No Return to Genocide As the Gaza Ceasefire Begins and the Extent of Israel’s Policy of Extermination Is Revealed

21.1.25

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As the ceasefire began on January 19, 2025, displaced Palestinians sought out their former homes, many deeply shocked by the extent of the devastation inflicted by Israel over the previous 15 months. One of the defining images from the first day of the ceasefire, by Omar al-Qattaa, it will, I hope, be so shocking that it will help to prevent any efforts on the part of Israel to resume what has been an incessant military assault of unforgivably brutal intensity.

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As the ceasefire in Gaza began on the morning of Sunday January 19 (delayed for three hours by Israel, when another 19 Palestinians were killed in last-minute bombing raids), I found myself trying to imagine what it must have felt like to be free, for the first time in 15 months — or, at least, since the six-day “pause” for the exchange of hostages at the end of November 2023 — from the constant threat of death, through the devastating Israeli bombings using weapons of maximum destruction relentlessly replenished by Israel’s ever-obliging allies (the US and Germany, in particular, but with numerous other countries involved), through cynical targeting by IDF snipers, and through the equally cynical targeting by armed quadcopters, a specialty of the Israeli “defense” industry. I also tried to imagine how sweet the silence must have been in the absence of what was, by all accounts, the truly relentless buzzing of drones, spying, monitoring, intimidating, and seeking out targets.

Throughout Sunday, the survivors of what had, until the ceasefire was announced last Wednesday, seemed to be a genocidal assault without end, were finally able to begin returning home — on what, as if by some miracle, was a bright and sunny day, in marked contrast to the freezing torrents of rain to which they had recently been subjected. As they walked from the makeshift tent cities to which most of them (an estimated 1.9 million people in total) had been exiled through expulsion orders, as Israel systematically razed Gaza to the ground, from north to south, over the first eight months of its remorseless destruction, what greeted them was a post-apocalyptic landscape of almost unimaginable annihilation.

While some were able to locate their homes, or what remained of them, others were unable even to find where they used to live, as a result of Israel’s determined efforts to erase their homeland. Almost all, however, were primarily preoccupied with finding the remains of their loved ones, buried under the rubble, or shot in the streets — just one of the many dreadful legacies of this unprecedented, and unprecedentedly long assault on a trapped civilian population in which no one — no one — has survived without losing family members, and in which hundreds of entire extended families have been erased from the civil registry (the same civil registry possessed by the Israelis, who used it to maximize their extermination).

Within hours, horrendous stories began to emerge of the unearthing of skeletal body parts, including skulls pierced by bullets, and yesterday, after what, for many, was the first quiet night in what must have seemed an eternity, the searches continued, the tally of remains building up an atrocity exhibition that, in and of itself, ought to ensure that, under no earthly circumstances whatsoever can Israel be allowed to break the ceasefire agreement and begin once more to undertake actions conjured up in the deepest, darkest depths of human depravity.

As one displaced resident, Mohammad Hussain, a 30-year old with an MBA, who has been living in a tent with his family, wrote on X after finally being able to go for a walk without the fear of being killed, “I was walking while crying at what I saw — ruins and rubble, as if it were a ghost town. Just imagine seeing bones and skulls in the streets and under the rubble, with the foul smell emanating from the decaying bodies.”

The hostage exchanges

In the afternoon of January 19, Hamas released the first three of the 33 hostages it will release over the first six weeks of the ceasefire deal, in the first of three phases of the agreement, followed, hours later, by the release of 90 Palestinians from Israeli jails — 69 women and 21 children, some as young as 12. Predictably, given the extraordinary bias of the whole of the western mainstream media, airtime and headlines were given over to the release of the Israeli hostages, with almost no coverage of the Palestinians, even though almost all of them were, legally, hostages too, having mostly been detained and held without charge or trial for perceived transgressions like social media posts criticizing Israel’s actions in Gaza. I’ll be writing much more about this shameful failure to analyze the extraordinary lawlessness of Israel’s entire detention system for Palestinians in an article to follow.

Although the second and third phases of the ceasefire deal, in which, eventually, Israel will withdraw its forces, are vague at present, it seems clear that Hamas’ insistence that all of the remaining 100 or so hostages will only be freed throughout all three phases pretty much guarantees that the deal will hold.

As I explained in my recent article, Dare We Hope That the Gaza Ceasefire Deal Will End the Horror of Israel’s Extermination of the Palestinian People?, Israel’s endless genocidal assault was only sustainable as long as Benjamin Netanyahu refused to accept the pressure within Israel from the hostages’ families, and a significant proportion of the Israeli population, to stop the killing to ensure their safe return.

Now that the hostages have taken center stage, he cannot realistically resume any actions that will endanger them, meaning that there are, at a minimum, 18 weeks — until May 25 — before his genocidal intentions can resume, although that seems unlikely, in part because of exhaustion in the military, and in the civilian population as a whole.

The military’s fatigue stems partly from soldiers themselves starting to break ranks to complain openly about a chain of command that openly encouraged and facilitated war crimes, although it has also been exacerbated by the ICC arrest warrants that were issued in November for Netanyahu and his former defense minister Yoav Gallant, for war crimes and crimes against humanity, from which ripples of accountability have begun to spread, with organizations like the inspiring Hind Rajab Foundation using soldiers’ incriminating social media posts to pursue them through the courts internationally, for complicity in war crimes, every time they want to take a foreign vacation.

As for Israel’s civilian population, a collapsing economy and the stress of becoming a parish state seem finally to be stifling the power of the persistent and hysterical genocidal fury that was sustained for 15 months throughout Israeli political life, through its mainstream media and through what purports to be its “entertainment” industry, with an entire sub-set of Israeli “culture” having developed that glorifies and seeks to justify genocide.

Ending Yoav Gallant’s murderous “siege” and addressing the destruction of Gaza’s entire healthcare system

As part of the ceasefire deal, the most annihilatory aspects of the genocide, beyond the direct killing, can — and must — now be addressed through the delivery of humanitarian aid on a colossal scale. For the last 15 months, since Yoav Gallant declared a “complete siege” on all supplies into Gaza on October 9, 2023, Israel has worked assiduously to starve the Palestinians, to deprive them of clean drinking water, to spread diseases through the deliberate destruction of the sewage system, and to kill as many of them as possible through the breathtakingly cynical, illegal — and, to be blunt, evil — destruction of the entire hospital and healthcare system.

Imagine a population of 2.3 million people, anywhere in the west, suddenly deprived of all hospital services and health clinics, and you will have some insight into the devastation this would cause — by all counts, at least 50,000 pregnant women, suddenly deprived of almost all neo-natal care, and the elderly cut off from all the medical care and medical interventions required to deal with the raft of illnesses that afflict them, to name just two of the most vulnerable groups of people.

Add to these the overwhelming numbers of those injured in the relentless bombing raids, and in sniper and quadcopter attacks, arriving at hospitals with no fuel to power generators and life-support machines, dwindling medical supplies, and no anaesthetics, and the enormity of the horrors becomes almost incomprehensible. Because of the intensity of the bombs dropped on built-up civilian areas, Gaza has a higher proportion of child amputees than in any other conflict in human history, but many of the operations required to save the lives of these children and babies had to take place without anaesthesia.

For their dedication, doctors and medical staff were besieged in their hospitals, killed in bombing raids or picked off by snipers, or sometimes, when hospitals were invaded by the IDF in search of proof for cynically invented claims that they were connected with Hamas militants, through summary executions. Almost a thousand doctors and healthcare workers have been killed over the last 15 months, while others were kidnapped, seized and “disappeared” into Israel’s grisly network of prisons for Palestinians, where hundreds are still held, including Dr. Hossam Abu Safiya, “disappeared” three weeks ago after holding out at Kamal Adwan Hospital for nearly three months, as Israeli forces sought to destroy the last functioning healthcare facility in northern Gaza, and where at least three have been murdered, including Dr. Adnan al-Bursh, an internationally renowned orthopaedic surgeon who was seized in December 2023, and died last April, quite possibly as a result of injuries sustained while being raped by his guards.

Humanitarian aid resumes

As the ceasefire begins, the provision of humanitarian aid has resumed, with the ceasefire agreement stipulating that 600 trucks a day, including 50 trucks of fuel, must be allowed in. 630 trucks entered on Sunday, and over 900 yesterday, finally bringing Yoav Gallant’s ruinous and homicidal “siege” to an end. The deliveries are especially crucial for the north of Gaza, where, since the start of October, a policy known as the “Generals’ Plan”, accurately described as a “genocide within a genocide”, has involved mass starvation and mass extermination in an effort to depopulate the entire area, prior to it becoming a “closed military zone”, and, in the fevered dreams of Israel’s far-right settlers, to its eventual colonization.

These gruesome hopes, of building new Israeli settlements on the corpse-strewn soil of Gaza, have been consistently led from within Netanyahu’s coalition government by the far-right ministers Bezalel Smotrich (the Minister of Finance) and Itamar Ben-Gvir (the Minister of National Security), even though they resemble nothing less ghoulish than a dystopian parallel universe in which, having secured victory in World War II, Nazi property developers redeveloped Auschwitz as a luxury hotel resort.

With the ceasefire, the “Generals’ Plan” — which was never adequately covered in the western media, although I focused on it relentlessly throughout October — is suddenly no more, and the colonizers’ dreams are also receding. In response to the ceasefire, which both Ben-Gvir and Smotrich opposed, Ben-Gvir resigned, withdrawing his Otzma Yehudit party (“Jewish Power”) from the coalition government, while Bezalel Smotrich, the head of the Religious Zionist Party, looked increasingly desperate as he told Israel’s Army Radio, “I will overthrow the government if it does not return to fighting in a way that [leads to us] taking over the entire Gaza Strip and governing it.” Having previously insisted that the north must be deliberately starved until some mythical “surrender” of Hamas takes place, he added that this was the only means by which any humanitarian aid should be provided.

As fuel, medical supplies and equipment re-enter Gaza, it is now hugely important for skilled medical personnel to also be allowed in, and in significant numbers, to address the urgent health needs of the surviving population. As Dr. Ghassan Abu Sitta, the British-Palestinian surgeon who was a witness to Israel’s crimes in Gaza as a surgeon in the early months of the genocide, told Sky News on Sunday, there “are 13,000 Palestinian women and children who need immediate surgery.” With 33 hospitals destroyed, 22,000 Palestinian children orphaned and 4,500 Palestinian children with amputations, he added, “We now need to help the people in Gaza mend their wounds and fix their lives.”

With so many medical personnel killed, and the rest exhausted after 15 month of frankly super-human dedication, it is abundantly clear that a massive influx of medical volunteers is desperately required.

Similarly, although the people of Gaza have proven extraordinarily adept at rebuilding hospitals, or parts of them, throughout the last 15 months, they cannot rebuild adequately without significant outside assistance, and in the meantime the establishment of field hospitals, also mentioned in the agreement, is urgently required.

So too are what the agreement describes as “the necessary supplies and requirements to accommodate and shelter displaced persons who lost their homes during the war (at least 60,000 temporary homes – caravans – and 200,000 tents).”

The need for urgent international action now

While the Palestinians themselves are as resilient as ever — one, Moayed Harazeen, a software engineer, noted on X on Sunday, “There is movement everywhere — bulldozers clearing roads blocked by debris, trucks preparing to deliver aid, and municipal teams cleaning streets and providing supplies”, adding, “Everyone is working today” — the need for significant outside assistance is also glaringly apparent.

Yesterday, Gaza’s Civil Defence Service issued an urgent call for support. In a statement mourning the killing of 99 Civil Defense workers, the wounding of 319 others, and the disappearance of 27 others, they declared, “Our crews recovered more than 97,000 wounded from the bombing sites”, noted that 2,842 further victims were “evaporated”, and that more than 10,000 bodies were still under the rubble, and stated, “We need rescue, ambulance and firefighting equipment due to the lack of capabilities. We demand the entry of Arab and foreign civil defense crews with full equipment to assist us in the rescue efforts.”

With an outrageous Israeli ban on the work on UNWRA, the UN Agency for Palestine Refugees, and the chief provider of humanitarian aid in Gaza, due to take effect next week, on January 29, it is more crucial than ever that the western countries tainted by their support for Israel’s genocide, and the Arab and other Muslim countries most noteworthy for their indifference, step up to help the people of Gaza to survive and rebuild, not just to salve their consciences — or to provide some mitigating factors for good behavior when prosecutors come knocking — but also because, the more pressure they put on Israel now, the less likely it is that a re-eruption of the pustulence of its genocidal frenzy will be viable in the future.

According to the ceasefire agreement, a reconstruction plan isn’t meant to begin until the third phase of the deal, 12 weeks from now. Envisaged as lasting for a period of three to five years, and including the rebuilding of homes, civilian facilities and infrastructure, “under the supervision of a number of countries and organizations, including Egypt, Qatar, and the United Nations”, this is, of course, supremely necessary, although the notion that it can wait until the start of April is absurd.

Whatever can be done now needs to be done now. Whether through direct complicity or shameful indifference, much of the rest of the world has blood on its hands, and the leaders of country after country need to take a long hard look in the mirror and ask how, if they don’t act now, they will justify their actions when any kind of reckoning — whether religious or judicial — is demanded.

* * * * *

Andy Worthington is a freelance investigative journalist, activist, author, photographer (of an ongoing photo-journalism project, ‘The State of London’), film-maker and singer-songwriter (the lead singer and main songwriter for the London-based band The Four Fathers, whose music is available via Bandcamp). He is the co-founder of the Close Guantánamo campaign (see the ongoing photo campaign here) and the successful We Stand With Shaker campaign of 2014-15, and the author of The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s Illegal Prison and of two other books: Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion and The Battle of the Beanfield. He is also the co-director (with Polly Nash) of the documentary film, “Outside the Law: Stories from Guantánamo” (available on DVD here, or you can watch it online here, via the production company Spectacle, for £2.50).

In 2017, Andy became very involved in housing issues. He is the narrator of the documentary film, ‘Concrete Soldiers UK’, about the destruction of council estates, and the inspiring resistance of residents, he wrote a song ‘Grenfell’, in the aftermath of the entirely preventable fire in June 2017 that killed over 70 people, and, in 2018, he was part of the occupation of the Old Tidemill Wildlife Garden in Deptford, to try to prevent its destruction — and that of 16 structurally sound council flats next door — by Lewisham Council and Peabody.

Since 2019, Andy has become increasingly involved in environmental activism, recognizing that climate change poses an unprecedented threat to life on earth, and that the window for change — requiring a severe reduction in the emission of all greenhouse gases, and the dismantling of our suicidal global capitalist system — is rapidly shrinking, as tipping points are reached that are occurring much quicker than even pessimistic climate scientists expected. You can read his articles about the climate crisis here.

To receive new articles in your inbox, please subscribe to Andy’s new Substack account, set up in November 2024, where he’ll be sending out a weekly newsletter, or his RSS feed — and he can also be found on Facebook (and here), Twitter, Flickr and YouTube. Also see the six-part definitive Guantánamo prisoner list, The Complete Guantánamo Files, the definitive Guantánamo habeas list, the full military commissions list, and the chronological list of all Andy’s articles.

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15 Responses

  1. Andy Worthington says...

    When I posted this on Facebook, I wrote:

    As the ceasefire in Gaza enters its third day, I report on what must be the almost unimaginable relief of Palestinians now that the relentless fear of sudden death has come to an end, but how they now face the new challenges of finding out whether or not their homes have survived, and searching for the remains of their loved ones, buried in the rubble or shot in the streets.

    While I hope that the release of hostages in stages over the next 18 weeks means that Israel cannot resume its deadly violence, I also note the vital return of humanitarian aid, but point out how it also needs to be accompanied by foreign support in rebuilding Gaza’s destroyed hospitals and healthcare system, and the almost unthinkable task of reconstruction in general — not just for its own sake, but also as another crucial obstacle to any attempts by Israel to think that it can resume the policies of extermination that it has been inflicting on Gaza for the last 15 months.

  2. Andy Worthington says...

    Carol Landsman wrote:

    And now they’re doing it in the West Bank.

  3. Andy Worthington says...

    Yes, you’re right, Carol. Attacks in the West Bank have indeed increased, and it’s obvious that, in part, this is an outburst of revenge for the thwarted efforts to continue the genocide in Gaza.

    However, the situation within Israel is more tenuous than most people in the west are reporting. Ben-Gvir, the Kahanist thug in charge of the police, prisons and security, has resigned from his role, leaving Bezalel Smotrich, the other deranged far-right minister, more isolated in the government.

    It will be interesting to see who will be installed to replace Ben-Gvir in the next few days, and whether the far-right, interested solely in the complete colonization of all Palestinian land, can somehow continue the momentum of the last 15 months when, within Israel, there is exhaustion in the military, and the focus has shifted to the hostages – for whose safety, crucially, it is imperative for Netanyahu not to break the terms of the ceasefire deal.

    We’re going to have to wait and see if Israel’s allies are going to accept increased violence in the West Bank, when Israel has never been able to justify any aggression there by pretending that Hamas is in charge. Trump has scrapped the sanctions on settlers today, put in place by Biden, but they weren’t significant, and it’s much more important how the west as a whole will deal with an increase in aggression, when they too have always had to concede, over the last 15 months, that the excuses for attacking Gaza simply don’t exist when it comes to the West Bank.

  4. Andy Worthington says...

    Natalia Rivera Scott wrote:

    They didn’t stop murdering Palestinians.

  5. Andy Worthington says...

    They almost have for the last three days, Natalia. There have only been a few sporadic assaults by the Israelis, with Palestinian medics reporting yesterday that eight people had been hit by Israeli fire since the ceasefire began.

    As I keep saying, Netanyahu knows the ceasefire has to hold, or the hostages, who are now center stage in Israel (but who he couldn’t have cared less about until he agreed to the ceasefire), will undoubtedly suffer and the whole sh*tshow will start again – which, it seems clear, is no longer the gleeful, arrogantly law-shredding, divinely-ordained mission that it was before, with the military and civilians all starting to tire of it.

  6. Andy Worthington says...

    Johan van der Merwe wrote:

    Thanks for sharing this very good article, Andy!

  7. Andy Worthington says...

    You’re most welcome, Johan. I’m so glad you appreciated it. It’s hugely important right now that we take the advantage of the end of the direct killing to push as much as possible to expose the horrors that the sudden peace reveals, and to raise as often as possible the need for international intervention, on the ground, to prevent Israel from backsliding into genocide once more.

  8. "Never again" means "never again" for Gaza as the ceasefire begins - IndieNewsNow says...

    […] As the ceasefire in Gaza enters its third day, I hope you have time to read my latest article on my website, No Return to Genocide As the Gaza Ceasefire Begins and the Extent of Israel’s Policy of Exterminat…. […]

  9. Andy Worthington says...

    Natalia Rivera Scott wrote:

    Andy, I have a question. It was reported that Trump reversed the “sanctions” Biden put on Israel … what sanctions? Biden financed and supported the genocide! I never read anything about him imposing sanctions and I have been informed about the genocide.

  10. Andy Worthington says...

    Biden imposed sanctions on a number of extremist settlers in the West Bank, Natalia, presumably as the only sop he provided to critics within his administration, because Hamas isn’t the government in the West Bank, which can’t therefore be attacked under a blanket definition of terrorism, as so shamefully happened in Gaza.

    With Gaza, disgracefully, almost no governments in the west were even prepared to point out that although they had all obligingly designated Hamas as a terrorist organization, that designation failed to distinguish between militants and everyone employed in the administration of Gaza. By that logic, doctors and teachers are terrorists, because they’re employed by the Hamas-run government. No one in the west said it out loud, but at some level it has been how they they have justified their support so they haven’t had to bother even thinking about the numbers of civilians killed.

  11. Andy Worthington says...

    Bobbi Schiff wrote:

    They already arrested more Palestinians than they released on the 19th.

    They also have blocked every single Palestinian village in the West Bank so no one can reach their homes and people in the villages are imprisoned there.
    They started a new war against Jenin called Project Iron The PA ran like cowards the instant the army entered Jenin. They were supposed to be there as security forces protecting the civilians.

    By the way Ben Givr and Smorich already announced that Netanyahu promised them this war in the West Bank to stop them from interfering with the hostage return pause. If you follow Israeli media no one in Israel plans on a real ceasefire. They all announced that after all the hostages are home they will start attacking Gaza again. Meanwhile Project Iron will keep them busy.

    Also during the signing of his executive orders which allowed the settlers terrorists out of prison. Trump and his ambassador have announced that he doesn’t care if Israel sticks to the ceasefire and the agreements to leave Gaza because It not his war and Israel can do what they want.

    Here is just a little bit of the report on what is really going on.
    https://youtu.be/vQ1VlFoTyXI?si=FY00eNgGi1yVOJpk

  12. Andy Worthington says...

    Good to hear from you, Bobbi, and yes, many of your points are valid, although none of it erases the possibility – or even the probability – that the ceasefire deal will hold until all the Israeli hostages are freed, which won’t be until the end of May.

    All the saber-rattling talk of resuming the genocide after the first phase ignores the unfortunate truth, for the genocide enthusiasts, that public opinion within Israel is unlikely to approve a resumption of hostilities while two-thirds of the remaining hostages are still held.

    I agree that the recent escalation of hostilities in the West Bank is ominous, although it’s important to remember that ramped-up Israeli aggression in the West Bank has been constant since October 7.

    As for Ben-Gvir and Smotrich, it’s important to note that Ben-Gvir, who was in charge of the police, prisons and security, has resigned from the coalition government along with the other elected representatives from his fanatical Jewish Power party, and we’re currently waiting to see who will replace him.

    That leaves Smotrich more isolated than he’s been for the last 15 months, and although he’s as committed as ever to remorseless annexation in the West Bank, unconditional western support for a marked increase in Israeli atrocities there is going to be hard sell (outside of the US), because Hamas can’t be used as an excuse.

    As for the scrapping of the sanctions on settlers, please read this thread on X today by Mouin Rabbani, the Dutch-Palestinian analyst, who is a respected expert on Israeli-Palestinian affairs:
    https://x.com/MouinRabbani/status/1881919295967597036

    And finally, as for what Trump thinks, a better bellwether for his administration’s approach is his Middle East Envoy, Steve Witkoff, who, although Jewish, is clearly not a fanatical Zionist. Check out this NBC article: https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/donald-trump/trump-middle-east-steve-witkoff-consider-visit-gaza-strip-rcna188274

    And also this Guardian article from yesterday about how he, the Qataris and the Egyptians are trying to make sure that the ceasefire holds: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jan/21/qatari-us-and-egyptian-negotiators-set-up-cairo-hub-to-shore-up-gaza-ceasefire

  13. Andy Worthington says...

    Lizzy Arizona wrote:

    We should flood Gaza with humanity gifts healthcare mental health first of utmost priority but gifts food ice cream candies sweets for the kids you know they have been so impoverished so cheated from childhood.

  14. Andy Worthington says...

    I’m sure some of that is happening, Lizzy, now that significant amounts of humanitarian aid are finally being allowed in. The challenges are mind-bogglingly immense, but no one should underestimate the progress that has already been made. Just four days ago anyone who went out anywhere was at risk of being killed, and the entire Gaza Strip – and especially the north – was being deliberately starved, as Israel prevented all but the most meager deliveries of humanitarian aid.

  15. Andy Worthington says...

    Recently sent out to my subscribers’ inboxes – my latest Substack newsletter, linking to and promoting this article. Free and paid subscriptions available – the latter particularly helpful to enable me to continue my reader-supported work.
    https://andyworthington.substack.com/p/never-again-means-never-again-for

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Investigative journalist, author, campaigner, commentator and public speaker. Recognized as an authority on Guantánamo and the “war on terror.” Co-founder, Close Guantánamo and We Stand With Shaker, singer/songwriter (The Four Fathers).
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