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Could America Become Another Gaza? Mind-Bending Questions…

11 Kasım 2025
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The title of this article may seem like an extreme or speculative scenario. However, as will be explained below, given the persistent discourse around “domestic enemies” and “civil war” in the United States, such a development cannot be entirely dismissed as implausible.

An article published in Middle East Monitor, titled “Drones tried and tested in the genocide against Palestinians are now swarming American cities” [1], reports that artificial-intelligence-powered autonomous drones, produced by the U.S.-based technology company Skydio and trained, tested, and deployed by the Israeli military during the war and genocide in Gaza, are now being used under the Donald Trump administration to monitor civilian dissent in U.S. cities.

Designed for surveillance and battlefield operations, these drones are capable of operating autonomously in environments where GPS is either nonfunctional or prohibited. They are equipped with thermal imaging and facial-recognition technologies that allow them to track individuals and upload captured imagery to cloud-based databases for law-enforcement use. Skydio maintains extensive technological and military partnerships with Israel’s advanced defense industry, which played a central role in developing these systems.

The report further reveals that these unmanned aerial vehicles have been deployed across major American cities to surveil opposition movements and collect massive quantities of visual data. Currently, they are being utilized by more than 800 U.S. law-enforcement and security agencies nationwide.

The Trump Administration’s Domestic Enemy Doctrine and the Priority of Civil Conflict

Within the framework of the Trump administration’s definition of a “domestic enemy,” the deployment of these civilian-massacre tools to monitor political opponents raises an alarming possibility: their potential use in a forthcoming domestic civil war. Inevitably, one is compelled to ask, “Is America becoming the new Gaza?”

It will be recalled that, upon the call of Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, nearly 800 senior American generals and admirals serving around the world convened at Quantico Base in Virginia on September 30, 2025. During his address to the military officers, President Donald Trump criticized the army’s traditional focus on external threats, urging instead that it direct its attention toward internal issues such as crime, immigration, and protests. “America is under an invasion from within,” he declared. “The enemy inside our borders is no different from a foreign army, but in many ways, more dangerous—because they don’t wear uniforms.” Trump went on to assert, “Something great will happen for the people in this room, because we must neutralize the internal enemy before it spirals out of control. The big cities governed by radical left Democrats will be training grounds. This is a war—a civil war.”

Acting as Commander-in-Chief, Trump identified Democrat-controlled cities such as Portland and Los Angeles as “battlefields” and instructed the military to prepare for conflict against internal adversaries.

Prior to this meeting, on September 22, 2025, the President issued an executive order designating ANTIFA (Anti-Fascist Action Movement) as a “domestic terrorist organization,” thereby mobilizing the National Guard and the armed forces to confront what he described as an “internal uprising.”

Considering Trump’s increasingly sharp rhetoric about “domestic enemies” and his directive for the army to prepare for civil conflict, the deployment across the United States of AI-powered surveillance drones—the same type used by Israeli occupation forces in Gaza to collect data, track, and mark targets, contributing to the killing or injuring of thousands of Palestinians—suggests that these tools are not merely instruments of internal security. Rather, they reveal an intention to militarize civilian life.

The daily flight of hundreds of Skydio drones over cities such as New York, Chicago, Miami, and Atlanta, their use in monitoring “No Kings” protests, anti-genocide encampments at Yale University, and similar demonstrations on U.S. campuses, along with the fact that the New York Police Department alone conducted more than 20,000 drone operations in less than a year, justify the public’s fear of these machines, now complicit in mass violence.

The images of Gaza in ruins, along with the hundreds of thousands of civilians—mostly women and children—killed or injured, starkly illustrate the potential horrors that could unfold should the Trump administration attempt to implement Israel’s AI-driven model of internal warfare within the United States under the guise of a domestic civil war.

The Other Side of the Coin

While Donald Trump has broadly characterized Democrats as “leftist enemies” and ordered military interventions in states governed by them, the war in Gaza has simultaneously fueled a different perception of “the enemy” among his grassroots base. For many within this segment, the real adversary was no longer domestic political opponents but rather Israel and the Zionists, whom they believed had taken control of the U.S. government.

The Gaza war—much like in other parts of the world—exposed the extent to which the Zionist lobby and Israel’s influence have shaped U.S. domestic and foreign policy. Recognition of this reality led to a rapid decline in support for Israel among the Democratic base, accompanied by a surge of sympathy for the Palestinian cause. Meanwhile, within the Republican camp, particularly among MAGA supporters embracing the “America First” slogan, a growing number came to believe that the United States was under Zionist occupation and that the nation must reclaim its independence from this domination.

This atmosphere of escalating tension reached a tragic climax on September 10, 2025, when Charlie Kirk, a conservative activist and founder of Turning Point USA, was shot dead by a sniper while speaking at a campus forum at Utah Valley University. The widespread belief that Mossad was behind the assassination fueled a transformation of MAGA supporters’ anger into a broader Christian anti-Zionist and anti-Jewish sentiment.

A recent poll conducted by The New York Times and Siena University between September 22–27 vividly illustrated the growing anti-Israel sentiment among the American public. According to the findings, 51% of Americans opposed sending additional aid to Israel—a figure that climbed to 68% among voters under 30. Moreover, 35% of respondents expressed support for Palestinians, while only 34% voiced support for Israel. Analysts described this shift in public opinion as a “seismic reversal” of attitudes toward Israel in the aftermath of the Gaza conflict.

For Israel, Maintaining Control over the U.S. Congress and the White House Is a Matter of Survival

The Hamas–Israel war has clearly demonstrated that without the financial, military, technological, intelligence, and political support of the United States, Israel would be incapable of sustaining itself. Since October 7, 2023, successive U.S. administrations have provided Israel with at least $21.7 billion in military aid—often in defiance of domestic legal constraints. Without this support, Israel’s collapse would have been inevitable. For Israel, therefore, preserving control over U.S. decision-making mechanisms has become an existential necessity. Jewish lobbying groups are working relentlessly to maintain their dominance over both Congress and the White House.

Among the Zionist lobbying organizations active in the United States, the most influential is the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), which plays a central role in shaping U.S. Middle East policy in favor of Israel. AIPAC finances the electoral campaigns of both Republican and Democratic members of the House of Representatives and the Senate, currently exerting influence over nearly 90 percent of them. Members of Congress who have been politically “pre-purchased” are not allowed to deviate from the pro-Israel line; those who criticize Israeli policies or express support for the Palestinian cause are systematically targeted and discredited by the lobby.

Another powerful organization is the Anti-Defamation League (ADL). While the ADL claims to advocate for Jewish rights and to combat antisemitism, its actual function has often been to silence critics of Israel and those who question Zionism. It has conducted defamation campaigns against such figures and sought to manipulate public opinion and Congress against governments that refuse to cooperate with Israel—often by instilling fear and moral intimidation.

However, the Gaza war has severely undermined the power of these lobbies, exposing many of their covert operations to public scrutiny. In a statement made in September, U.S. President Donald Trump highlighted this transformation:

“If you go back 20 years, let me tell you—Israel had the strongest lobby in Congress compared to any organization, company, or government. Today, it doesn’t have such a strong lobby anymore. It’s incredible.”

In another remark, Trump emphasized the changing political atmosphere:

“There was a time when, if you wanted to be a politician, you couldn’t say anything bad about Israel. But that has changed.”

The FBI’s Attempt to Break Free from Zionist Control

In early October, FBI Director Kash Patel referred to the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) as “a political front that profiles American citizens,” while the FBI itself officially labeled the organization as “an extremist group operating like a terrorist organization.” Patel, commenting on the period when former director James Comey integrated the ADL into FBI operations, declared, “That era is over. The FBI formally rejects any partnership with the ADL.” This statement marked the termination of a decades-long training and intelligence-sharing partnership between the FBI and the Zionist organization.

MAGA supporters celebrated this decision as part of a broader “deep-state cleansing”, urging that a similar purge be carried out within the CIA, which they claim remains heavily infiltrated by Zionist networks.

Could Israel and the Zionist Front Turn America into Another Gaza if They Lose Power?

The nationalist demand to “cleanse” the CIA of Zionist influence is not entirely unfounded. The relationship between the CIA and the U.S.-based artificial intelligence company Palantir illustrates this connection in stark terms. Palantir, funded by the CIA, develops AI technologies for targeting, intelligence analysis, and logistics in support of military operations. The company processes CIA–Pentagon data through its systems, providing a shared intelligence platform between the U.S. military and intelligence agencies.

Notably, Palantir’s partners are predominantly Jewish, and many of its employees are reservists or graduates of Unit 8200—the elite Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) unit specializing in electronic warfare, cyber operations, and global surveillance. In January 2024, Palantir signed a “strategic partnership” agreement with Israel’s Ministry of Defense, further deepening its integration with the Israeli military-intelligence complex.

For Americans opposing Israeli hegemony, the greatest potential threat may come from such AI corporations—deeply intertwined with Israel’s military and intelligence apparatus—whose primary loyalties lie with Israel rather than the United States.

As discussed earlier, maintaining political control and unlimited U.S. support is an existential issue for Israel. Consequently, any individual, organization, or institution seeking to weaken that dominance is immediately classified as an enemy. Within this framework, the deployment of AI-operated Skydio drones—trained in Gaza by Israeli forces for target recognition and tracking—across American cities raises legitimate concerns that these drones may now be used against anti-Zionist institutions and civilian groups inside the United States.

Beyond Palantir, Israel sustains powerful economic, technological, and strategic partnerships with major global AI companies such as Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, Meta, Amazon, NVIDIA, and Apple. The founders of Google, OpenAI, Meta, and Amazon are of Jewish descent, and these corporations maintain deep strategic cooperation with the Israeli defense sector.

Many Unit 8200 veterans are employed across these tech companies, bringing their expertise in cyberwarfare, signal intelligence, and electronic surveillance into the private sector. Their technologies—facial recognition, automated image classification, object tracking, emotion analysis, and big data processing—were developed and tested in Gaza as new instruments of warfare and deployed in the mass killing of Palestinians. Between 2023 and 2025, over 40,000 targets were reportedly struck through AI-assisted targeting systems.

If Israel and its Zionist allies lose power and influence within the United States, they might resort to the same retaliatory methods they have used abroad. As in Lebanon—where Israel neutralized Hezbollah cadres by detonating their pagers and mobile devices—or during the 12-day assault on Iran, which decimated the Iranian military leadership, Israel could plausibly use personal data harvested through AI systems to launch targeted digital or kinetic attacks on anti-Zionist figures within the U.S. itself.

Indeed, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s remarks during his September 15, 2025 meeting with a U.S. congressional delegation—“Do you have a cellphone? You’re holding a piece of Israel in your hand”—were widely perceived as a veiled threat and act of intimidation, recalling Israel’s previous cyber-assisted assassinations in Lebanon and Iran.

In this context, the persistent allegation that information and footage from Mossad agent Jeffrey Epstein’s case—who was accused of child sexual abuse and operating a prostitution network—have been used by Zionist circles to blackmail U.S. President Donald Trump, must also be considered as part of the broader network of coercive influence wielded by pro-Israel forces within the United States.

Conclusion

Whether the Trump administration deploys AI-enabled weapons systems against those it has labeled “domestic enemies” and declared a civil-war priority, or whether civil American actors and institutions attempt to break free from Zionist-lobby control (as exemplified by the FBI episode) and subsequently encounter AI weapons operated by lobby-aligned actors, the risk is real. In such a deep-state confrontation, it is foreseeable which side major AI companies—those that hold clandestine military and intelligence ties and possess vast troves of Americans’ personal data—would support.

In a potential civil conflict, the prospect that companies like Skydio, Palantir, and similar AI firms could employ the data, technologies, and urban-warfare experience at their disposal against groups they define as enemies is truly terrifying.

At the same time, inexpensive and easily attainable drone technologies have proliferated among non-state actors, who can use them effectively against conventional forces. Given that American civilians possess roughly 500 million firearms and show a strong propensity to arm themselves for perceived self-defense, the outcome of any such conflict would be highly unpredictable.

If the civil war often invoked by President Trump were to materialize, the use of AI-drone technologies—field-tested on Palestinians in Gaza—carries the potential to turn an entire country into something like Gaza. The new warfare model, developed in concert with Israel for operations in Gaza, could, like a boomerang, rebound and strike the United States—an outcome that, the text argues, would be consistent with the immutable laws ordained by God.

“Because they were arrogant on the earth and plotted [against others] in malice; but the plot of the evildoers will come to naught. Do they expect anything other than what happened to those before them? You will not find any alteration in the laws of God; you will not find any deviation in the laws of God.” (Fāir / 45)

 

1] Drones ‘tested in genocide and refined on Palestinians’ areswarming American cities

https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20251103-drones-tested-in-genocide-and-refined-on-palestinians-are-swarming-american-cities/

 

 

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