Trump's Gaza peace plan looks like the biggest political test in the Middle East in decades; a plan born from the rubble, at a time when blood and international calculations, hope and fear, intersect. On paper, the plan promises to stop the war and rebuild a besieged and shattered Strip, but in depth it carries a much bigger question: can peace really be made on a land that has not dried up from the fire of battle?
The plan began with remarkable steps: a comprehensive ceasefire, the exchange of thousands of prisoners and hostages, a gradual military withdrawal from populated areas, and the establishment of a transitional civilian administration with international supervision and US-Arab guarantees. These rapid developments gave the Palestinians a rare moment of breathing space and put Gaza back on the map of international attention, but the paper emphasizes that this is only the beginning ... The real battle is in what comes after.
The road is full of landmines: the future of weapons in Gaza, the identity of the international security force, the ambiguity of the Israeli withdrawal, the form of the next civilian government, and the balance of influence between the United States, Egypt, Qatar, and Turkey. More seriously, the plan treats Gaza as a gateway to reshape the entire Palestinian political landscape - and perhaps the region later - making every step calculated and every delay combustible.
The paper does not stop at describing the scene, but reveals that the fate of the plan will be determined in the next few weeks: it will either turn into a historic turning point leading to a gradual settlement path, or it will turn into a suspended truce that collapses at the first clash, only to start the war again...but at a higher price and with more chaos.
This is not a traditional peace plan. It is a confrontation between the possible and the impossible, between politics and reality, between hope and the explosion scenario.
To view the video and read the full analytical paper, please scroll down. 🔻
Trump's Gaza peace plan: A delicate balance between truce and explosion - will it work?
The most dangerous thing about this plan... is that it offers real hope, but it stands on the brink of collapse.

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