No Guarantee Gaza Peace Will Last: Trump

Tue Feb 04 2025
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Key points

  • Netanyahu is in Washington for talks with the new Trump administration
  • Hamas is ready to begin negotiations on the details of a second phase
  • This is Trump’s first meeting with a foreign leader since returning to the White House
  • Israel has turned its focus to the occupied West Bank

WASHINGTON: United States (US) President Donald Trump said on Monday there were “no guarantees” that a fragile ceasefire in Gaza will hold, as he prepares to discuss its future with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Netanyahu is in Washington for talks with the new Trump administration on a second phase of the truce with Hamas, which has not yet been finalised, according to the Arab News.

Just over two weeks after the ceasefire took hold, two Hamas officials said the group was ready to begin talks on the details of a second phase, which could help secure a lasting cessation of violence.

Before leaving Israel, Netanyahu told reporters he would discuss “victory over Hamas,” countering Iran and freeing all hostages when he meets Trump on Tuesday.

Trump’s first meeting

It will be Trump’s first meeting with a foreign leader since returning to the White House in January, a prioritization Netanyahu said showed “the strength of the Israeli-American alliance.”

With fragile ceasefires holding in both Gaza and Lebanon — where an Israeli campaign badly weakened Hezbollah — Israel has turned its focus to the occupied West Bank and an operation that it says is aimed at rooting out extremism that has killed dozens.

HAM
—Photo by AFP

Trump, who has claimed credit for sealing the ceasefire deal after 15 months of war, said Sunday negotiations with Israel and other countries in the Middle East were “progressing.”

The president later told reporters that he has “no guarantees that the peace is going to hold.”

Truce second phase

Netanyahu’s office said he would begin discussions with Trump’s Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff on Monday over terms for the second phase of the Gaza truce.

Witkoff said he was “certainly hopeful” that the truce will hold.

The next stage is expected to cover the release of the remaining captives and could lead to a more permanent end to the war.

Gaza, Israel, Palestine, ceasefire deal,
A boy runs with a Palestinian flag atop a mound of rubble at a camp for people displaced by conflict in Bureij in the central Gaza Strip on January 17, 2025 following the announcement of a truce amid the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas. —Photo by AFP

One Hamas official, speaking to AFP on condition on anonymity because of the sensitivity of the talks, said the Palestinian group “has informed the mediators… that we are ready to start the negotiations for the second phase.”

A second official said Hamas was “waiting for the mediators to initiate the next round.”

First phase

Under the Gaza ceasefire’s first, 42-day phase, Hamas is to free 33 hostages in staggered releases in exchange for around 1,900 Palestinians held in Israeli jails.

Four hostage-prisoner exchanges have already taken place, and the truce has led to a surge of food, fuel, medical and other aid into rubble-strewn Gaza.

It has also allowed displaced Gazans to return to the territory’s north, which Israel had blocked before. According to UN humanitarian office OCHA, more than 545,000 people have reached the north since the truce began.

Prisoners, Israel, Palestinian, Prisoners, Gaza, Hostages
Freed Palestinian prisoners ride in a bus after their release from an Israeli jail as part of a hostages-prisoners swap and a ceasefire deal in Gaza between Hamas and Israel, outside the Israeli military prison, Ofer, near Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, January 20, 2025 —Photo from Social Media/ X

During Hamas’s October 7, 2023 attack, the group took 251 hostages, 91 of whom remain in Gaza, including 34 the Israeli military has confirmed are dead.

The attack resulted in the deaths of 1,210 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official Israeli figures.

Death toll

Israel’s retaliatory response has killed at least 47,498 people in Gaza, a majority of civilians, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry, figures which the UN considers reliable.

While Trump’s predecessor Joe Biden sustained Washington’s military and diplomatic backing of Israel, he also criticized the mounting death toll and aid restrictions.

Ethnic Cleansing, Gaza Genocide, Human Rights Watch, Israel, MSF, Palestinians, West Bank,
A woman touches the cheek of a child killed by an Israeli airstrike Saturday.
—Photo by Omar Al-Qattaa / AFP – Getty Images

Back in office, Trump moved quickly to lift sanctions on Israeli settlers accused of violence against Palestinians in the West Bank and reportedly approved a shipment of 2,000-pound bombs that the Biden administration had blocked.

Trump has also repeatedly touted a plan to “clean out” Gaza, calling for

Clean out Gaza

Palestinians to move to neighbouring countries such as Egypt or Jordan.

Qatar, which jointly mediated the ceasefire along with the United States and Egypt, underscored the importance of allowing Palestinians to “return to their homes and land.”

In the West Bank — which is separated from the Gaza Strip by Israeli territory — Israel said it had killed at least 50 people and detained more than 100 “wanted individuals” in an operation that began on January 21.

Gaza
Scores of displaced Palestinians walk along a road in the Saftawi area of Jabalia, as they leave areas near Gaza City where they had taken refuge, toward the further northern part of the Gaza Strip. (Photo by Omar AL-QATTAA / AFP)

Israel’s military says the offensive is aimed at rooting out Palestinian armed groups from the Jenin area, where militants have long operated.

Detonating buildings

On Sunday, Palestinian official news agency WAFA said Israeli forces “simultaneously detonated about 20 buildings” in the Jenin refugee camp.

Gaza, Hamas, Palestinian, Israel, Khan Younis, UN, United Nations, Beit Lahiya
—Photo from Social Media/ X

On Monday, the Palestinian presidency denounced the operation in the territory, which Israel has occupied since 1967 and where violence has surged since the Gaza war began.

Israel, Gaza, Hamas, Palestinians, Ceasefire, Egypt, Qatar, United States, Aid, UN, Donald Trump
This aerial view shows displaced Palestinians returning to the war-devastated Jabalia refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip on January 19, 2025, shortly before a ceasefire deal in the war between Israel and the Palestinian group Hamas. —Photo by AFP

In a statement, spokesman Nabil Abu Rudeineh said the Palestinian presidency “condemned the occupation authorities’ expansion of their comprehensive war on our Palestinian people in the West Bank to implement their plans aimed at displacing citizens and ethnic cleansing.”

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