Vance
Heads to Israel as U.S. Tries to Shore Up Gaza Truce
With the
cease-fire deal under strain, Vice President JD Vance is set to meet with Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and other leaders.
Aaron
Boxerman
By Aaron
Boxerman
Oct. 21,
2025, 1:54 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/21/world/middleeast/jd-vance-israel-gaza-ceasefire.html
Vice
President JD Vance is scheduled to arrive in Israel on Tuesday morning for
meetings with the country’s leaders, as the Trump administration rushes to
shore up the hard-won, fragile cease-fire deal in Gaza.
Israel
and Hamas agreed this month to a truce in their two-year war, based a plan
outlined by President Trump. On Oct. 13, the Palestinian armed group handed
over the 20 Israeli hostages it was still holding in Gaza, while Israel
released nearly 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees in exchange.
But the
cease-fire is under strain as Mr. Vance starts his trip to Israel, which is set
to last until Thursday. On Sunday, Palestinian militants fired on Israeli
soldiers in the southern Gaza city of Rafah, killing two. In response, Israel
launched a wave of strikes that left a total of 45 Palestinians dead, according
to Gaza health officials. The round of violence was short-lived, but analysts
have warned that the truce is likely to be tested again.
In a
speech on Monday to the Knesset, Israel’s Parliament, Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu offered few details about what he expected to discuss with Mr. Vance.
“We will
talk about two things, mainly the security challenges and the diplomatic
opportunities we face,” Mr. Netanyahu said. “We will overcome the challenges
and seize the opportunities.”
Mr. Vance
will join Steve Witkoff, Mr. Trump’s Mideast envoy, and Jared Kushner, the
president’s son-in-law, both of whom are already in Israel to monitor the
truce. The two were instrumental to brokering the deal alongside Egyptian,
Qatari and Turkish mediators.
Mr. Trump
and his mediators hope to build on the cease-fire to realize an ambitious
postwar vision for Gaza, in which Hamas fighters would lay down their weapons,
an international force would take charge of security and an independent
Palestinian administration would eventually assume control.
Hamas has
expressed serious reservations about that plan, particularly about disarming
its fighters. And both sides have yet to carry out significant parts of the
initial cease-fire agreement, much less reach a broader deal on Gaza’s future.
The
bodies of 15 hostages, which Hamas is obligated to return to Israel under the
cease-fire deal, are still in Gaza. Hamas officials have said that they are
doing the best they can, but that the sheer devastation left by two years of
war has made it difficult to recover the bodies.
Israeli
leaders, including Mr. Netanyahu, have accused Hamas of violating the deal by
not immediately returning more hostages’ remains. Israel has retaliated by
keeping the Rafah crossing between Gaza and Egypt closed until further notice.
The cease-fire calls for that crossing to be opened, allowing civilians to
enter and leave Gaza for the first time in months.
Aaron
Boxerman is a Times reporter covering Israel and Gaza. He is based in
Jerusalem.


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