Why was the Sharm el-Sheikh agreement reached?

Sharm el-Sheikh

PNN – If the occupiers adhere to the terms of the agreement of Sharm el-Sheikh, it will be a great achievement for the Palestinian resistance, which was able to impose its conditions on Israel through the extraordinary epic of the Qassam fighters and the steadfastness of the people of Gaza.

Hamas, like Iran and Yemen, accepted Trump’s proposed ceasefire, and there is a logic and rationality in all of them. Whether in Iran, Palestine, Yemen, or Lebanon, the resistance is using all the favorable opportunities to advance its project. The resistance project over the past two years has been to end the killings, consolidate the historic victory of October 7th, and defeat all plans based on permanent displacement, the occupation of Gaza by the regime army, and the disarmament of the resistance.

The greedy nature of the West will require that they not adhere to any understanding, and this ceasefire is likely to be a demonstration of a way out of the two current impasses; the first is Trump’s withdrawal from the existing pressures to win the Nobel Peace Prize, and the second is Israel’s withdrawal from the quagmire of the Gaza occupation plan.

If the occupiers adhere to the terms of the agreement, it will be a great achievement for the Palestinian resistance, which was able to impose its conditions on Israel through the extraordinary epic of the Qassam fighters and the legendary perseverance of the people of Gaza, and in general, return it to the conditions of the past seventy years, and the joy and celebration of the people in the Gaza neighborhoods today also stems from this perspective.

Read more:

The ceasefire in Gaza: The most strategic defeat the Zionists suffered

If, after Trump’s reports of leading the world and positioning himself to receive the Nobel Prize and achieve the release of Israeli prisoners, the agreement is destroyed in the second stage by the regime’s sabotage, it will bring three new achievements for the resistance: First, the Islamic world, and especially the people of Gaza, have become more and more convinced of Hamas’s responsibility, and they are increasingly supporting the Islamic resistance movement in managing the future of Gaza. Second, there will be no more issues for future negotiations, and the battle will become more intense. Third, global pressure and hatred of Israel and America will reach their maximum.

The most important lesson of this event is fundamental to this point, and we must never forget that if all the weapons power from around the world is gathered, they will retreat and fall short in the face of the will and faith of a people without any assets or means. Israel today still needs an agreement based on its goals of October 8, 2023, and in the same language, meaning that after 730 days of operations and the bloodshed of 200,000 people, it has still not achieved any field, operational, or strategic success, and Hamas, while rejecting any imposed clause, still demands the establishment of a prisoner exchange process.

According to natural and historical tradition, no peace plan will go anywhere without preserving the full rights of the Palestinians and will be doomed to failure. If the Trump peace plan is not based on the conditions of resistance, it will fail for the same reason that the Abraham Accords reached a deadlock and the Oslo Accords before it were nullified, because these plans ignore the root of the problem. The root of the problem is occupation and the denial of a people’s basic and fundamental rights. Until this root is eradicated and the right to self-determination is returned to the Palestinian people, any peace built on it will be a temporary construct.

If today some currents refer to this agreement with the concept of peace, they should know that the Palestinian people and their new generations have reached a point of no return. The Al-Aqsa storm and the regime’s insane response have forever destroyed all the half-built and fragile bridges between Palestinian society and the Zionists, bringing their relations to a point of no return.

Previously, despite decades of occupation and conflict, there was still a glimmer of hope for coexistence, political solutions, or even minimal interactions at some levels. But the unprecedented scale of killing, the depth of war crimes, and the creation of humanitarian catastrophes in Gaza left such a deep wound on the collective memory and psyche of the Palestinian people that no path of interaction or any shared future with this entity is conceivable for them, let alone a state of peace.

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