, and Jordan, a geopolitical map that reaches far beyond Israel's borders.
For Refaat Badawi, a political analyst and a former presidential adviser in Lebanon, Netanyahu's remarks signal that,“Israel aims to redraw the maps of the Middle East in a way that serves the Israeli goal of expansion in the Middle East.”
Beyond Israel's own political manoeuvring, the United States has provided unconditional support to Israel throughout the Gaza conflict.
According to Israeli official data from May, Trump's Government delivered 90,000 tonnes of weapons to Israel, between Oct, 2023 and May, 2025.
In addition to military aid, the Trump government has leveraged its superpower status, to shield Israel politically, disregarding widespread international opposition and condemnation.
In the UN Security Council, the United States has used its veto power six times, to block Gaza-related resolutions calling for a ceasefire, throwing a wrench into international efforts, to halt the bloodshed.
“Washington's repeated vetoes at the UN Security Council have shielded Israel from international accountability. At the same time, U.S. financial and military aid, sustains Israel's war effort,” Mohammed Osman Ali, managing editor of Qatar's The Peninsula newspaper, pointed out.
Under global gaze, Hamas and Israel are engaged in indirect negotiations, centered on a 20-point ceasefire plan in Gaza, put forward by U.S. President Donald Trump.
Trump hailed the proposal as a“critical step” towards lasting peace, while threatening that Hamas' refusal could lead to“complete obliteration.”
Though Israel has accepted the plan and Hamas has offered a cautiously positive response, major questions remain about whether it can truly bring peace to Gaza.
The proposal demands the total disarmament of Hamas, striking at the heart of the group's survival. Meanwhile, the plan sidesteps any mention of implementing the two-state solution, which is widely regarded as essential for durable peace in the region.
It also fails to address accountability or reparations for the deaths and destruction wrought in Gaza during the two years of brutal conflict.
Despite the flaws in the plan, both countries and the people of war-torn Gaza, are still clinging to a sliver of hope that the ongoing negotiations could be the faint light at the end of the tunnel.
“The people of Gaza are not seeking a military or political victory,” said Ismail Abu Shar, a resident of Deir al-Balah in central Gaza.“We just hope the talks will mark the beginning of the end of the massacre and the war of extermination.”
As for the prospects of lasting peace in the Middle East, analysts have offered a more sober assessment.
“Even if Gaza quiets down, conflicts and animosities in Lebanon, the Red Sea, and the West Bank remain unresolved,” said Hussam al-Dajani, a Palestinian political analyst based in Gaza.
“The flames are still burning, the deaths continue, and the war's impact has long since spilled beyond Gaza. This means the Middle East is hurtling towards greater instability and chaos,” he said.
(Video reporters: Zhao Weihong, Sanaa Kamal, Khader Abu Kwaik, Yang Yiran, Yu Fuqing and Yao Bing; video editors: Zhang Yichi, Hui Peipei and Wu Yao)– NNN-XINHUA

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