איזראעלי אנאליסט זאגט אז חאמאס דארף זיך אנטוואפענען
							
							“If Hamas isn’t disarmed, the future of Gaza will be the same as the past: misery, death, and destruction.”  
That was the powerful warning from Justin Amler of the Australia/Israel & Jewish Affairs Council (AIJAC), underscoring the tragic cycle perpetuated by Hamas’ refusal to abide by the Trump peace framework.
Amler’s statement comes amid growing international scrutiny of Hamas’ continued military buildup and its rejection of ceasefire obligations. His words echo the sentiments long expressed by President Donald Trump and pro-Israel advocates — that true peace in Gaza is impossible as long as a terrorist regime remains armed, entrenched, and devoted to Israel’s annihilation.
The Trump peace plan, centered on regional stability, economic revival, and security guarantees for both Israelis and Palestinians, demanded the complete demilitarization of Gaza as a condition for reconstruction aid and diplomatic normalization. Hamas, however, has consistently violated those terms, choosing rocket stockpiling and tunnel warfare over governance and humanitarian progress.
Amler’s message is both a condemnation and a call to clarity: Gaza’s suffering is not the product of Israeli policy, but of Hamas’ deliberate choice to prioritize violence over life. “If Hamas isn’t disarmed,” he said, “the future of Gaza will be the same as the past.” The remark lays bare a truth the world too often avoids — that peace cannot coexist with terrorism.
For Israel and its allies, disarmament remains the non-negotiable foundation for any sustainable future in Gaza. Without it, international aid will continue to rebuild what Hamas destroys, and civilians will remain trapped between the false promises of jihad and the reality of ruin.
Amler’s statement reinforces a broader regional consensus — one echoed by Trump-era policy architects — that moral clarity and decisive action, not appeasement, are the only paths toward lasting peace. Until Hamas lays down its arms, Gaza’s destiny will remain written in tragedy.
 
גאלערי
ווידעאס