Netanyahu
nominates Trump for Nobel peace prize at White House meeting expected to focus
on Gaza
The prime
minister made the announcement at a dinner with the president, with the US
expected to push Israel to agree a Gaza ceasefire
Andrew
Roth in Washington
Tue 8 Jul
2025 02.41 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jul/08/trump-nominated-nobel-peace-prize-netanyahu
Benjamin
Netanyahu told Donald Trump that he would nominate him for the Nobel peace
prize on Monday, as the two leaders met for the first time since the US
launched strikes on Iran’s nuclear program as part of a short-lived war between
Israel and Iran.
Trump was
expected to press Netanyahu to agree to a ceasefire in Israel’s 21-month-old
war against Hamas in Gaza amid an outcry over the humanitarian cost of an
offensive that has led to nearly 60,000 deaths, most of them Palestinian.
Israeli
and Hamas negotiators met for indirect talks for the first time in six weeks in
Qatar on Monday. While both sides have spoken positively about the prospects
for a ceasefire, a number of crucial negotiating points remain including
guarantees from the Israeli side that the war would not continue and
Netanyahu’s insistence that Hamas be banished from Gaza for good.
Before a
dinner in the Blue Room at the White House, Trump was asked whether he believed
that Palestinians should be forcibly removed from Gaza, amid reports that
Israel has laid out plans to force all Palestinians in Gaza into a camp on the
ruins of Rafah – a plan that has been criticised as a blueprint for ethnic
cleansing. Trump directed Netanyahu to answer the question.
“It’s
called free choice,” said Netanyahu, who is wanted by the international
criminal court for alleged war crimes relating to the Gaza war. “You know, if
people want to stay, they can stay, but if they want to leave, they should be
able to leave.”
“It
shouldn’t a prison,” Netanyahu said. “It should be an open place and give
people a free choice. We’re working with the United States very closely about
finding countries that will seek to realize what they always say they wanted –
to give the Palestinians a better future. And … I think we’re getting close to
finding several countries.”
At the
beginning of the meeting, Netanyahu presented Trump with a letter that he said
he had sent to a committee for the Nobel peace prize commending Trump’s efforts
to end conflicts in the Middle East.
“I want
to express the appreciation and admiration not only of all Israelis, but of the
Jewish people,” Netanyahu said before presenting the letter. “You deserve it,”
Netanyahu added.
“Coming
from you in particular, this is very meaningful,” Trump said.
It was
the second high-profile nomination for the president: last month Pakistan said
it would recommend Trump for the prize.
During
the meeting, Trump also said that he “hoped” that the US would not strike Iran
again.
“They
want to work something out,” he said. “They’re very different now than they
were two weeks ago.”
He
declined to give a date for upcoming talks with Iran, but told reporters they
would find out more details tomorrow.
Asked
about Russia’s war in Ukraine, Trump suggested that he would resume weapons
shipments to the Ukrainian army, although the White House had recently
confirmed it had halted some weapons deliveries due to a Pentagon review of
dwindling US munitions stocks.
In
impromptu remarks, Trump said he was “not happy with president Putin at all.”
“I’m disappointed, frankly, that President Putin hasn’t stopped,” he said. “I’m
not happy about it.”
“We’re
going to send some more weapons” to Ukraine, he continued. “We have to. They
have to be able to defend themselves. They’re getting hit very hard now.
They’re getting hit very hard. We’re going to have to send more weapons.”
Trump
claimed during the meeting that Hamas “want to meet and they want to have that
ceasefire.” But he did not share any additional details on preparations for a
ceasefire, and when asked about a two-state solution with the Palestinians,
directed the question to Netanyahu, who repeated Israeli insistences that they
would maintain a “security guarantee” over territories like the Gaza Strip.
“I think
the Palestinians should have all the powers to govern themselves, but none of
the powers to threaten us,” Netanyahu said. “And that means that certain powers
like overall security will always remain in our hands.”
“I think
we can work out a peace between us and the entire Middle East with President
Trump’s leadership and by working together,” he continued. “I think we can
establish a very, very broad piece that will include all our neighbours.”
Before
departing for Washington on Sunday, Netanyahu said he was confident a deal
could be achieved and that Israeli negotiators had been given clear
instructions to achieve a ceasefire – but only with conditions that Israel has
already agreed.
Sources
in the prime minister’s entourage described the talks in Qatar as positive,
according to Israel’s military radio station and an Israeli official quoted by
Reuters. Palestinian officials were more downbeat and said initial meetings on
Sunday had ended inconclusively.
Netanyahu
had met with Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff and secretary of state Marco Rubio
earlier on Monday. He is expected to remain in Washington to meet with
vice-president JD Vance and senior officials, including house speaker Mike
Johnson.

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