Israel has kicked off its heaviest push yet into Gaza City—after weeks of “shaping operations”—while also striking in Yemen and reportedly backing Druze fighters in southern Syria. At the same time, a ceremony beneath Jerusalem’s Old City—attended by Secretary of State Marco Rubio—lit up a very different front: history, faith, and narrative. Here’s the fast tour through what matters and why.
The war just shifted gears
Over the last week Israel hammered Gaza City with air and artillery, flattening high-rises Hamas used as observation posts and command nodes. That was prelude. As of last night, IDF Merkava columns pushed in en masse with heavy air cover—what looks like the start of the full ground thrust many assumed began weeks ago.
What’s different now:
Tempo: From pin-point raids to multi-brigade advances.
Purpose: Clear and hold, not just attrit.
Civilians: Israel had urged evacuations for weeks; Hamas intimidated and manipulated many into staying as human shields.
“Shaping” is over. The main act just walked onstage.
Israel also continues long-arm strikes into Yemen to blunt Houthi launches and interdiction attempts—reminding everyone this conflict has regional plumbing.
A northern wrinkle: Druze in southern Syria
Multiple reports say Israel is arming and paying several thousand Druze fighters in Syria’s Suwayda region. The likely aims:
carve a buffer against jihadi networks and Iranian proxies,
stabilize Druze communities adjacent to the Golan, and
pressure Damascus while U.S. political heat rises on the Assad regime.
If true, it’s classic Israeli realpolitik: empower local actors who can both hold terrain and deny sanctuaries to the worst people in the neighborhood.
Hostages, threats, and hard truth
President Trump warned Hamas that using hostages as above-ground shields would mean “all bets are off.” Hamas has played the human shield card from day one, and as fighting tightens around Gaza City, the danger to the captives sadly increases, whether underground or in tents. Two sober realities:
Hamas won’t voluntarily release all hostages;
“Pressure camps” outside the PM’s residence don’t move Hamas—they help Hamas by showing internal Israeli division.
A miracle remains possible. Absent that, rescue and relentless pressure are the only paths that have ever worked on terror kidnappers.
The “G-word” and how headlines get made
When a UN panel labeled Israel’s conduct “genocide,” many outlets headlined it as fait accompli: “Israel committing genocide in Gaza,” and only later added the “UN inquiry says” clause. That ordering isn’t accidental; it’s framing. The same pattern appears with the phrase “occupied Palestinian territory”—baked into the body names themselves, bias pre-installed.
A few counters you won’t see on those front pages:
Population reality: Gaza’s population grew for years; Israel has sent in food and medicine even while fighting.
2005 withdrawal: Israel pulled out of Gaza entirely for nearly two decades.
Military necessity vs. malice: Collapsing tunnels and neutralizing rooftop fire isn’t the same as targeting civilians as civilians.
No one should be casual about civilian harm. But precision and intent matter—and so does honest language.
Under the Old City: a tunnel, a text, and a statement
While rockets and headlines flew, another story unfolded under Jerusalem. Secretary of State Marco Rubio joined Israeli leaders to inaugurate a newly opened pilgrimage tunnel linking the City of David to the Western Wall—an archaeological artery that strengthens the historical case for an ancient Jewish Jerusalem.
The press called the event “extremist” because the City of David organization is settlement-friendly. Watch the speeches and you’ll hear… basic statements about history, law, and God’s promises. Whether you agree the temple stood on today’s Temple Mount or nearer the Gihon Springs, the archaeology keeps saying the quiet part out loud: the Jews didn’t arrive in 1948.
Stones don’t tweet, but they do testify.
The Gaza map keeps changing
The IDF’s own sequencing shows a slow squeeze: Rafah sealed and cleared, buffer zones bulldozed, then methodical bites northward. The carve-outs will likely remain. When a terror army embeds in apartments and alleys, the land you can live on shrinks until your militants stop using it as a launchpad. That’s cruel math—but it’s Hamas’s math.
Quick answers to common questions
“Why doesn’t Israel just take Gaza in weeks?”
Booby-trapped stairwells, IED belts, tunnel networks, and hostages make speed the enemy of success.“Cut Gaza’s internet already.”
It’s a live intelligence hose. Israel harvests signals and patterns from the traffic. Turning it off cuts both ways.“Two-state solution?”
The UN votes it like a spell. History says every concession to Hamas is treated as proof of weakness, not a path to peace.“Arabs in Israel?”
Roughly one in five Israeli citizens is Arab—voting, serving, studying, and running businesses inside Israel proper.
What to watch next
Gaza City blocks: Expect grinding, building-to-building clearing with casualty spikes when tunnel nodes are found.
Northern front: More rocket trades with Hezbollah; keep an eye on Mount Hermon / Golan movements.
Damascus diplomacy: If Druze gains hold, watch for Assad-Israel rumblings about territory swaps and tacit understandings.
Jerusalem narrative: The tunnel opening is just the start—archaeology will keep undermining convenient modern myths.
Bottom line
The kinetic phase in Gaza City has truly begun.
The information war remains as vicious as the street fight.
Under the streets, stones keep speaking—about covenant, continuity, and belonging.
And for families of hostages and soldiers, the stakes aren’t theoretical; they’re mortal.
Pray for the captives. Pray for wisdom in Israel’s war cabinet. Pray for justice without vengeance, strength without cruelty, and an end state that keeps evil from regenerating.
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