Trump and
Netanyahu to Discuss Plans for Postwar Gaza
The
president and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel are set to meet in
Washington after a week in which Israel grew more isolated internationally.
Aaron
Boxerman
By Aaron
Boxerman
Reporting
from Jerusalem
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/29/world/middleeast/trump-netanyahu-meet-gaza.html
Sept. 29,
2025, 4:38 a.m. ET
President
Trump and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel are expected to meet at
the White House on Monday to discuss the latest U.S.-backed plans for postwar
Gaza, which they hope could pave the way to ending the two-year-old conflict in
the territory.
It will
be their fourth meeting in Washington since Mr. Trump’s return to power in
January. Each raised hopes for a cease-fire, but none decisively ended the
fighting.
This
time, the leaders will meet amid international efforts to develop concrete
proposals for governing Gaza once the war ends. The Trump administration is
weighing one idea pitched by Tony Blair, the former British prime minister,
while France and several Arab governments have offered their own plans.
The
meeting follows a week in which Israel’s international isolation deepened, as
Britain, France and other European countries announced they would recognize a
Palestinian state, over Israeli objections.
A
longtime champion of Israel, Mr. Trump, too, has voiced impatience with the
war, which will enter its third year in October. He also said he “will not
allow” Israel to annex parts of the occupied West Bank, which many Palestinians
hope will be part of a future state.
Last
week, Mr. Trump met in New York with the leaders of Arab and Muslim-majority
countries to discuss his administration’s plan for a postwar Gaza. But it is
not clear what leverage Mr. Trump is willing to use if Mr. Netanyahu resists
the latest proposal to end the war and usher in a new government for Gaza.
Vice
President JD Vance said Sunday that there was a “complicated negotiation” going
on among Arab leaders, Israel and the Trump administration. While cautiously
optimistic about a breakthrough, Mr. Vance added that the deal could always
“get derailed at the very last minute.”
In
previous negotiations, Mr. Netanyahu has opted to press on with the war against
Hamas rather than compromise. His far-right coalition allies hope to control
Gaza indefinitely and rebuild Jewish settlements there.
On
Sunday, Mr. Netanyahu said he hoped Israel could “make it a go” on Mr. Trump’s
proposal. “We’re working on it; it’s not been finalized yet,” he said in an
interview with Fox News.
He
suggested that Israel would be willing to grant amnesty to Hamas members if
they ended the war and released the hostages.
A
delegation of Israeli settler leaders was in the United States on Sunday
seeking a meeting with Mr. Netanyahu to press him to defy Mr. Trump’s warning
on annexation. Along with other right-wing Israelis, they pushed for Israel to
annex the territory after several European countries recognized a Palestinian
state last week.
The war
in Gaza began on Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas led a surprise attack on Israel that
killed about 1,200 people and saw hundreds taken hostage. Israel launched a
counterattack in Gaza that has now killed over 65,000 people, including
thousands of children, according to Gaza health officials. Their count does not
distinguish between civilians and combatants.
Hamas
said on Sunday that it had yet to formally receive a copy of the latest
cease-fire proposal. Negotiations have been at a standstill since Israel bombed
Qatar on Sept. 9 in an attempt to assassinate Hamas’s top leadership in the
Persian Gulf nation, a brazen attack that drew international condemnation.
The armed
group has fought a determined guerrilla war in Gaza, prompting some criticism
from Palestinians for not reaching a cease-fire with Israel to spare them
further death and destruction.
Israeli
forces are now sweeping through Gaza City, forcing hundreds of thousands of
Palestinians to flee for their lives. Many have been displaced multiple times
over the past two years, which have become a seemingly endless nightmare of
fear, hunger and bombardment.
The war
has shattered Israel’s global standing: Mr. Netanyahu is wanted by the
International Criminal Court on allegations of war crimes; several of Israel’s
traditional allies recognized a Palestinian state over Israeli objections; and
even ordinary Israelis traveling abroad encounter protests and harassment.
Despite
the toll on Gaza and its residents, the war in Gaza has not forced Hamas to
surrender or to release the remaining hostages held in the territory. At least
20 living captives are still being held, according to Israel, along with the
bodies of roughly 25 others.
Mr.
Netanyahu has responded to his critics with defiance, arguing that Israel has
gone above and beyond in protecting civilians in Gaza by issuing evacuation
orders before attacking.
In a
speech to the United Nations General Assembly last week, Mr. Netanyahu called
his opponents “weak-kneed leaders" who had given way to “antisemitic
mobs.”
Nadav
Shtrauchler, a former adviser to Mr. Netanyahu and an Israeli political
analyst, said the prime minister was already looking ahead to the next
elections in the country, expected next year.
That
might give Mr. Netanyahu incentive to agree to Mr. Trump’s proposal and “wind
down” the campaign in Gaza, even if it rattled his government and prompted some
backlash from the right, he said.
“He’s
looking for a way out of the situation,” Mr. Shtrauchler said. “This might well
be the formula that allows him to do so.”
Aaron
Boxerman is a Times reporter covering Israel and Gaza. He is based in
Jerusalem.


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