The BBC’s Jeremy Bowen, a man who has seen more conflict zones than most of us have had hot dinners, has issued a stark warning. He says the combination of Benjamin Netanyahu’s military intransigence and Donald Trump’s transactional diplomacy risks locking the Middle East into a “permanent war”. It is not a hyperbole.
It is a prognosis from someone who has watched the region’s wounds fester for decades. Meanwhile, the UK has dispatched a special envoy, a move that feels less like a solution and more like a diplomatic sticking plaster. But what does this mean for the people actually living through it?
For the families in Gaza, in Tel Aviv, in the West Bank? For them, the warning is not a headline. It is their daily reality.
The human cost of this permanent brinkmanship is measured in shattered homes, in children who know the sound of drones better than the sound of laughter, in a generation being raised on a diet of fear and vengeance. The cultural shift is palpable. In Israel, the centre ground has been hollowed out.
The peace camp is a ghost. In Palestine, the dream of a two-state solution feels like a relic from another era. What we are witnessing is not just a political crisis but a profound social unraveling.
The language of war has become the only language spoken. And every time a ceasefire is brokered and then broken, trust erodes a little more. Class dynamics, too, play their part.
The wealthy in both societies can buy safety. They can move to the centre of Tel Aviv or to a gated community in Ramallah. The poor are left to bear the brunt.
They are the ones who cannot afford to flee. They are the ones whose sons and daughters are conscripted into endless conflicts. They are the ones whose homes are demolished.
The UK’s special envoy is a gesture, but gestures do not stop rockets. They do not rebuild schools. They do not bring back the dead.
What is needed is a recognition that every escalation has a human face. And that face is not a politician’s. It is the face of a mother in a shelter, a father in a queue for bread, a child who cannot sleep.
The warning from Bowen is clear. If we continue down this path, the war will become the new normal. And normalising war is the greatest tragedy of all.










