The US president, Donald Trump, has put on the table on Monday what he calls. It is not yet clear that the Cristalice project, in the absence of the response of a Hamas that would have to surrender and deliver the weapons and that just hours before he denounced that he had not received a copy of the document. But one of the unknowns has been clear: after this Monday’s meeting between Israeli prime minister, Benjamín Netanyahu, and Trump, Israel says accepting the proposal of 20 points. And if the Palestinian group rejects the offer, the Republican has given his ally permission to continue the offensive on Gaza, which exceeds 66,000 dead by the invasion of the Israeli army.
The plan, publicly made minutes before its joint appearance in the White House, provides for the surrender of Hamas, the return of all Israeli hostages even in the strip – almost 50, mostly dead – and the creation of a provisional entity of the Palestinian government that will be supervised by an international organism of which the former British prime minister Tony Blair will be part of the Tony Blair and that will be chaired by Trump himself.
“I support your plan to end the war in Gaza, which meets our war goals,” said Netanyahu in the joint appearance in the East Room of the White House, in which they have not accepted questions. The proposal “will bring all our hostages back, dismantle the military capabilities of Hamas, will end his political mandate and ensure that Gaza never represents a threat to Israel,” said Prime Minister.
Trump, on the other hand, has considered a great way that “it is a beautiful day, potentially one of the best days ever in civilization.” According to the president, and achieve “an immediate end to war”, by detailing the sections of the plan prepared in recent months in collaboration between the US and Blair government. “It’s a historic day for peace,” he insisted.
But the triumphalist statements from both podiums collide with reality, although Trump has assured that he has the support of a good number of Arab countries and Muslims with which he has discussed the plan. So far it is ignored what is going to be Hamas’s response. Some of the points included in the document, such as their obligation to disarm, force them to take steps that the Islamist group has rejected again and again during the almost two years of the war initiated since October 7. And if what comes from Hamas is a “No”, the negotiation document will be on wet paper.
Trump has recognized that it is still not clear what the position of the Palestinian group will be. “I hear that Hamas also wants to see this resolved, and that is a good thing,” said the American, before pointing out that if the militia leaders reject the proposal, he will give Israel green light to continue the offensive that has razed the Palestinian strip and that even an independent commission of the UN Tilda already openly genocide.
“I want to thank Prime Minister Netanyahu for accepting the plan and for having confidence that, if we collaborate, we can end the death and destruction we have attended for so many years, decades and even centuries, and thus begin a new era of security, peace and prosperity for the entire region,” Trump has solemnized.
The 20 points of the document foresee that, if Israel and Hamas accept, a high immediate fire will be launched, during which the Israeli army would retreat in what Netanyahu has described as a “modest” withdrawn. Within 72 hours, Hamas would have to deliver to the surviving Israeli hostages and the bodies of the deceased. In total, 48, according to Israel’s calculations. In return, Israel would return to 1,700 gazaties arrested since the beginning of the war and 250 prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment. The pact also foresees that once the exchange is completed, and that those who wish can leave the strip, with security guarantees on their way to third countries.
Once the agreement was accepted, the complete supply would begin and without interference of humanitarian aid towards the strip and the reconstruction of basic infrastructure.
The Gazatis will not have to leave Gaza and, if they do, they can return, as promises the document. Trump will preside over a transition body that will supervise the Palestinian government body that will manage Gaza temporarily. During the time these institutions are active, a “Trump Economic Development Plan” will be launched for reconstruction.
The project has been presented after a long encounter between the two leaders, of which it also transpired that Netanyahu apologized on the phone in a call made at the meeting to the prime minister of Qatar, Mohamed Bin Abdulrahman to the Thani, for the attack you make three weeks against Hamas leaders in the Emirate and promised that it will not be repeated.
No other international leader has been so regular at the White House during Donald Trump’s mandate as: Israeli prime minister has come on Monday for the fourth time in eight months to the oval office. None of his previous visits threw advances for peace and those appointments only served for the Israeli leader to gain time in his defensive deadly in Gaza. On this occasion, the US president had declared himself, moments before starting the meeting, “very confident” that the appointment can finally throw.
Both initiated the conversation with a handshake at the west wing door of the presidential residence. Netanyahu’s delegation had entered with a few minutes late in a white house adorned. Trump went out to receive the prime minister, as he likes to do personally when a foreign leader arrives. The two greeted the press with a gesture before entering and starting the match.
Just two hours before the meeting, the White House spokeswoman, Karoline Leavitt, reiterated that Israel and Hamas are “very close” to reach an agreement to end the offensive on the Gazatí population.
On the eve of the crucial meeting, the representatives of the US administration had made intense contacts to try to reduce differences and. Trump’s personal envoy for the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, spoke with the Israeli representatives; Jared Kushner, son -in -law of the president and negotiator of Abraham’s agreements in the first mandate of the Republican, treated with the Arab allies.