How Jared
Kushner, a Self-Described ‘Deal Guy,’ Helped Broker a Gaza Breakthrough
Trained
in New York City real estate, the president’s son-in-law had a single goal: Get
to a yes first, and hash out the details later. “It’s just different being deal
guys — just a different sport,” he said.
Katie
Rogers Tyler
Pager
By Katie
Rogers and Tyler Pager
Katie
Rogers and Tyler Pager are White House correspondents. They reported from
Washington.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/09/us/politics/jared-kushner-gaza-deal.html
Oct. 9,
2025
Last
Friday, when Jared Kushner heard that Hamas would begin talks to release
Israeli hostages, he was fielding calls at his mansion, which sits on a
man-made island just north of Miami. He jumped into his car and drove the 20
minutes to another mansion — this one owned by the billionaire Steve Witkoff,
President Trump’s Middle East peace envoy.
In those
crucial moments, the Trump administration’s diplomatic power center was not in
Washington but in one of the wealthiest enclaves in Florida.
The two
real estate developers, charged with closing the deal on a prime piece of Mr.
Trump’s foreign policy ambitions, got to work setting up a command center,
where they made and fielded calls from stakeholders, including an impatient
president and cabinet members in the Israeli government.
The stage
had been set for a peace deal earlier that week, when Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu had agreed with Mr. Trump on a 20-point proposal for pursuing a peace
agreement.
With
terms that largely favored Israel, it was still unknown whether Hamas would
sign on and agree to release hostages or relinquish control of the enclave. As
the deadline for Hamas to respond ticked closer, Mr. Trump warned Hamas
fighters that thousands of them had already been killed, and that many more
would be if they did not agree to a deal.
Hamas
said hours later that it would begin talks to release hostages.
While he
was working alongside Mr. Witkoff in Miami, Mr. Kushner’s advice to the
Israelis was not to worry about the rest of the militant group’s statement,
which did little to assuage Israeli concerns that Hamas would refuse to give up
its arms or political control of Gaza. Mr. Kushner was focused on the first
part of the statement, which meant hostages could soon come home.
“Steve
and I said to Israel, ‘We encourage you to be positive as well,’” Mr. Kushner
recalled in an interview. In phone calls, the Israelis had been telling them
that Hamas would outright reject any deal. “‘This is a time to be positive,’”
Mr. Kushner reiterated.
Hours
later, the office of Mr. Netanyahu said that it would agree to begin carrying
out the first phase of Mr. Trump’s peace plan. On Thursday, Israel’s government
approved the agreement, just after Mr. Kushner and Mr. Witkoff addressed the
Israeli cabinet and discussed the deal.
In his
quest to end the Israel-Hamas war, Mr. Trump has not turned to longtime
diplomats to get the job done. His advisers say he is not steeped in the
details of what a long-term peace agreement would look like. Instead, he has
relied on his son-in-law, Mr. Kushner, to step in and add momentum to the
negotiations, which Mr. Witkoff had been pursuing for months.
Mr.
Kushner, 44, had built diplomatic relationships in Arab countries while working
as an adviser during Mr. Trump’s first term. He became a key architect of the
Abraham Accords, a set of diplomatic agreements that normalized relations
between Israel and three Arab states, which gave him an understanding of the
complexities of the region and the key players who operate within it.
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Mr.
Kushner traveled to Egypt on Tuesday alongside Mr. Witkoff and found success.
The pair joined a set of mediators who had already been working there for days
to convince Hamas to disarm and to give over Israeli hostages who were taken in
the wake of terrorist attacks two years ago.
The two
spent the plane ride strategizing over ways they felt the deal could fall
apart, and what they could do to salvage it. When the two men are working, Mr.
Kushner is often drafting the plans as Mr. Witkoff works the phones.
“In New
York real estate, you’re always negotiating back and forth,” he said. “But
there’s a lot to be negotiated before you get the contract and you put money up
hard. I think we’re just used to complex deals that are very dynamic, and with
complex characters as well.”
Hours
after Mr. Kushner arrived in Egypt, Mr. Trump announced that Israel and Hamas
had reached an agreement that could spell the end of a two-year conflict that
began when Hamas attacked Israel, killing roughly 1,200 people and taking about
250 hostages. The Israeli military has since killed more than 67,000
Palestinians, including civilians and combatants, according to local health
officials.
“Jared is
a very smart guy,” Mr. Trump said on Thursday.
Trained
in the bare-knuckle arts of New York City real estate, Mr. Kushner and Mr.
Witkoff think of themselves as deal guys working for the ultimate deal guy.
Their approach is simple: Get to a yes first, and hash out the details later.
The two have spent a lot of time together over the past few weeks,
crisscrossing Miami, then the country, and now the world, in pursuit of peace.
The rebuilding of Gaza is also in their sights.
“The
experience that Steve and I have as deal guys is that you have to understand people,” Mr. Kushner said. “You have to be able to kind of get the bottom line out of them, and then see who do you think is playing games, and how much room do you have to push things?”
He added:
“A lot of the people who do this are history professors, because they have a
lot of experience, or diplomats. It’s just different being deal guys — just a
different sport.”
Diplomacy
and Business
Mr.
Kushner has received bipartisan praise for his role in the negotiations, but as
an unpaid volunteer, he is not subject to the same laws and disclosure
requirements of a government employee. And Mr. Kushner has extensive business
dealings in the Middle East, enriching himself as he builds deep diplomatic
relationships with leaders across the region. His critics have said that he is
evading bureaucratic safeguards designed to prevent conflicts of interest.
As for
any questions about Mr. Kushner’s moneymaking efforts in a region of the world
where he is trying to negotiate peace, the White House has said there is no
problem.
“I think
it’s frankly despicable that you’re trying to suggest that it’s inappropriate
for Jared Kushner, who is widely respected around the world and has great trust
and relationships with these critical partners in these countries, to strike a
20-point, comprehensive, detailed peace plan that no other administration would
ever be able to achieve,” Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary,
said last week when asked about whether his involvement was appropriate.
She
added: “We are very proud of that plan, and we hope Hamas will accept it,
because it will lead to a more peaceful and prosperous Middle East.”
Mr.
Kushner’s private equity firm, Affinity Partners, is almost entirely financed
from overseas investors, and has taken money from government wealth funds in
Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.
“In order
for the next stage of this agreement to be successful, Jared Kushner needs to
stop approaching this issue as a real estate deal and start focusing on
political and human rights,” Senator Chris Van Hollen, Democrat of Maryland,
said in a statement.
If Mr.
Kushner seems like a familiar face in the Trump White House, that is because he
never really left. He was an unpaid senior adviser to Mr. Trump during the
president’s first term, as was his wife, Ivanka Trump, the president’s eldest
daughter. Both faced intense criticism from Democrats for not being moderating
forces with Mr. Trump, particularly on his efforts to restrict immigration.
The
onslaught of headlines about their unpopularity were so constant that Mr. Trump
would sometimes joke that instead of marrying the football player Tom Brady,
she’d married Mr. Kushner. “Jared hasn’t been so good for me,” Mr. Trump would
remark at points.
Relations
have since improved.
Mr.
Kushner began focusing on matters from prison reform to normalizing relations
between Israel and several Arab nations. He left the White House, and his
private equity firm has made money from his relationships with some of those
countries. His father, Charles Kushner, was given a presidential pardon for tax
evasion and retaliating against a federal witness, among other violations. The
elder Mr. Kushner, a campaign donor, is now the U.S. ambassador to France.
‘The
Right Timing’
Mr.
Kushner has stayed in his father-in-law’s orbit as a volunteer adviser, and he
has long abandoned any pretense that he would be the one to mediate Mr. Trump’s
impulses. Instead, he has leaned heavily into Mr. Trump’s approach to achieving
peace in Gaza, a process in which the president has made decisions on gut
instinct over careful deliberation.
Michael
Herzog, the former Israeli ambassador to the United States, said the
combination of Mr. Kushner’s connections in the Middle East and his status as a
member of the Trump family made him particularly valuable during the
negotiations.
“I
believe Jared played a role in convincing President Trump, together with Steve
Witkoff, to come out with this initiative,” he said of the 20-point peace plan.
“It was the right timing. Everyone around here didn’t give it much chance, but
it worked.”
Mr.
Kushner’s efforts are even winning praise from Democrats. Thomas R. Nides, who
served as the U.S. ambassador to Israel in the Biden administration, said he
was thrilled the final hostages were set to be released.
“He was
exceptionally important in Abraham Accords, knows how to manage Bibi and
understands the Arab countries,” Mr. Nides said of Mr. Kushner. “Forget my
politics, I’m more than happy to give him as much credit as he deserves.”
Until
recently, Mr. Kushner had a much less visible role in the president’s orbit. He
was frequently in touch with his father-in-law and some of the president’s top
aides, and made occasional visits to the White House.
Roughly
eight months ago, Mr. Kushner started working with Tony Blair, the former
British prime minister, on plans for a postwar Gaza. In August, the two of them
met with Mr. Trump and his top aides to discuss the future of the Gaza Strip.
In the weeks since that Oval Office meeting, Mr. Kushner emerged as a key
player in the negotiations, working closely with Israel and the Arab nations.
“This is
way more than I kind of anticipated,” Mr. Kushner said in an interview. “I
think there’s a chance that when I get home, my wife changes the locks on the
house.”
Katie
Rogers is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President
Trump.
Tyler
Pager is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump
and his administration.


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