The war in Gaza ignited a chain of conflicts that reshaped the Middle East, eventually culminating in a U.S.-Israeli confrontation with Iran.
Yet as Washington and Tehran negotiate the terms of a fragile peace, the fate of the devastated Palestinian territory has largely faded from the international spotlight.
"Ever since the United States went to war with Iran, the whole world has forgotten Gaza and its tragedy. We no longer have anyone standing by us," said 53-year-old Palestinian Ahmed Jamali, speaking to Agence France-Presse (AFP) from a displacement camp in Gaza where he lives.
"We are weak and oppressed, and Israel is doing whatever it wants: killing, destroying and occupying Gaza, while no one in the world lifts a finger."
The world's shifting focus is especially striking because Gaza lies at the center of the chain of events that pushed the Middle East into its most dangerous crisis in decades.
Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, incursion into Israel unleashed a devastating Israeli military campaign in Gaza, drawing Iran-backed groups including Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthi rebels in Yemen into the conflict before it ultimately expanded to direct confrontation with Iran.
What began as a local war between Israel and Hamas evolved into a regional conflict and, in turn, a direct confrontation between arch-foes Tehran and Washington.
More than two and a half years later, Gaza remains mired in a severe humanitarian crisis. Despite a fragile ceasefire reached between Israel and Hamas in October 2025, efforts to bring the war to a definitive end have stalled for months.
Although Iranian officials initially spoke of an agreement to end the Middle East war that would encompass the entire region, the preliminary text endorsed by Tehran and Washington last month contains no mention of Gaza.
For analysts, that signals a shift in regional priorities.
"It reflects Hamas' declining strategic value in Iran's eyes," Hugh Lovatt of the European Council on Foreign Relations told Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Iran has long armed and financed Hamas as part of its "axis of resistance," an array of regional forces opposed to Israel and the U.S., but the October 2023 attack appears to have fundamentally altered that relationship.
"Iranians do not really care about Gaza. Hamas was an ally, not an Iranian tool," said Israeli military expert Eado Hecht.
"It betrayed them. They did not want war in autumn 2023; it was too early for them."
'Gradually fading'
Michael Milshtein, another Israeli military analyst, argued that Tehran's calculations have shifted elsewhere.
"It places greater value on preserving Hezbollah as a pillar of the regional balance," he said.
The diplomatic focus has also shifted, with a growing sense of international fatigue over Gaza.
"Gaza is gradually fading from international attention," said Lovatt.
One diplomat involved in negotiations described a widespread belief among governments that "most actors see the issue as insoluble in the short to medium term."
Another veteran diplomat based in Jerusalem told AFP that Gaza's absence from the discussions reflected political paralysis rather than progress.
"Gaza is absent from the agreement not because the war is over, but because no credible political framework exists for the day after," he said.
Israel insists that Hamas must fully disarm before any political transition can begin, while Hamas refuses to surrender its weapons without guarantees that an alternative Palestinian governing authority will replace it.
Neither an international stabilization force nor a credible transitional mechanism has emerged in the months since the ceasefire took effect, both of which were called for in the U.S.-brokered framework that halted the fighting.
Cairo talks
Behind the scenes, negotiations over Gaza's future continue in Cairo.
The talks bring together Palestinian factions, including Hamas, along with the Board of Peace set up by US President Donald Trump and regional players including Qatar and Türkiye.
"Trump may want to give this process a chance," said a source close to the negotiations.
"Whether it succeeds remains to be seen."
Although few details have emerged publicly, diplomatic and security sources told AFP that negotiators are working on a roadmap combining the gradual disarmament of Hamas with the creation of transitional governing authorities for Gaza.
Israeli media have reported that the government would reject such a framework.
"For now, this diplomatic process exists only around the negotiating table," Lovatt said.
"There has been progress, but reconstruction remains a distant prospect, and nothing is changing for the people on the ground."
Return to combat?
With diplomacy stalled, concerns are mounting that fighting could resume.
Israeli media have reported military preparations for a possible summer 2026 offensive against Hamas should political negotiations fail.
But military expert Hecht cautioned against assuming that contingency planning means another war is inevitable.
"Having the military opportunities is not the same as having the political opportunity," he said.
"Preparations are not the same as implementation."
Analyst Milshtein argued that Israel has little leverage left.
In his view, Washington could ultimately pressure Israel to accept a phased disarmament of Hamas alongside a transitional political framework or even to withdraw from Gaza.
"Alternatively, Israel could embark on another military adventure. Given this government's record, it cannot be ruled out," Milshtein said, adding that Israeli leaders still lack a coherent long-term strategy.