In a defining moment, the Zionist entity crossed every red line of conflict. The war was no longer confined to the alleys of besieged Gaza — its flames reached the heart of Doha, the capital of mediation and diplomacy. The Israeli airstrike targeting Hamas leaders was not a mere military operation, but a bloody message: the assassination of the political process itself. It leaves the region facing two stark options — the end of the Gaza war by any means, or the devastating outbreak of a full-scale regional conflict.
The Operation: Tactical Precision, Strategic Failure
According to available information, Israeli warplanes — likely F-35 stealth jets — fired long-range missiles from above the Gulf waters. Their target was a residential villa where a Hamas delegation, led by Khalil al-Hayya, had gathered to discuss the latest proposal put forward by U.S. President Donald Trump.
Despite the tactical accuracy of the strike, the outcome was a strategic disaster for Israel. The negotiating delegation survived unharmed. But the attack martyred Hamam, son of Khalil al-Hayya, his chief of staff Jihad Labad, and a member of Qatar’s internal security force.
This raises a pressing question: did accurate intelligence save the delegation at the last moment, turning what was meant to be a precision assassination into nothing more than a fiery statement?
The Mystery of Warnings and the “American Green Light”
The survival of the entire delegation strengthens the theory that an urgent intelligence warning was issued beforehand. Potential sources are many: Qatar, which would never accept a political assassination on its soil; Turkey, with military assets and security stakes in Doha; or even other intelligence agencies seeking to prevent total collapse of regional stability.
Yet, the most troubling narrative — circulated by Israeli and American media — suggests that Trump himself may have given a “green light” for the operation. If true, his proposal was nothing but bait, luring Hamas leaders into a death trap. Such a scenario would strip Washington of its mediator’s mask and reveal it as a complicit partner in assassination.
Assassinating Mediation: The Blow to Diplomacy
The real target of the attack was not Hamas alone, but Qatar’s role as a vital channel of communication. By striking on Qatari soil, Israel sent a clear message: it no longer respects the rules of diplomacy or the immunity of mediators. The consequences are profound:
- Collapse of Trust: Trust, the cornerstone of any negotiation, has been shattered. No party can feel safe to negotiate when the host state itself is violated.
- Qatar’s Crucial Test: Doha condemned the strike in unprecedented terms, calling it a “cowardly criminal assault.” Qatar now faces a historic test of sovereignty, and its response will define its regional standing.
- The End of Talks: For Hamas, suspicions are confirmed that American mediation was a cloak for betrayal. Any future talks will demand binding international guarantees — a condition Israel categorically rejects.
Dangerous Scenarios Ahead
The failure of the assassination and the destruction of the mediation track leave the region at a dangerous crossroads. Two main scenarios loom:
1. U.S. Attempt to Contain Qatar
The Trump administration may try to placate Doha by pressuring Netanyahu to de-escalate. But this is unlikely to succeed amid widespread suspicions of American complicity. Containment would only be effective if backed by a united Arab political and economic front, supported by emerging global powers such as China and Russia, and regional heavyweights like Turkey and Pakistan. Only such a coalition could threaten U.S. strategic interests — energy security, military bases, trade routes — and force Washington to restrain its ally. Without it, any American “containment” will remain a hollow diplomatic manoeuvre.
2. The Slide Toward Regional War
This is the more likely and more dangerous outcome. By shutting the door on diplomacy with missiles, Israel left the resistance axis with no choice but retaliation. Violating Qatar’s sovereignty is tantamount to announcing that any Arab capital may be next. Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen, and Iraqi factions may now coordinate a strategic joint response. The counterattack may not be immediate — but carefully timed to bleed Israel and its allies across multiple fronts, transforming the war from a local conflict into a regional confrontation.
A Historic Crossroads
The Doha strike was not just a failed assassination — it was a strategic turning point that redefined the rules of engagement. The war has leapt from Gaza’s ruins to the soil of a sovereign Arab capital, from a battlefield struggle to the systematic assassination of diplomacy itself.
The Middle East now teeters on the brink. The coming days will decide whether the region sees a political settlement enforced by shifting global power balances, or a devastating regional war that threatens to engulf it entirely.








