ALWAGHT- By advancing a bill to repeal the Oslo Accord, the Zionist regime has once again exposed its policy of expanding occupation and ignoring international obligations—a move that comes as its internal political and security crises deepen.
Hebrew-language media report that a bill to repeal the Oslo Accord—introduced by Knesset deputy speaker Limor Son Har Melech—is being examined in a ministerial committee of the Zionist regime. Proponents claim the 1993 agreement with the Palestine Liberation Organization "brought terrorism instead of peace." Son Har Melech wrote on X: "We promised to prevent the establishment of a Palestinian state, and now the time has come to strengthen settlement in Areas A and B and to repeal the ill-fated Oslo Accord."
The Oslo Accord, engineered by the US in 1993, has never been genuinely implemented by the American-Zionist side. Contrary to commitments about an independent Palestinian state, the Zionist regime has instead intensified occupation of the West Bank and al-Quds through settlement expansion and genocide in Gaza, with Benjamin Netanyahu blatantly displaying a map without Palestine. Whether the Oslo Accord remains or is repealed has no real impact—the regime's very nature is founded on occupation, repression, and genocide.
Netanyahu has historically pursued a policy of instigating open-ended wars from Gaza to Lebanon and Iran to maintain power. However, the Ramadan War—featuring Iran's surprises and Hezbollah's resilience—disrupted many of the regime's calculations, leaving intensified occupation of the West Bank as Netanyahu's last tool to appease extremist domestic factions. Defeated both on the battlefield and in public opinion, Netanyahu now seeks to launch a new game under the banner of withdrawing from international commitments to preserve his political life amid intense domestic protests.
The Zionist regime's move to dismantle international commitments is influenced by the United States, particularly Trump's "America First" policy of violating treaties and disregarding international norms—a dangerous precedent that has given the regime false confidence. Western silence on International Court of Justice rulings, along with inaction on reports from Amnesty International, the Red Cross, and the UN Human Rights Council, has paved the way for crisis escalation. The Ramadan War and the resilience of Iran and the Axis of Resistance have emerged as restraining factors, and that Iran's smart management of the Strait of Hormuz remains essential because these regimes understand only the language of power.
