Listening to Umm Kulthum sing about the glories of Arab nationalism is painful. There is so little of it on display. As Israel continues its genocidal violence against the Palestinians, neighbouring Arab countries seem almost paralysed. Lebanon’s government—under pressure from the US and France—wants to disarm Hezbollah, the only military force able to try and defend the country’s sovereignty. Egypt opened the door to normalisation with Israel in 1979, and now does nothing to force open the Rafah Crossing, send aid to Gaza, and allow seriously ill Palestinians to enter Egypt to be treated in its hospitals. Egypt’s leader, President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, has not once threatened to put his over two hundred F-16 Fighting Falcons in the air to enforce a no-fly zone over Gaza. On the other side, the Queen of Jordan, Rania al-Abdullah, was forthright in two interviews with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour in 2023 and 2024 about the Israeli violence and the ‘glaring double standard’ of the West in failing to condemn Israel’s attack on civilians whilst it was so vocal against Russia. But Queen Rania’s statements did nothing to move her husband, King Abdullah bin Hussein, who sat on Jordan’s 1994 peace deal with Israel and never threatened to withdraw from it because of what his wife called ‘the depth of the grief, the pain, and the shock that we are feeling here in Jordan’. Jordan’s fleet of F-16 Block 70 sat in its hangar, the tarpaulin barely moved on behalf of the Palestinians. The ugliest display of the collapse of Arab nationalism comes from Syria, where it was Israeli air cover that allowed the former al-Qaeda chief Ahmad al-Sharaa to capture Damascus, while Israeli tanks rolled into the former United Nations buffer zone outside the occupied Golan Heights. Israel has more than doubled its seizure of Syrian territory. Al-Sharaa, a creature of the Israelis, has neither condemned this expansion of Israel into Syria nor made any gesture regarding the genocide. These are key countries in the Arab League, which has been relatively quiet throughout the past few years. Umm Kulthum sounds utterly foreign in Amman, Beirut, Cairo, and Damascus.