news
analysis
Trump
Takes a Victory Lap, but Avoids Questions About What’s Next
Except
for brief references, President Trump did not talk about what it would take to
rebuild Gaza or the future of the Palestinian people.
David E.
Sanger Erika
Solomon
By David
E. Sanger and Erika Solomon
David E.
Sanger has covered five American presidents and writes often on superpower
conflict, the subject of his latest book. He reported from Jerusalem. Erika
Solomon has reported on the Middle East for more than a decade. She reported
from Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/13/world/middleeast/trump-victory-lap-whats-next.html
Oct. 13,
2025
President
Trump landed in Israel on Monday morning minutes after the first of 20 hostages
were released by Hamas, and spent the day basking in the applause of a country
that credits him, more than Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, for joyous
family reunions and a cease-fire after two years of war.
Mr. Trump
seized on the moment to tell the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, that this is
“not only the end of a war, this is the end of the age of terror and death.”
Using a line that other presidents have reached for — and often been
disappointed — he added: “This is the historic dawn of a new Middle East.”
He then
traveled to Egypt, where dozens of world leaders awaited his arrival for a
“peace summit” that offered the pomp and circumstance Mr. Trump is known to
enjoy. Banners adorned with his face were dotted along the streets of a Red Sea
resort.
“From the
city of Sharm el-Sheikh, the will of the people meets the resolve of world
leaders to end the war in Gaza,” President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi of Egypt said.
“They all carry a single message to mankind: Enough war. Welcome to peace.”
But at
the Egypt summit, neither Israel nor Hamas were participants. And although the
White House released what appeared to be a document signed by the countries
that did attend, it did not commit the signatories to any specific action.
Rarely
has an American president, particularly one as divisive at home as Mr. Trump
is, been met with such adulation abroad. In Hostages Square in Tel Aviv, tens
of thousands yelled, “Trump, Trump,” and in the Knesset some members wore red
MAGA-style hats.
Mr.
Netanyahu, whose name was booed in the same square on Saturday night, declared
the president was “the greatest friend that Israel has ever had in the White
House.” There was more talk of nominating him for the Nobel Peace Prize and the
Israel Prize.
And Mr.
Trump himself surprised Israeli lawmakers when he twice made an offer to Iran —
a country that Israel and the United States bombed only four months ago — to
enter talks that could end decades of enmity and isolation.
“You know
what would be great, if we could make a peace deal with them,” he said. “Would
you be happy with that?” He added, “I think they’re tired,” but the offer did
not elicit an enthusiastic response.
There was
more enthusiastic applause when Mr. Trump described Israel’s assassinations of
Iranian nuclear scientists during the 12-day bombing of the country, or when he
detailed the number of B-2 bombers, re-fuelers and support aircraft that
dropped bunker-busters on Fordo, Natanz and Esfahan, the major Iranian nuclear
enrichment sites.
And just
beneath the surface, there were obvious differences over the future of Gaza,
and even over whether the cease-fire that is finally allowing food and medicine
to flow into the territory would necessarily lead to a lasting peace. “The war
is over,” Mr. Trump told reporters, both on Air Force One on the way to Israel
and in the hallways of the Knesset.
Mr.
Netanyahu was far more cautious, welcoming the release of the hostages, and the
fact that no living Israelis were being held in Gaza for the first time in
years, while refusing to discuss whether Israel would resume hostilities if
Hamas does not disarm or leave the territory. Hamas never agreed to that part
of Mr. Trump’s 20-point plan, and its militias were already moving into
neighborhoods from which Israel had withdrawn in recent days.
And even
while Mr. Trump was in Jerusalem, Israel’s defense minister, Israel Katz,
declared that Hamas had released the remains of only four out of 28 hostages
who had died in captivity. “Each delay or intentional avoidance will be
considered a blunt violation of the agreement and will be answered
accordingly,” he posted on X.
Mr. Trump
chose to ignore the possible roadblocks ahead. In his speech to the Knesset, he
wandered off text to assess Mr. Netanyahu’s personality: “He’s not the easiest
guy to deal with, but that’s what makes him great.” He talked at length about
the hours of conversation his special envoy, Steve Witkoff, held earlier this
year with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia.
Mr.
Witkoff, a real estate investor from New York, was described by Mr. Trump as
“Henry Kissinger who doesn’t leak.” Mr. Kissinger, the national security
adviser and then secretary of state under Nixon and Ford, was a master of the
self-serving Washington leak.
Except
for brief references, Mr. Trump did not talk about what it would take to
rebuild Gaza, or the future of the Palestinian people, or the trade-offs
between creating a Palestinian state and its alternatives.
In fact,
there was almost no public discussion of the implementation of his 20-point
plan at all, save for the fact that he was meeting wealthy Arab states and
European governments to form an international stabilization force or fund the
rebuilding of the devastated territory.
In that
regard, elements of Mr. Trump’s speech gave another glimpse of his foreign
policy. He praised countries for their military strength, especially Israel,
which he said emerged “stronger, more respected” than before.
Two years
of conflict with Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran certainly did prove that Israel was
the strongest power in the region. But Mr. Trump did not discuss its diplomatic
isolation, as European powers embraced the idea of a separate Palestinian state
partly because of the huge civilian casualties caused by Israeli attacks.
As usual,
Mr. Trump argued that countries would make decisions based on their economic
interests — that joining the Abraham accords, for example, would enhance trade.
But of course the Middle East is filled with nations, religious groups and
terror organizations that have gone to war even when it risks all economic
progress. Russia did the same in invading Ukraine.
There
were departures from the norm. Mr. Trump is not known for nurturing alliances,
but he expressed gratitude “for all of the nations of the Arab and Muslim world
that came together to press Hamas.”
Yet he
said little about how to build on the momentum of that new cooperation.
In Sharm
el-Sheikh, Mr. Trump marveled at just how quickly the hastily planned summit
came together, and how many people had come: Leaders from more than 20 nations
flocked to join him on a stage adorned with the words PEACE 2025. “These people
all came in like 20 minutes notice,” Mr. Trump said.
Most of
the summit consisted of Mr. Trump effusively praising the other world leaders
in attendance. Mr. Trump signed a document at a table alongside the leaders of
the three other mediating countries — Egypt, Qatar, and Turkey.
Before
signing the paper, Mr. Trump said it was “going to spell out a lot of rules and
regulations and lots of other things,” he said. “It’s very comprehensive.”
But the
version of the document released by the White House did not include substantive
details, instead alluding largely to vague principles instead.
“We
hereby commit to the resolution of future disputes through diplomatic
engagement and negotiation rather than through force or protracted conflict,”
the document said in part.
There
were scattered protests in Israel against Mr. Trump’s visit, and two left-wing
lawmakers belonging to a joint Palestinian-Israeli political party were
escorted out of the Knesset for displaying signs that said “Recognize
Palestine!” They were quickly seized, and Mr. Trump pursed his lips before
saying: “That was very efficient.”
Ayman
Odeh, one of the two lawmakers, wrote on social media that the speeches in the
Knesset would not absolve Mr. Netanyahu “of the crimes against humanity
committed in Gaza.” He later added: “There are two peoples here, and neither
one of them is leaving.”
Trump
made the argument that if he had not destroyed Iran’s three major nuclear
sites, the agreement to get the hostages out of Gaza would not have been
possible. Arab states would not have taken the risk of pressuring Hamas, an
Iranian proxy.
“We took
a big cloud off of the Middle East and off of Israel,” he said, rejecting
predictions that Iran would try to restart its nuclear program. “The last thing
they want to do is start digging holes again in mountains that just got blown
up. They are not doing that. They want to survive.”
But there
were signs of stumbling blocks ahead. Arab leaders have been particularly wary
about the commitment of Mr. Netanyahu, who told Israelis this week that the
military campaign in Gaza is “not over.”
Mr.
Netanyahu underscored their anxieties with a last-minute plan to attend the
peace summit. Egypt’s presidency quickly announced what would have been a major
symbolic moment for the event. But it was then forced to backtrack shortly
after, when Mr. Netanyahu canceled his plans, citing a Jewish holiday.
David E.
Sanger covers the Trump administration and a range of national security issues.
He has been a Times journalist for more than four decades and has written four
books on foreign policy and national security challenges.


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