
Ahmed al-Khalidi (https://x.com/khalidi79397) is a man who calls himself a ‘pragmatic Palestinian’ and he has recently published a post on X about how the ‘Palestinians’ had a chance to improve the lives of every Arab in the region but who threw that chance away in order to engage in their baseless hatred of Jews. It’s a post that I to a large extent agree with. The Gazans and the broader ‘Palestinian’ movement could have chosen peace and peaceful coexistence with their neighbours but they took that chance of peace, prosperity and life and threw it into the gutter and stamped on it. The movie quote ‘I could have been a contender’ must surely apply also to the Gazans. They had everything they could have possibly wanted for a prosperous and respectful future but turned aside from that future.
Mr al-Khalidi said: * “We Had a Chance to End the Conflict and We Chose to Burn It. In 2005, something historic happened. Israel withdrew completely from Gaza - not just its soldiers, but also all of its civilians, farms, and settlements. Thousands of Israeli families were uprooted from their homes by their own government. Synagogues were dismantled, greenhouses and infrastructure worth hundreds of millions of dollars were left behind - not destroyed, but handed over to give us a chance to start fresh. For the first time in our history, we had full control over a piece of land - our own borders, our own cities, our own people, and access to the sea.
The world was ready to help. Billions in aid and investment were promised. It could have been the beginning of a Palestinian Singapore. But instead of building schools, hospitals, and industries, we built tunnels, rockets, and militias. Instead of creating hope, we chose hatred. Instead of turning Gaza into proof that Palestinians can govern themselves, we turned it into proof that we cannot.
When Israel left, the world expected calm, peace, and progress. What did we give them? Civil war between Fatah and Hamas. Executions in the streets. A terror group seizing power and turning Gaza into a launching pad for endless wars. And the world still asks: Why doesn’t Israel “just give up the West Bank” too? Because they already saw what happened the last time they gave land for nothing in return.
The truth is painful, but it must be said: We were given a chance to build a future and we used it to destroy our own. We could have shown that we were ready for peace. Instead, we showed that we were ruled by those who fear peace more than they fear death. Every rocket fired from Gaza wasn’t just aimed at Israel - it was aimed at our own future. And now, after all the destruction, poverty, and death, I keep asking myself: What if, just once, we had chosen life instead of revenge? We had the opportunity to end the conflict. But our leaders and too many of us chose to keep it alive.”*
Well said Mr al-Khalidi