Trump Rethinks Gaza Peace Strategy Amid Stalled Talks and Israeli Pushback
The Trump administration appears ready to abandon the planned deployment of an international stabilization force to Gaza — a central pillar of its postwar peace blueprint — in order to accelerate reconstruction of the devastated enclave, according to an Israeli television report today.
Negotiations over the next stage of the ceasefire have reached a standstill, with disputes centered on Hamas’s disarmament and who will govern Gaza once the fighting ends. As one Israeli official described it, the shift in Washington’s stance has created a “deadlock” in ongoing talks with Israel over the territory’s future.
An Israeli security source told Channel 13 that the White House has struggled to recruit nations willing to take part in the demilitarization of Hamas and has therefore started exploring “interim solutions, which are currently unacceptable to Israel.”
“This interim situation is the worst there is,” one senior Israeli official warned. “Hamas has been strengthening in recent weeks since the end of the war.”
“There can be no rehabilitation before demilitarization. It is contrary to Trump’s plan. Gaza must be demilitarized,” another Israeli security official stated emphatically.
Despite the tension, Washington is moving ahead with a draft UN Security Council resolution set for a vote on Monday. The text, previously obtained by The Times of Israel, incorporates all 20 points of President Donald Trump’s peace framework — a plan that Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu publicly endorsed alongside Trump in September.
Under the proposed resolution, UN member states would “establish a temporary International Stabilization Force,” authorized to operate in Gaza through 2027. Countries that have considered sending troops reportedly insisted they would only do so with formal UN backing.
In anticipation of the resolution’s approval, Israel has already begun logistical groundwork to accommodate “thousands of foreign soldiers,” according to a report released today by the Kan public broadcaster. Israeli officials expect the international force to have wide authority to dismantle Hamas’s arsenal, but most nations involved have signaled that they would limit their role to peacekeeping rather than active disarmament.
On Friday, the US coordinated a joint statement from Qatar, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Jordan, Turkey, Indonesia, and Pakistan, all expressing support for the upcoming UN vote and describing the process as one that “offers a pathway to Palestinian self-determination and statehood.”
Moscow, however, is advancing an alternative draft that sidesteps the creation of a peacekeeping body altogether. The Russian proposal, circulated to Security Council members, acknowledges “the initiative that led to the ceasefire” but omits Trump’s name and merely calls on the UN secretary-general to study “the possibilities of deploying an international stabilization force” in Gaza.
As the diplomatic wrangling intensified, Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke with Netanyahu by phone today. The Kremlin said the discussion focused on Gaza, Iran’s nuclear activity, and developments in Syria.
According to the Israeli Prime Minister’s Office, Putin initiated the call, which followed a series of recent conversations between the two leaders. The PMO said the talks “dealt with regional issues,” without offering further details.
{Matzav.com}
