Peace boards and technocrats won’t stem out Palestinian resistance

American presidential envoy Steven Witkoff announced on social media last week that the “ceasefire” is in its second phase as Israel’s bombardment of the Gaza Strip increased. The composition of a foreign executive committee and peace board that will oversee the Palestinian technocrats’ interim government of Gaza was revealed by US President Donald Trump in the days following.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated in his plan that neither Hamas nor the Palestinian Authority (PA) would be involved in Gaza’s future. The latter is mentioned in Trump’s “peace plan,” but it is supposed to have to implement a number of unnamed reforms before being allowed to play any part in Gaza.

In reality, this implies that Fatah can also be easily prevented from regaining control of the Gaza Strip under the pretext that these ambiguous reforms are in place.

The current arrangement and Israel’s call for “no Hamas, no Fatah” are both deeply ignorant of Palestinian society’s foundation, its politics, and its history. It is unrealistic to assume that an independent Palestinian political organization could be established and fully integrated into the occupation to oversee Palestinian affairs.

There have been numerous national movements and revolutions in Palestine that have all been united by a single criterion: the end of Israeli colonial rule. No Palestinian collective has ever publicly agreed to be included in the Israeli colonial project, regardless of its form.

The formation of political parties and the formation of public opinion were all influenced by the resistance movement.

Although the methods and tools used by various political parties and groups in Palestine may differ, all of them have a shared commitment to the Palestinian cause and Palestinian rights.

The two most important political actors in Palestinian society are still Hamas and Fatah. Hamas has continued to support resistance since its inception while Fatah emerged as the country’s dominant liberation movement before the Oslo Accords changed its political direction. The Palestinian social fabric naturally rejects any leadership or organization that doesn’t adhere to the principles of national independence or accepts foreign guardianship in addition to these two currents and other smaller factions.

Israel has chosen to ignore this deeply ingrained reality and instead tries to ignore it by imposing artificial facts on the ground. In response, it has remained on the lookout for “local alternatives” to governance in Gaza.

Israel made an effort throughout the conflict to empower and provide weapons to specific groups and individuals in an effort to aid their postwar efforts. Many of them had extensive criminal histories, and many of them were socially excluded before the war. Yasser Abu Shabab, a member of the Tarabin tribe, is one such example. He was held in prison for many years for drug-related charges and received significant Israeli support to form his own militia during the war.

He looted humanitarian aid and supported the occupation in Rafah, including obtaining Israeli troops’ passage. His own tribe issued a statement denouncing him after he was killed on December 4 and there were celebrations in Gaza. Israeli efforts to empower and engage with other clans have also failed.

Celebrity clans and families have repeatedly condemned individual members’ actions in public statements as having chosen to work with Israel. While confirming that Palestinian clans continue to be firmly committed to the Palestinian national struggle, they have removed protection and outdone the collaborators.

This rejection is attributable to Israeli policy’s failure to implement any local extensions that are compatible with the project. Despite genocide, starvation, and displacement, it confirms Israel’s inability to erase Palestinian national memory or sabotage the general consensus.

In the West Bank, things are similar. The Fatah-dominated PA has collaborated there on security and the occupation for three decades. In consequence, it is extremely unlikely to be legitimate today. In contrast, Mahmoud Abbas, the PA’s president, has a 16% approval rating while its president, a recent poll, has a 23% approval rating in the West Bank.

Despite the PA’s close security ties to the occupation, it has failed to halt Palestinian resistance in the West Bank. The West Bank witnessed the rise of armed formations that were independent of the traditional Fatah and Hamas, such as Areen al-Usud (Lions’ Den) in Nablus and the Jenin Brigades.

These initiatives were carried out by youth and received a lot of popular support. Their resistance campaigns reflected the Palestinian people’s support for the armed struggle approach that has continued despite outdated structures.

Legitimacy matters in the Palestinian context, which Israel and its Western allies are trying to understand. Foreign councils or militias funded by Israel cannot create it. Because of the ties between national history and identity, resistance gives Palestine its legitimacy.

Any attempt to get around this reality is a failure because it will only lead to internal conflict, complete security collapse, and permanent chaos in Gaza. Additionally, it would sever Trump’s role as a broker and make the current arrangement appear to be nothing more than a political spectacle to cover up an Israeli-executed genocide.

The only thing that can guarantee stability is the Palestinian people’s total and unwavering support for a free and independent Palestinian state, which will be based solely on their wishes regardless of their differences and political affiliations.

Syria announces ceasefire agreement with Kurd-led SDF after heavy fighting

According to Syrian state media, the Syrian government has announced a ceasefire with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) that will require the latter’s forces to leave areas west of the Euphrates River.

SDF forces will also be able to join Syria under the terms of the agreement on Sunday.

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The SDF and the Syrian government have been fighting for days in northeastern Syria, leading to the signing of the agreement. Over strategic posts and oilfields along the Euphrates River, the army and the SDF had been fighting.

Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa stated in a statement in Damascus that the agreement will allow the SDF to occupy three of its former rulers, al-Hasakah, Deir Az Zor, and Raqqa.

Our Arab tribes should continue to be composed and allow for the terms of the agreement to be carried out, according to al-Sharaa.

The SDF administration in charge of ISIL (ISIS) detainees and camps and the security forces guarding the facilities will now be integrated into the nation’s state structure, giving the government full legal and security responsibility.

In order to ensure national partnership, the SDF will make a list of leaders for the central government’s senior military, security, and civilian positions.

Al-Sharaa met with American Special Envoy to Syria Tom Barrack in Damascus to make the announcement. Mazloum Abdi, the head of the SDF, was supposed to attend the meeting, but al-Sharaa claimed that the weather had prevented him from traveling until Monday due to the situation.

‘Victory’

Ayman Oghanna, a journalist in the Syrian capital, reported that the agreement “can be seen as a victory” for the Syrian government.

According to Syrian state media, the SDF-controlled governorates will be handed over to the military under the terms of the agreement, as well as civilian institutions.

“Total control of all border crossings and oil and gas fields will be assumed by the Syrian government.”

Fighting has periodically broken out between the two sides in recent months, increasing in ferocity this month, as a previous agreement from March that included the integration of SDF forces into the Syrian military was not implemented.

The Syrian army moved further into towns in the SDF-held territory on Saturday, though.

The army had taken control of the major Freedom dam, which was formerly known as the Baath, west of Tabqa, as well as the northern city of Tabqa and its adjacent dam, according to state media.

In a significant blow to the SDF, the army also seized the largest oil field in the country, the Omar oilfield, and the Conoco gas field in Deir Az Zor. Al-Sharaa claimed last week that the SDF’s claim to have a quarter of the nation’s main oil and other commodity resources was unacceptable.

The SDF’s political isolation, according to Gamal Mansour, a University of Toronto political science lecturer, partially accounts for their swift retreat.

The issue that SDF has is that sometimes you have arms, but your political situation, lack of backing, strategic and regional background, etc., he told Al Jazeera.

Iraqi Kurdistan read the SDF’s regional image and strategic approach in a way that caused them to go to the SDF and say, “You need to cooperate with the Americans so that you can have a peaceful relationship with the Syrian government,” he said, adding that the US has also stated this.

Arab tribes in SDF-controlled areas, whose loyalty to the SDF was already fragile because of dissatisfaction with their rule, Kurdish nationalist dominance, and a lack of economic investment, contributed to the Syrian government’s rapid advance, according to Mansour.

Sudan’s people endure ‘horror and hell’ in war, says UN rights chief

Volker Turk, the UN’s representative for Sudan, claims that Sudan’s people are still living in severe conditions and are being forced to flee.

Turk made the remarks during his first visit to Sudan since the war broke out in April 2023 that it was “despicable” that money was being used to “adjust the suffering of the population,” not to mention drones.

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The UN has repeatedly warned about foreign actors’ involvement in Sudan’s civil war.

Despite Abu Dhabi’s persistent denial, the United Arab Emirates has been repeatedly accused of providing the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) with weapons, support, and political backing.

Egypt and Saudi Arabia support the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF). Iran and Turkiye reportedly gave the army weapons, including drones.

Turk, however, claimed from Port Sudan, on the coast of Sudan, that the nation was “affected by the increasing militarisation of society by all parties to the conflict, including through the arming of civilians and the recruitment and use of children.”

After the SAF and RSF fought to oust themselves from power in 2023, the nation was plunged into a bloody civil war.

INTERACTIVE - SUDAN - HUMANITARIAN SITUATION - NOV12, 2025 copy 2-1765797196
(Al Jazeera)

Horrific violations

The UN rights chief warned of similar crimes taking place in the Kordofan region, the epicenter of the conflict right now, after hearing testimony about “unbearable” atrocities committed by survivors of attacks in Darfur.

The “commanders of this conflict and those who are arming, funding, and profiting from this war” must hear the testimony, he said.

Regardless of affiliation, Turk urged that repeated attacks on civilian infrastructure could lead to “war crimes” and that “we must ensure that these horrific violations are brought to justice.”

The UN chief urged both sides to “cease intolerable attacks against civilian targets, including markets, hospitals, schools, and shelters,” according to the UN chief.

Both sides of the conflict have been accused of committing war crimes, but the RSF was the one who was alleged by monitoring groups of killing at least 1,500 people during its capture of El-Fasher in Darfur in October.

Out of a population of 46.8 million, 30.4 million people in Sudan need humanitarian assistance, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

Particularly in the Darfur and Kordofan regions, the population is experiencing acute food insecurity and a nutrition crisis. Disease outbreaks are also aggravated by the situation at the same time.

Police chief steps down after UK fallout from ban on Tel Aviv football fan

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The West Midlands Police Chief Craig Guildford resigned following the UK’s decision to forbid Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters from a game against Aston Villa last year. Despite the police’s own investigation, a government report found that bias and inaccuracies were a factor in the police’s decision to ban fans in Amsterdam despite their violent behavior.