The latest Israeli airstrikes in Gaza, which killed at least 21 Palestinians on February 4, are not an isolated tragedy—they are part of a sustained campaign of terror against a trapped civilian population. Homes, neighborhoods, and families are being erased with chilling regularity, while the world is urged to look away or accept the violence as inevitable.
There is nothing inevitable about bombing civilians. There is nothing defensive about turning Gaza into a graveyard. These strikes come after months of mass death, displacement, and starvation inflicted on Palestinians who have nowhere to flee and no protection from the skies above them. Children, the elderly, and the wounded continue to pay the highest price for political decisions made far from the rubble.
International law is clear: collective punishment and indiscriminate attacks are war crimes. Yet accountability remains absent, replaced by hollow statements of “concern” and unconditional military support. Silence, in this moment, is not neutrality—it is complicity.
If the mass killing of Palestinians is allowed to continue without consequence, the very idea of human rights becomes meaningless. Justice delayed is justice denied, and Gaza cannot survive more delays.