News Analysis
Biden and
Trump Defy Their History of Animosity to Seal Gaza Cease-Fire
But the
extraordinary collaboration between outgoing and incoming presidents did not
stop both sides from claiming credit.
Peter Baker
By Peter Baker
Peter Baker has covered the past five presidents and was
briefly The Times’s lead correspondent in Jerusalem.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/15/us/politics/trump-biden-gaza-ceasefire.html
Published Jan. 15, 2025
Updated Jan. 16, 2025, 12:02 a.m. ET
The long-sought, tortuously negotiated Gaza cease-fire deal
announced on Wednesday came about in part through a remarkable collaboration
between President Biden and President-elect Donald J. Trump, who temporarily
put aside mutual animosity to achieve a mutual goal.
The two presidents directed their advisers to work together
to push Israel and Hamas over the finish line for an agreement to halt the
fighting that has ravaged Gaza and release hostages who have been held there
for 15 months. The deal is set to start on Sunday, the day before Mr. Biden
turns over the White House to Mr. Trump.
Each president had his own interest in settling the matter
before Inauguration Day. For Mr. Biden, the deal, if it holds, represents a
final vindication on his watch, what he hopes will be the end of the deadliest
war in the history of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict while freeing Americans
as well as Israelis from captivity. For Mr. Trump, the deal, for now, takes a
major issue off the table as he opens a second term, freeing him to pursue
other priorities.
The dramatic development, just five days before the transfer
of power in the United States, cut against the natural grain in Washington,
where presidents of opposing parties rarely work in tandem during a transition,
even in the face of a major crisis. But the political planets quickly returned
to their normal orbits as both sides argued over who deserved credit for
resolving the standoff.
While Mr. Biden waited for official word to come from the
region, Mr. Trump got the jump on him by disclosing the deal himself in an
all-caps social media post. “This EPIC ceasefire agreement could have only
happened as a result of our Historic Victory in November,” he added soon
afterward.
By the time Mr. Biden appeared before cameras at the White
House later in the afternoon, he was more gracious, noting that the two teams
spoke with one voice. But he bristled when asked who merited credit, he or Mr.
Trump. “Is that a joke?” he asked.
Still, the partnership, awkward and prickly as it was, stood
out in an era of deep polarization. “It really is extraordinary,” said Mara
Rudman, who was deputy special envoy for Middle East peace under President
Barack Obama. “Everybody’s talking about who gets credit, but the fact is that
it’s shared and part of the reason it worked is that it’s shared.”
That was not to say that it would lead to enduring synergy
on this or other issues. “This was a case where the right thing to do aligned
with people’s best political interest as well,” said Ms. Rudman, now a scholar
at the University of Virginia’s Miller Center.
However credit is ultimately apportioned, diplomats,
officials and analysts said it seemed clear that both presidents had played
important roles. The deal that was finally agreed to was essentially the same
one that Mr. Biden had put on the table last May and that his envoys, led by
Brett H. McGurk, his Middle East coordinator, had worked painstakingly to make
acceptable to both sides.
At the same time, Mr. Trump’s impending return to power and
his blustery threat, that “all hell will break out” if the hostages were not
released by the time he was sworn in, clearly changed the calculations of the
warring parties. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, the beneficiary
of so much support from Mr. Trump during his first term, could not take for
granted that the new president would back him if he prolonged the war during
his second term.
Indeed, it was telling that Mr. Netanyahu, who goes by the
nickname Bibi, called Mr. Trump first to thank him after the deal was announced
and only then called Mr. Biden. In a statement, Mr. Netanyahu emphasized his
gratitude to Mr. Trump “for his remarks that the United States will work with
Israel to ensure that Gaza will never be a terrorist haven.” Mr. Biden was not
mentioned until the fourth paragraph and only in a single sentence that thanked
him “as well” for his assistance.
Mr. Trump’s desire to force a deal went beyond his trademark
public threats and extended to constructive assistance on the ground. He
authorized Steve Witkoff, his longtime friend whom he picked as special envoy
for the Middle East, to work with Mr. McGurk to press negotiators to finalize
the agreement. Mr. McGurk and his team were happy to have the help and use Mr.
Witkoff’s support as leverage.
“This was Biden’s deal,” former Representative Tom
Malinowski, Democrat of New Jersey, wrote on social media, “but as much as I
hate to say it, he couldn’t have done it without Trump — not so much Trump’s
performative threats to Hamas, but his willingness to tell Bibi bluntly that
the war had to end by Jan. 20.”
There were some Republicans who were willing to praise Mr.
Biden for his efforts to forge the agreement along with Mr. Trump. “It is good
to see the Biden Administration and Trump Transition working together to get
this deal done,” Senator Thom Tillis of North Carolina wrote on social media.
Few transitions have seen such a moment of intersecting
interests. In the throes of the Great Depression, the defeated President
Herbert Hoover tried to engage President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt to team up
to address a bank crisis, only to be rebuffed by an incoming leader who did not
want to be tied to his predecessor.
A more eerily haunting example came 44 years ago, when
President Jimmy Carter labored until the final hours of his presidency to free
52 American hostages being held in Iran without help from his successor,
President-elect Ronald Reagan. In fact, some evidence has emerged suggesting
that people around Mr. Reagan tried to discourage Iran from releasing the
hostages before the election for fear that it would help Mr. Carter, although
official investigations never verified that.
Mr. Carter ultimately struck a deal to free the hostages,
but in a final insult Iran held back the planes with the Americans onboard
until moments after Mr. Reagan was sworn in on Jan. 20, 1981. That memory was
not lost on Mr. Biden’s team in recent weeks, especially after Mr. Carter’s
death last month. Administration officials and their allies in recent days had
been morbidly mulling the possibility of history repeating itself.
The coming change in political leadership in the United
States was not the only factor driving the negotiations over the war in Gaza.
The situation on the ground has changed dramatically since Mr. Biden first
offered his cease-fire proposal in May.
In the interim, Israel has decapitated the leadership of
Hamas, all but demolished its allied militia Hezbollah in Lebanon and taken out
key military facilities in Iran. A Biden-brokered cease-fire in Lebanon left
Hamas without a second front against Israel, further isolating it. And the fall
of President Bashar al-Assad in Syria only reinforced the weakness of Iran and
its allies and proxies.
But the looming Inauguration Day in Washington created a new
action-forcing deadline that was hard to ignore. Mr. Trump said little during
the campaign about the war, but when he did he made it clear that he was not
happy about it and urged Israel to wrap it up as soon as possible because the
heart-wrenching pictures of death and destruction in Gaza were damaging
Israel’s reputation on the international stage.
Moreover, Mr. Trump’s relationship with Mr. Netanyahu has
evolved since his first term, when he presented himself as the Israeli leader’s
staunchest ally. Mr. Trump cut aid to the Palestinians, moved the U.S. Embassy
to Jerusalem, recognized Israeli authority over the Golan Heights and presided
over diplomatic openings between Israel and several of its Arab neighbors.
But their ties soured in Mr. Trump’s final year in office
when he perceived Mr. Netanyahu to be taking advantage, and they deteriorated
even further when the prime minister congratulated Mr. Biden on a victory in
the 2020 election that Mr. Trump still denies. Mr. Netanyahu has worked
assiduously in recent months to make up with Mr. Trump.
As for Mr. Biden, his own relationship with Mr. Netanyahu
has been strained since the days soon after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led
terrorist attack, when he flew to Israel and hugged the Israeli leader on the
tarmac. Biden advisers and allies have suspected that Mr. Netanyahu was
deliberately holding off on a cease-fire deal to hand the victory to Mr. Trump
in an effort to kowtow to him.
Mr. Biden said nothing about that during his televised
remarks on Wednesday. But after 15 months of trying to manage the Middle East
crisis and head off a wider regional war, he appeared relieved to see an end
coming.
“I’m deeply satisfied this day has come, finally come, for
the sake of the people of Israel and the families waiting in agony and for the
sake of the innocent people in Gaza who suffered unimaginable devastation
because of the war,” Mr. Biden said.
He referred to the collaboration with Mr. Trump without
mentioning him by name. “I’d also note this deal was developed and negotiated
under my administration,” Mr. Biden said, flanked by Vice President Kamala
Harris and Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken. “But its terms will be
implemented for the most part by the next administration. These past few days,
we’ve been speaking as one team.”
Asked about Mr. Trump’s role, Mr. Biden noted that the
cease-fire was “the exact framework of the deal I proposed back in May” and
claimed credit for giving Israel the backing it needed to weaken Hamas,
Hezbollah and Iran. “I knew this deal would have to be implemented by the next
team,” he added, “so I told my team to coordinate closely with the incoming
team to make sure we’re all speaking with the same voice because that’s what
American presidents do.”
Mr. Trump made no mention of the role of his predecessor’s
team and left the impression in his social media posts that he had delivered
the agreement by himself.
“We have achieved so much without even being in the White
House,” he wrote. “Just imagine all of the wonderful things that will happen
when I return to the White House, and my Administration is fully confirmed, so
they can secure more Victories for the United States!”
Peter Baker is the chief White House correspondent for The
Times. He has covered the last five presidents and sometimes writes analytical
pieces that place presidents and their administrations in a larger context and
historical framework. More about Peter Baker
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