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اکتوبر 9, 2025Hamas and Israel sign ceasefire and hostage deal
اکتوبر 9, 2025Washington / Gaza / Tel Aviv, 9 October 2025 — U.S. President Donald Trump described the preliminary ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas as a “momentous breakthrough,” forecasting that it would unlock massive reconstruction and lasting peace in Gaza. Speaking at a Cabinet meeting, Trump expressed confidence that wealthy regional states will contribute, saying that just a small portion of their resources “will do wonders for Gaza.”
However, key details of the agreement remain under negotiation, and Israeli government approval is still pending.
What the President Said
- Trump called the deal the “end of the war”, asserting that a new era of peace is within reach: “We ended the war and, on a much bigger basis, created peace … I think it’s going to be a lasting peace — hopefully an everlasting peace.”
- He said hostages may be released “Monday or Tuesday,” but did not divulge how many or under which terms.
- He emphasized that the deal would pave the way for major financial contributions: “You have tremendous wealth … just a small part of that … will do wonders for Gaza.”
- He also claimed that many nations would “step up and put up a lot of money” for reconstruction — though he stopped short of naming any or presenting a detailed funding plan.
What We Know So Far & What Remains Unclear
According to news agencies:
- Israel and Hamas have signed a first phase of a ceasefire and hostage exchange agreement.
- In the deal, Hamas agrees to release hostages and Israel to begin partial withdrawal from Gaza.
- The first phase includes phased truce implementation, prisoner exchanges, and troop redeployment to an “agreed line.”
- But the key elements such as disarmament of Hamas, governance of Gaza, security guarantees, and the financial structure are not yet finalized.
In short: the framework is in place, but the real test lies in execution and follow-through.
Why This Matters — Stakes & Risks
Humanitarian relief & reconstruction: Gaza is in ruin after years of war. If reconstruction funds and logistics flow as Trump hopes, relief could accelerate recovery. But funding pledges often face delays, conditionalities, and political hurdles.
Security & trust: A ceasefire only holds if both sides trust one another to honor terms. If one side reneges, the truce could collapse.
Political leverage & image: Trump is positioning himself as a key broker. A successful implementation could boost his global standing. But failure could turn it against him.
Domestic hurdles in Israel: Some coalition factions oppose concessions; full Israeli cabinet approval is needed.
Hamas’s position: Hamas has conceded aspects of the deal, but has not committed to full disarmament. That remains a red line.