Since its inception, this usurping entity has known no language but that of fire — inscribing its presence on the shattered walls of cities and signing ceasefire agreements with the ink of blood. Every so-called truce in its lexicon is merely an interlude between two massacres, a reminder that the war has never truly ceased.

From the very moment the cessation of war was declared, violations by the usurping entity never stopped. Yet in recent days, those breaches have surpassed mere incidents, revealing a deliberate strategy to keep the Strip in a state of constant ignition — as if death itself is part of managing life in Gaza.

Since last night and into the morning, the usurping entity has carried out dozens of airstrikes across various areas of the Strip, resulting in nearly a hundred martyrs and dozens of wounded, in yet another wave of escalation testing the limits of spilled blood. Despite all the talk of ceasefire, the sky continues to pour fire, as though it refuses to grant Gazans a single day without funerals.

The latest assault cannot be read as an isolated episode; it is part of a deeply rooted policy built on sustaining chaos and turning Gaza into a gray zone where the line between annihilation and survival fades away. Each new bombing reinforces a formula that allows the killer to return at will — armed with whatever pretext he fabricates.

Since the signing of the ceasefire agreement on October 10, the Government Media Office has documented more than 125 violations, resulting in 94 martyrs and 344 wounded. Numbers that expose the falsity of the so-called ceasefire and confirm that what is labeled as a ceasefire in Gaza is nothing more than a postponement of the next round of bombardment.

It is a recurring policy aimed at normalizing airstrikes and turning pain into a daily occurrence. Under this logic, the very air in Gaza grows heavy with fear, and the night becomes a fixed appointment with explosions. People go about their lives as if walking over embers beneath the ashes — never knowing when the fire will flare again.

Researcher Ahmad Al-Ataouneh observes that the usurping entity seeks, through these strikes, “to collect justifications and pretexts to legitimize the continuation of its aggression,” using humanitarian files as a political cover to distort reality and shift priorities. It is a war waged not only with weapons, but also with propaganda and feverish attempts to justify the unjustifiable.

In this context, Gaza becomes a perpetual testing ground — measuring the pulse of the world and the endurance of human conscience before the images of martyrs and destruction. Dozens of airstrikes pass amid a disturbing international silence, as though life in Gaza has lost its moral worth on the map of justice.

What is unfolding today is not a temporary escalation, but a systematic policy designed to keep the Palestinian wound open — to ensure the Strip remains under relentless pressure that prevents any recovery or stability. It is another form of slow genocide, carried out not only through bombs, but through the denial of life itself — and through a “calm” that is measured by the number of martyrs, not by the days of peace.

And yet, despite it all, the people of Gaza persist in redefining “truce” in their own way: by clinging to life, by cultivating what remains of their land, and by their steadfast determination to exist in defiance of erasure. Here, a truce is not defined by the silence of cannons — but by the people’s ability to dream amid the ruins.