Bibi Will Sabotage Trump’s Gaza Plan
Peace for Palestine? Not while Netanyahu’s in charge.
Oct 2, 2025
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/bibi-will-sabotage-trumps-gaza-plan/
President Donald Trump sounded jubilant on Monday when
he announced a plan to end the war in Gaza. “This is a big, big day, a
beautiful day, potentially one of the great days ever in civilization,” Trump
said before describing the proposal.
The 20-point peace plan calls for the release of hostages and prisoners,
the disarmament of Hamas, the uninhibited delivery of aid into the Strip, the
withdrawal of Israeli forces out of it, and the establishment of a technocratic
and apolitical committee for governing Gaza, among other measures. Trump said
the deal would resolve millennia-old problems and bring “eternal peace.”
“And I’m not just talking about Gaza,” the president
added. “It’s called peace in the Middle East.”
But there’s a big problem, and he was standing next to
Trump as the president spoke. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel was
in the White House for the fourth time since Trump’s inauguration in January—no
other world leader has come more than twice—and it didn’t take long for him to
start throwing up roadblocks to peace. Indeed, Netanyahu had gotten to work
undermining the deal before it was even announced.
During the joint press conference with Netanyahu,
Trump said that Arab and Muslim countries helped craft the deal, and he
emphasized that only one relevant actor hasn’t yet accepted it: Hamas. But as
Barak Ravid of Axios reported Tuesday, “The deal now before Hamas is
significantly different than the one the U.S. and a group of Arab and Muslim
countries had previously agreed on, due to Netanyahu's intervention.” According
to Ravid’s sources, the “significant changes requested” by Netanyahu had
infuriated Arab officials involved in the peace process.
The edits pertain to two sensitive matters—the
withdrawal of Israeli forces and the disarmament of Hamas—and were negotiated
during a six-hour meeting attended by U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, Trump’s
son-in-law Jared Kushner, the Israeli Minister of Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer,
and Netanyahu himself.
The updated proposal “ties Israel’s withdrawal to the
progress of disarming Hamas, and gives Israel a veto over the process,” Ravid
writes. Moreover, even if the phased withdrawal envisioned by the proposal is
completed, “Israeli forces will still remain within a security perimeter inside
Gaza ‘until Gaza is properly secure from any resurgent terror threat.’ That
could mean indefinitely.”
Many critics of Israel interpreted comments that Netanyahu published on Monday as
evidence that he has no intention of fully withdrawing forces. In a video
statement recorded from Washington, the prime minister said, “Now the whole
world, including the Arab and Muslim world, is pressuring Hamas to accept the
terms that we created together with Trump, to bring back all the hostages—the
living and the dead—while the IDF [Israel Defense Forces] stays in the Strip.”
Moreover, Netanyahu poured cold water on the idea of a
Palestinian state, though the proposal calls for a “credible pathway to
Palestinian self-determination and statehood.” He assured the person behind the
camera that Palestinian statehood is “not written in the agreement” and that
the Israeli team had made clear that “we would strongly oppose a Palestinian
state.”
Netanyahu has used his leverage to sabotage the
U.S.-led peace process many times before, often to the frustration of the White
House. As Jonathan Lis of Haaretz, an Israeli newspaper, reports:
Since the war began, Netanyahu has repeatedly taken
steps to disrupt talks and stall progress: Israel introduced “poison pills” –
demands that could not be bridged and that blocked negotiations; and
negotiation teams were given insufficient authority to compromise, slowing
understandings with Hamas.
In addition, under Netanyahu's direction, Israel
violated clauses in an agreement already approved by both sides that had
enabled a cease-fire earlier this year, leading to its collapse. Netanyahu could take similar steps again now.
Lis’s report does provide one reason to think that
Netanyahu could finally be ready for peace. Previously, Netanyahu had seen the
continuation of the war as key to his political survival, but the calculus this
time is less straightforward. “Israel is entering an election year,” Lis
writes. “Running a campaign while hostages remain in captivity is expected to
weigh heavily on Netanyahu, as a deal for their release enjoys broad support,
including among Likud voters.”
Netanyahu would appear stuck between the majority of
Israeli voters and an extremist faction of Jewish supremacists upon which his
governing coalition depends. These ultra-nationalist ministers have opposed any
peace deal and have proven adept at sabotaging diplomacy, as the Minister of
National Security Itamer Ben-Gvir candidly bragged this January.
“Over the past year, through our political power, we
have succeeded in preventing this deal from being implemented, time and again,”
Ben-Gvir wrote on X. He called on other extremist ministers to
oppose the deal then being considered: “The Prime Minister will refrain from
signing the deal only if the force opposing it is strong enough to prevent him
from doing so.”
With another deal proposed this week, Ben-Gvir,
Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, Minister of Settlements Orit Stock, and
other Jewish supremacist ministers are again lobbying against peace. And they
may have the leverage to get what they want yet again. “If the Israeli
government approves the plan, it could lead to the withdrawal of Smotrich’s
Religious Zionism Party as well as Ben-Gvir’s Jewish Power Party from the
coalition,” Israeli Arab politician Mtanes Shehadeh told TRT World. “This may also trigger early
elections, potentially as soon as the beginning of 2026.”
So, will Netanyahu side with the Israeli voters or
with the extremist ministers? Trump’s push for peace, Lis writes, may give
Netanyahu political cover to end the war and get the hostages released—or it
may not. “It now remains to be seen whether the pressure from the White House
on Israel's prime minister will outweigh the pressure already being applied by
far-right Ministers Ben-Gvir, Bezalel Smotrich, and Orit Strock.”
There’s the rub. Trump reportedly played hardball to get the Israeli premier to
endorse the new deal, threatening to end U.S. support for Israel if Netanyahu
rejected it. But Netanyahu too has been known to play hardball, and he will
find ways to sabotage the peace process unless Trump keeps up the pressure.
Trump seems unlikely to do so. Indeed, on Monday Trump gave Netanyahu the
greenlight to escalate the Gaza war if a deal falls through—and thus also an
incentive to ensure it does:
Israel would have my full backing to finish the job of
destroying the threat of Hamas. But I hope we’re going to have a deal for
peace. If Hamas rejects the deal, which is always possible—they’re the only one
left. Everyone else has accepted it. But I have a feeling that we’re going to
have a positive answer. But if not, as you know, Bibi, you’d have our full
backing to do what you would have to do.
Many critics of Trump and Netanyahu are allowing
themselves some optimism that Hamas will accept the new 20-point peace plan and
that the brutal war in Gaza, now about to enter its third year, will soon
finally end. This columnist predicts that Netanyahu, ever shrewd, won’t let
that happen. For the sake of the beleaguered Gazans, I hope I’m wrong. And
Trump, for the sake of his own credibility, his Mideast policy, and his legacy,
should hope so too.
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