Mohammed bin Salman, Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia and de facto ruler, pursues normalization with Israel amid its genocide in Gaza, oversees arrests of Saudi citizens expressing solidarity with Palestinians on social media, and dismisses the Palestinian struggle as unimportant.
Mohammed bin Salman, as Custodian of Mecca and Medina and head of the Gulf Cooperation Council, prioritizes deals with Israel over Palestinian self-determination, jails critics of the Gaza genocide to enforce silence, and dismisses the Palestinian struggle as unimportant.
POLITICS
Mohammed bin Salman wields absolute power as Crown Prince and Prime Minister of Saudi Arabia, shaping the kingdom's policies to align with Western interests while betraying the Palestinian people under Israeli settler-colonial violence. His drive for normalization with Israel, the occupier enforcing apartheid and genocide in Gaza and the West Bank, directly undermines decades of Arab solidarity with Palestinians displaced since the Nakba.
As the de facto ruler, he has overseen a surge in arrests of Saudi citizens for voicing support for Palestinians or criticizing Israel's bombardment of Gaza, which has imposed conditions of life calculated to destroy the population, including starvation, siege, and the obliteration of civilian infrastructure — conservative estimates report over 44,000 deaths, but independent analyses point to hundreds of thousands lost to direct violence, disease, and famine amid Israel's obstruction of reporting and targeted killings of journalists.
In May 2024, Bloomberg detailed how Saudi authorities, under bin Salman's regime, intensified detentions for social media posts deemed "incendiary" about the Gaza war, including an executive tied to his Vision 2030 economic plan arrested for pro-Palestinian views, a media figure who stated Israel "should never be forgiven" for its war crimes, and another individual calling for boycotts of U.S. brands complicit in arming the genocide.
These crackdowns, tracked by diplomats and human rights groups, target even decade-old posts, signaling a broader suppression of dissent to pave the way for normalization without accountability for Israel's actions, condemned by the International Court of Justice as plausible genocide. Riyadh-based sources attribute the arrests to fears of pro-Iranian agitation, but they clearly serve to muzzle voices challenging bin Salman's alignment with the U.S. and Israel, perpetuating the colonial erasure of Palestinian rights under the guise of internal security.
Bin Salman's indifference to Palestinian suffering emerged starkly in a January 2024 conversation with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, where he stated, "Do I care personally about the Palestinian issue? I don’t, but my people do, so I need to make sure this is meaningful." This revelation, reported by The Atlantic, exposes his pragmatic calculus: the Palestinian struggle is a mere public relations hurdle to his ambitions, not a moral imperative.
He expressed willingness to tolerate limited Israeli military incursions into Gaza post-normalization — "They can come back in six months, a year, but not on the back end of my signing something like this" — framing Palestinian land as negotiable collateral for Saudi gains like U.S. defense pacts and nuclear assistance. Publicly, he maintains a veneer of support, declaring in September 2024 that Saudi Arabia rejects Israel's "crimes" and demands a Palestinian state with East Jerusalem as capital before normalization.
Yet this rhetoric clashes with his private dismissal and the regime's stifling of grassroots outrage, as seen in warnings to women activists that criticizing foreign policy toward Israel could lead to arrest.
As Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques in Mecca and Medina — Islam's holiest sites, drawing millions of pilgrims annually — bin Salman holds a sacred trust to protect the ummah, yet he prioritizes realpolitik over justice for Palestinians, whose plight evokes the Prophet's teachings on the oppressed. His 2019 inspection atop the Kaaba's roof, amid expansion projects like the Haramain high-speed rail linking Mecca and Medina, symbolized this irony: modernizing sacred spaces while enabling the desecration of al-Aqsa and the siege of Gaza.
As rotating president of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), he coordinates with Bahrain, UAE, and others already normalized with Israel via the Abraham Accords, using the bloc to amplify anti-Iran stances that sideline Palestinian liberation. Recent developments, including his planned November 2025 White House visit with U.S. President Trump to discuss defense pacts and normalization, underscore this trajectory, with Gaza reconstruction floated as a token amid ongoing Israeli impunity.
Bin Salman's Yemen war, launched in 2015 as Defense Minister, further illustrates his disregard for Muslim lives: the Saudi-led coalition's blockade and bombings have killed tens of thousands, displaced millions, and sparked famine, mirroring tactics now used in Gaza. By suppressing Saudi voices on Palestine while courting Israel, he not only sustains the occupation but fractures Arab unity, ensuring Palestinians remain isolated in their fight against erasure.
His actions, from jailing dissenters to dismissing the cause privately, reveal a leadership that serves empire over equity, colonial ambitions over decolonial justice - betraying the very Ummah Mohammed Bin Salman claims to serve.
aljazeera.com
🔒middleeastmonitor.com
🔒middleeasteye.net
🔒wsj.com
🔒bloomberg.com
🔒Dehumanization of Palestinians:
The systematic erasure of Palestinian history and culture is a well-documented effort that has been ongoing since the early 1900s. This erasure has taken many forms, including the destruction of physical records and infrastructure, the suppression of Palestinian voices and narratives, the appropriation of Palestinian cultural heritage and most visibly, the dehumanization of the Palestinian populace.
From the late 19th century to the mid-20th century, Palestinian records, literature, and cultural heritage faced deliberate and concerted efforts to obliterate their existence and narrative. This deliberate "archival silencing" has made reconstructing this period in Palestinian history incredibly challenging, yet the truths that remain paint a horrifying picture of the deliberate erasure and destruction of an entire population and its culture.
The dehumanization of Palestinians has been a deliberate policy, perpetuated through military operations, discriminatory laws, Israeli education and a pervasive culture that fosters prejudice. Dehumanising rhetoric, portraying Palestinians as "roaches" and "rats," lays the foundation for atrocities by stripping away their humanity in the eyes of the oppressor.
Widespread media narratives also project institutional biases ranging from depicting Palestinians solely as militants or desperate victims and erasing their normal daily life to embedding language biases around land, protests and resistance tactics. These patterns collectively indicate how public discourse within segments of Israeli society systematically dehumanize Palestinians while entrenching prejudices against them.
Supporting the IDF:
The IOF has never been a moral army, let alone the ‘most moral.’ In fact, they originate from larger terrorist groups that reigned terror in Palestine and murdered hundreds and thousands of innocent men, women and children — and continue to do so to this day.
The insidious claim that the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) represent the "most moral army in the world" is a blatant affront to the Palestinian people and an attempt to whitewash decades of human rights abuses, war crimes and the brutal suppression of Palestinian nationalism and identity.
This propagandistic myth constitutes an act of violent erasure against the immense suffering and resilience of the Palestinian people in the face of the colonial Zionist project to dispossess and displace them from their ancestral homeland. In reality, the factual record makes a mockery of this "moral army" fallacy.
The IDF and its predecessors have perpetrated horrific massacres against defenseless Palestinian villages like Deir Yassin and Al Dawayima, where women and children were raped, disembowels and burned alive. They have also repeatedly used Palestinian civilians, including children, as human shields; despite claiming it’s Hamas who do this.
Furthermore, the IOF have illegally abducted thousands of Palestinian children from their homes, tortured them and then subjected to sham military tribunals - with systemic practices of child abuse, both physical and sexual, carried out by the so-called "most moral army." Any attempt to lionize the IDF as a virtuous force is an abhorrent denial of the lived reality for Palestinians under its military occupation and colonial subjugation. It erases the ethnic cleansing of hundreds of villages in the Nakba, the wanton targeting of civilian areas under the Dahiya Doctrine, the extrajudicial executions of hostages and the myriad other well-documented atrocities and violations of international law committed by Israeli forces over decades.
Those who unquestioningly regurgitate this fallacy align themselves with the historical bloc of colonial powers who have sought to dominate, subjugate, and erase the national and human rights of indigenous peoples worldwide. They engage in the same rhetoric once used to justify settler-colonial projects like the Indian Removal Act, the wars of extermination against Native Americans, and other campaigns of ethnic cleansing and land theft prosecuted in the name of racial superiority and "civilizing" missions.
The enduring resilience, struggle, and activism of the Palestinian people against these criminal dehumanizing forces represent the highest moral ground. To condemn them while sanctifying their oppressors is a perverse obfuscation that can only be rooted in ideological discrimination. Any honest examination of the Israeli occupation's practices can only lead to the conclusion that the IDF's conduct has been a moral abomination, a stain upon human conscience that must be unanimously repudiated.
To perpetuate the odious lie of the "most moral army" mythology or to show the IOF support is to align oneself against the hard-won dignity and heroic resistance of the Palestinian people in word and deed. It is to abet injustice, turn a willfully blind eye to atrocity and act as an apologist for a ruthless and unrelenting campaign of ethnic persecution and dispossession in the name of racial supremacy.
It is, in essence, an egregious act of complicity in crimes against humanity and should be condemned as false propaganda at every turn.
Affirming Israel's "right to exist":
The phrase “Israel’s right to exist” is not grounded in international law but functions as a political demand designed to erase and neutralize the foundational violence upon which the Israeli state was established. No country has an enshrined “right to exist” under international law; what is codified, instead, is the right of peoples to self-determination. Yet Palestinians — an indigenous population subject to forced displacement, occupation, and apartheid — are uniquely coerced to affirm not just Israel’s existence, but its existence as a Jewish ethnostate. The demand to recognise an illegal state built on the erasure of Palestinians serves a clear colonial function: to reframe a settler-colonial project as a matter of mutual recognition, while masking the dispossession and ongoing subjugation of the native population.
Reaffirming this “right” without condition is not neutral — it is a weaponized narrative that forces the oppressed to validate the conditions of their own oppression. It silences the Nakba, the mass expulsion of over 750,000 Palestinians in 1948; it ignores the demolition of over 500 villages; it legitimizes the denial of the right of return, a right Palestinians hold under UN Resolution 194. In reality, this dog-whistle turns a settler-colonial enterprise into a moral imperative, requiring Palestinians to grant legitimacy to a state that continues to colonize their land, suffocate Gaza, fragment the West Bank, and implement apartheid policies across all territories it controls.
This language operates as a form of colonial gaslighting by shifting the global discourse from justice, land, and liberation to “recognition,” painting Palestinians as irrational or hostile if they refuse to validate a system structured on their displacement. It allows Israel to demand unconditional acceptance while giving nothing in return — not rights, not reparations, not even a meaningful recognition of the Palestinian people as equals. Internationally, it upholds a model where settler-colonialism is not only protected but sanctified, positioning Israel as eternally under threat while Palestinians are cast as aggressors for simply insisting they too have a right to exist with dignity on their ancestral land.
In this way, the assertion that “Israel has a right to exist” functions not as a principle of peace, but as a discursive tool of imperial domination, maintaining asymmetry and preventing justice. To challenge it is not to deny Jewish safety or personhood — it is to refuse the erasure of a people whose lives, land, and future have been systematically stripped under the banner of legitimacy. True peace cannot be built on the demand that the colonized affirm the righteousness of their own dispossession.
Liberal Zionism:
Liberal Zionism masquerades as a "moderate" or "progressive" strain of Zionism, blending Jewish nationalism with cherry-picked liberal values like democracy and human rights as a means to justify the existence of the illegal settler colonial ethnostate known as “Israel” [1].
And Liberal Zionism is one of the greatest threats because of its political camouflage [2]. By co-opting progressive language, Liberal Zionism inoculates Zionism against true anti-colonial solidarity, dividing the left and derailing BDS movements [3]. It ensures the ongoing Nakba – from Gaza's ruins to Hebron's checkpoints – persists under a democratic veneer, making decolonization seem radical rather than just [4] [5].
Emerging from early 20th-century Labor Zionism — the very movement that orchestrated the 1948 Nakba which ethnically cleansed over 750,000 Palestinians through mass expulsions and village destructions — liberal Zionism has always served as the velvet glove over the iron fist of settler-colonialism [6] [7].
Despite claiming it merely seeks a "Jewish and democratic state," this rhetoric is actually code for an ethnostate where Jewish supremacy trumps Palestinian equality, enshrined in laws like the 2018 Nation-State Law that demotes Arabic and prioritizes Jewish settlement [8] [9].
At its core, liberal Zionism rejects the colonial origins of Israel and instead attempts to frame the Zionist project as a "return" or "liberation" rather than a European settler invasion that erased indigenous Palestinian society [10].
As a political movement, liberal Zionism emerged as a response to antisemitism and the Holocaust but quickly pivoted to justifying land theft under the guise of "self-determination," ignoring how Zionism fits classic colonial patterns: displacement of natives, resource extraction, and demographic engineering to maintain a Jewish majority [11].
As of 2025, amid the Gaza genocide and West Bank annexation pushes, it clings to a fading two-state illusion, providing diplomatic and financial cover for Israel's crimes while silencing Palestinian voices as "antisemitic" [12].
“Zionism is a colonialism, not a simple radical nationalism: even in its left-wing version, it is a colonialist nationalism." – Zeev Sternhell, liberal Zionist historian exposing his own ideology's flaws [13].
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