This is Malik Hassan for Global1.news, reporting from Beirut.
The ink on the latest ceasefire agreement is barely dry, and already the world’s pundits are selling us salvation. They peddle the illusion that a cessation of visible violence is a moral victory. But here in Beirut, we have learned to read silence not as peace, but as a pregnant pause between two horrors. We are the connoisseurs of the interregnum, the moment where maps are redrawn not by diplomats, but by real estate developers looking to build luxury towers on pulverized memory.
The orthodox narrative demands we celebrate any pause as progress, a step on the ladder to a solution. I call this the pornography of incrementalism. It allows the powerful to manage conflict, never to resolve it, transforming justice into a perpetually delayed appointment. The latest developments are not a detente; they are a reconfiguration of the abattoir. We are being herded into a new, shinier cage where algorithms and AI-driven surveillance replace the clumsy brute force of the tank. The wall is no longer concrete; it is a smart perimeter that learns our fears before we even voice them.
The true danger is not the one who breaks the ceasefire, but the one who convinces you that its fragile existence is the absolute horizon of your political imagination. We must refuse to mistake a temporary lull in the slaughter for genuine transformation.
This is Malik Hassan for Global1.news, reporting from Beirut.
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