Trump’s plan for Gaza rewards Israel’s genocide and
punishes its victims
Joseph
Massad
7 October 2025
https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/trumps-plan-rewards-genocide-punishes-victims
Two years on, complicit governments back a US plan to
safeguard Jewish supremacy and mute global outrage, while Israel revives Nazi
torture methods to force Palestinian surrender.
A few days ago, on the eve of the second anniversary
of Israel's genocide in Gaza, the Trump administration issued its latest ultimatum to the Palestinian people, framed as a "peace plan".
It threatens Palestinians with more genocide unless
they acquiesce in the US-Israeli project to continue to destroy their lives and
homeland.
The Palestinian
Authority (PA), along
with European, Arab and Muslim-majority states such as Turkey, Pakistan and Indonesia - and even the United Nations and the Vatican's American pope - joined the chorus of support for this
genocidal American threat, which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, its
ostensible co-author, agreed to under the guise of an Israeli "compromise".
Evidently, this international consensus on supporting,
or at least accepting, Israel's right to be and remain a Jewish supremacist
state agrees that Israel's genocide of the Palestinians is not only justified
as a means of safeguarding Israel's Jewish
supremacy but also
deserves to be rewarded.
US President Donald Trump and the governments
backing his latest plan to complete the genocide demand that the Palestinian
resistance surrender to the genocidal state, sparing the Israeli military the
arduous effort and cost of continuing the slaughter and the expulsion of
survivors.
The Arab League, under US orders, had already called last July for
the Palestinian resistance to disarm and leave Gaza.
Unsurprisingly, it is the victims of genocide who must
surrender their few weapons, while the war criminals slaughtering them must
continue to be armed to the teeth by the US and Europe - with the notable
recent exception of Spain.
Divide and re-educate
For Israel's defenders, disarming the victims of
genocide is not enough. The editors of The New York Times not only support
Trump's genocidal threats but also insist that the Palestinian victims be sent to
re-education camps to learn how to love their oppressors and accept their fate
without the right to resist those who seek their annihilation.
To this end, The Times editors have endorsed a
proposal prepared by the US government-founded Wilson Center, co-authored by a
retired Israeli colonel and none other than retired American
Lieutenant-General Keith Dayton.
This is the same Dayton who served as the US security
coordinator for
the PA from December 2005 to October 2010, and oversaw the training of its
thuggish militias and the coup they staged against the democratically elected
Hamas in 2007.
Before coming to the West Bank, Dayton was busy fighting
America's war against the Iraqi people in 2003. Today,
his war against the Palestinian people continues unabated, as he strives to
ensure that only unelected thugs govern them.
As "experts at the Wilson Center in
Washington have argued", the editors of The Times tell us, the Trump
plan's proposed billionaires who would run post-genocide Gaza "should
create a program in schools, the media and elsewhere 'to remove Hamas's
pervasive radicalizing influence over Gazan society'".
Echoing Netanyahu's speech at the UN, the editors
assure their readers that there are precedents for such re-education:
"Deradicalization programs succeeded in Germany and Japan after World War
II."
Both the authors of the report and The Times editors
are certain, however, that there is no need to re-educate Israeli society not
to commit genocide.
In addition to forcing Palestinian victims into
re-education camps, the Trump plan seeks to further splinter the people by
separating the survivors of the genocide in Gaza from the rest of the
Palestinians.
Whereas the first chapter of the Oslo Accords in 1993 required the Palestine Liberation
Organization (PLO) to submit to Israel's will and surrender the vast majority
of the internationally recognised rights of the Palestinian people, this latest
chapter of the Oslo saga seeks the final separation of "Gazans" from
the West Bank.
It follows the Oslo strategy of dividing the
Palestinians within the 1967 territories from those Israel expelled in 1948,
who live in exile, and those inside Israel. For its part, Israel - later joined by Trump during
his first term - isolated the Palestinians of East Jerusalem from the
rest.
Meanwhile, the Netanyahu government is pressing ahead
with plans to annex the West Bank, or at least 60 percent of it, encompassed by
the so-called Area C outlined in the Oslo Accords.
The first step of this annexation would be to execute
the Israeli E1 settlement
project, which stipulates
that Israel take over 36 percent of Area C.
Trump's pledge not to permit annexation is belied by
his endorsement during his first term of Israel's illegal annexation of East
Jerusalem and the Golan Heights and characterisation of its illegal West Bank
settlements as "not
inconsistent with
international law".
Blame reversal
Trump's plan was preceded by Netanyahu's
speech to a nearly
deserted UN General Assembly, in which he pledged to destroy Israel's
"savage enemies".
Netanyahu lauded the genocide, which has killed and
injured upwards of a quarter of a million Palestinians to date, as the work of
"the brave men and women of the [Israeli military]".
Paving the way for Trump's post-genocide Gaza plan,
Netanyahu deployed a familiar blame-reversal tactic, likening Palestinians to
Nazis and insisting they be excluded from any role in Gaza's future.
He proclaimed: "Just imagine, for those who say Hamas has to
stay, it has to be part of a post-war Gaza - imagine, in a post-war situation
after World War II, allowing the defeated Nazis in 1945 to rebuild Germany?
It's inconceivable. It's ridiculous. It didn't happen then, and it's not going
to happen now."
Netanyahu's reasonable position that perpetrators of
major crimes should not be allowed to remain in power is not contested by
Palestinians or their supporters.
But given that only one party has been accused of
genocide at the highest levels - including the International
Court of Justice (ICJ),
the UN, and human rights organisations - and has otherwise been the object of
global condemnation, it is that party alone whose continued rule over its
victims could be considered "inconceivable" and
"ridiculous".
Yet it is this perverse inversion that underpins
Trump's plan, which demands that the Palestinians, once stripped of whatever
paltry weapons the resistance has, must submit to the very state seeking to
annihilate them.
'Sonic torture'
Netanyahu's psychological assault was not confined to
the UN stage. The indicted war criminal ordered his forces to use loudspeakers to broadcast his speech to the Palestinians,
whom they are slaughtering and starving in Gaza.
In case the loudspeakers were not loud enough, the
Israelis also seized their mobile phones to ensure that Netanyahu's threats of further
genocide and vow to achieve "total victory" over the mostly
defenceless population, half of whom are children, would reach them through a
livestream.
Human rights monitors have gathered testimonies from Palestinians in Gaza on how Israel has
weaponised sound itself in its ongoing genocide.
The report describes Israeli forces "broadcasting
gunshots, [sounds of] armed conflicts, explosions, military vehicle movements,
and occasionally songs in Hebrew and Arabic in order to psychologically
intimidate civilians who live amid total darkness at night and total
disconnection from the external world".
A particularly sadistic tactic involves Israeli
quadcopters broadcasting recordings of women screaming and children crying for
help, a ploy to lure people into the open as targets. When residents went out
to investigate, they were met with gunfire.
The weaponisation of loudspeakers against captive
populations is an old tradition among aggressors and racial supremacists. The
Nazis might have pioneered the use of sonic torture to psychologically "manipulate, intimidate
and indoctrinate" prisoners.
In the summer of 1933, work at Dachau was deliberately halted so prisoners could be
forced to listen to broadcasts from the Nazi Party Congress in Nuremberg,
including "Nazi speeches and the menacing music that accompanied
them".
Walter Hornung, a former inmate, testified: "When
the first sounds came from the speakers, we were sure that the modest amount of
rest and quiet normally brought by the evening was gone forever."
Blaring across the concentration camp were
"parade marches and jingoistic music by Wagner", along with speeches
of the Fuhrer, which the prisoners endured "with great difficulty".
In November 1933, the loudspeaker system was deployed again during the
parliamentary elections, playing hours of Hitler's speeches and march
music.
In subsequent years, loudspeakers continued to be used
to demoralise prisoners and, as Nazi commanders themselves
described, to "re-educate" them by instilling the values of the racial
state.
During World War Two, "victory announcements from
the German radio station were designed to break the inner resistance of the
inmates". This eventually became routine practice in the death camps,
where broadcasts were carried across the barracks to drown out the screams of
those tortured and killed.
A Zionist tradition
Netanyahu's use of loudspeakers also follows a
long-standing Zionist tradition.
In 1948, as Zionist militias carried out massacres and
the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians, they adopted loudspeakers as tools of
psychological warfare.
Alongside Arabic-language radio broadcasts that spread
propaganda and rumours of disease to provoke panic and flight, Zionist forces
deployed loudspeaker
trucks.
Israeli historian Ilan Pappe describes their use:
"These would be used in the villages and towns to urge the Palestinians to
flee before they were all killed, to warn that the Jews were using poison gas
and atomic weapons, or to play recorded 'horror sounds' - shrieking and
moaning, the wail of sirens, and the clang of fire-alarm bells."
The Haganah Zionist militias also "rolled barrel bombs
down from the hills and used loudspeakers to broadcast terrifying noises to
frighten the population".
In Acre, where the Zionists poisoned the aqueduct with
typhoid germs, infecting scores of Palestinians as well as British
soldiers, loudspeakers
blared, "Surrender
or commit suicide. We will destroy you to the last man" - a call not
unlike the one that Netanyahu trumpeted at the UN last week.
Throughout the war, the Haganah continued to use
Arabic-language broadcasts and loudspeaker vans. Their radio announced that "the day of judgement had
arrived".
Even anti-Palestinian right-wing Israeli
historian Benny Morris acknowledges that "the mortar barrages and
the psychological warfare broadcasts and announcements, and the tactics
employed by the infantry companies, advancing from house to house, were all
geared to this goal. The orders of Carmeli's 22nd Battalion were 'to kill
every [adult male] Arab encountered' and to set alight with fire-bombs' all objectives that can be set
alight. I am sending you posters in Arabic; disperse on route'".
During the mass expulsions in Lydda and Ramleh on 11
July 1948, led by Yitzhak Rabin and Moshe Dayan, "all Arab men of military age were rounded up
and penned into special enclosures. Israeli loudspeaker vans then toured the
two towns announcing that neither food nor water would be provided and that the
Arabs had 48 hours to get out to Transjordan. Israeli troops then began sacking
both towns. On July 13, the loudspeakers gave final orders, naming the Kubah
and the Hinda bridges as the exodus routes for Ramleh and Lydda
respectively".
The tactic resurfaced during Israel's 1967 conquest of
the rest of Palestine. In Bethlehem, Israeli jeeps drove through the city
with loudspeakers, threatening and terrifying the population: "You
have two hours to leave your homes and flee to Jericho or Amman. If you don't
your houses will be shelled."
Colonial confrontations
As is clear from these precedents, Netanyahu is in
good company with his loudspeakers terrorising the Palestinians of the Gaza
death camp. One could even imagine Trump himself arranging for loudspeakers in
Gaza to broadcast his ultimatums and harangues to the subjugated population.
Two years into Israel's genocide, its slaughter has
not only precipitated a showdown between the West and the Global South at the UN
and in myriad international forums, but more recently pitted the US against its
European subordinates over the theatrics of recognising a non-existent
Palestinian state.
Yet the confrontation between western colonial powers
and the Global South over Palestine dates back to 1947, during the vote to
partition the land between the Zionist colonists and the indigenous
Palestinians.
It further intensified amid decolonisation and the
rise of the PLO in the 1970s. It was in that decade that the UN recognised the
Palestinian people's right to self-determination, affirmed the PLO as their
sole legitimate representative, and in November 1975 passed Resolution 3379, condemning Zionism as a "form of racism and
racial discrimination".
Israel's UN ambassador at the time, Chaim Herzog - who, eight years earlier, in 1967, had
bulldozed Palestinian homes in the Magharibah neighbourhood of East Jerusalem
and expelled thousands of residents - feigned horror: "Hitler would have
felt at home... in this forum," he pontificated, adding that the UN
had become the "world center of antisemitism".
This refrain has been a constant of Israeli diplomacy
at the UN, echoed last week when Netanyahu denounced the body as a "house of
darkness" and a "swamp of antisemitic bile".
In a theatrical
move for which
Israeli diplomats would become known at the UN, Herzog tore the "Zionism
is racism" resolution in half - an act applauded by then US Ambassador
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, himself notorious for the racist 1965 report he
authored on "The Negro Family".
Israel also retaliated by renaming every street and avenue originally named after
the United Nations "Zionism".
Born in Ireland, Herzog went on to become Israel's
president in 1983. Today, his son Isaac Herzog holds the same office. True
to his father's legacy, President Herzog Junior announced to the world Israel's
plans for genocide, declaring: "It is an entire nation out there that is
responsible… It is not true this rhetoric about civilians not being aware, not
involved. It's absolutely not true."
He went further, insisting that Israel's genocidal war against the
Palestinian people "is not only between Israel and Hamas. It's a war that
is intended, really, truly, to save western civilisation, to save the values of
western civilisation".
Rewarding genocide
The recent Trump plan, which continues the US
tradition of denying the Palestinian people's right to self-determination, is
engineered to undo the uninterrupted global condemnation of Israel's genocide
in Gaza.
Extending from rulings at The Hague and UN findings to the belated declaration of genocide by
the UN Office of
Human Rights, as
well as charges from groups including Amnesty
International, Human Rights
Watch, and B'Tselem, Trump hopes to erase these condemnations.
His aim is to quash the growing public furor in
the US and Western Europe over their governments' complicity in the genocide by
rewarding Israel and lining up the US's Arab client regimes to do the same.
Colombian President Gustavo Petro's call last week to
liberate the Palestinians demanded "a powerful army of the countries that do
not accept genocide". He added: "That is why I invite nations of the
world and their peoples more than anything, as an integral part of humanity, to
bring together weapons and armies. We must liberate Palestine. I invite the
armies of Asia, the great Slavic people who defeated Hitler with great heroism,
and the Latin American armies of Bolivar."
Rather than join his proposed army of liberation, the
Arab client regimes, including the PA, are lining up behind the Trump plan to
deepen the suffering of the Palestinians.
That the same European and Arab countries, which have
abetted Israel's campaign recently, recognised a phantom Palestinian
state, demonstrates
that their gesture is an act of support for
Israel and its
right to be and remain a Jewish supremacist state.
It is also, as I have written here, recognition of the unelected, collaborator
PA and its role in
repressing Palestinians. Their endorsement of Trump's plan simply adds yet
another band of billionaires - the so-called "Gaza International
Transitional Authority" - to preside over future Israeli and PA brutality
and the destruction of what remains of Palestinian life and livelihood.
Hamas has decided to cleverly play the American game.
Since the US floated ceasefire and prisoner-exchange proposals in May 2024,
Hamas has invariably responded positively but with modifications, while Israel
rejected each offer.
This time around, Hamas also agreed to a ceasefire, a
prisoner exchange, Israeli withdrawal, the entry of food and provisions, and
the creation of a committee of Palestinian technocratic administrators to run
Gaza after the genocide.
It also said it would hand over its arms, but only to
a future Palestinian government in an independent Palestinian state.
Crucially, and contrary to Trump's demands, Hamas
insisted that the future of Gaza and the choice of its leaders must be decided
by Palestinians themselves, not by foreign overseers, and that it could not
negotiate those questions on their behalf. This unexpected stance has
spoiled Israel's plans.
For now, Trump appears to have accepted Hamas's response, but his threats remain operative, and he could still
backtrack, as he did in January.
Those who support the Palestinian people's right to
resist Israeli settler-colonialism and genocide should not waver in opposing
Trump and Israel's threats and ultimatums, which aim to prolong Palestinian
suffering for the foreseeable future.
They should instead support Petro's call for the
liberation of Palestine and the Palestinians. That is the only path that offers
even the possibility of a lasting peace.