No Result
View All Result
SUBMIT YOUR ARTICLES
  • Login
Friday, October 24, 2025
TheAdviserMagazine.com
  • Home
  • Financial Planning
    • Financial Planning
    • Personal Finance
  • Market Research
    • Business
    • Investing
    • Money
    • Economy
    • Markets
    • Stocks
    • Trading
  • 401k Plans
  • College
  • IRS & Taxes
  • Estate Plans
  • Social Security
  • Medicare
  • Legal
  • Home
  • Financial Planning
    • Financial Planning
    • Personal Finance
  • Market Research
    • Business
    • Investing
    • Money
    • Economy
    • Markets
    • Stocks
    • Trading
  • 401k Plans
  • College
  • IRS & Taxes
  • Estate Plans
  • Social Security
  • Medicare
  • Legal
No Result
View All Result
TheAdviserMagazine.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Market Research Business

Trump’s peace plan: Perhaps impossible, but never more necessary

by TheAdviserMagazine
3 weeks ago
in Business
Reading Time: 7 mins read
A A
Trump’s peace plan: Perhaps impossible, but never more necessary
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LInkedIn


President Donald Trump’s 20-point peace plan for the Gaza Strip is a smart plan for turning a bomb crater into a launchpad for peace — for taking a terrible, terrible war in Gaza and leveraging it to not only create a new foundation for solving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but also for normalization between Israel and Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Syria and maybe even Iraq as well. If it succeeds, it could even set in motion a much-needed transformation in Iran.

Hats off to its key architects: Jared Kushner, Steve Witkoff and Tony Blair. Without their efforts, this initiative would not have been born.

But while it may be unprecedented in its creativity, it meets a moment unprecedented in its cruelty, which makes it a long shot at best. If only this plan were meant to solve a border dispute between Swedes and Norwegians. Alas, it is meant to halt the most vicious and deadly two years of fighting between Jews and Palestinians in the history of this conflict.

The indiscriminate murder on Oct. 7, 2023, by Hamas of Israelis in front of their children and children in front of their parents, on top of the kidnapping of babies and elderly people, which was met by the often indiscriminate retaliation by an Israeli army that was daily prepared to kill and maim dozens of Palestinian civilians and children to get one Hamas fighter — while grinding Gaza into rubble — may have done something no previous Israeli-Arab war ever did: It made the necessary — achieving peace — impossible.

Live Events

In a lifetime of covering this conflict, I have never seen it broken into so many little pieces, each soaked in more distrust and hatred of the other than ever before. Aggregating these pieces together to implement this complex plan for a ceasefire, phased Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, hostage release, Palestinian prisoner release and then rebuilding of the Strip under international supervision will be a herculean task. It will require solving a diplomatic Rubik’s cube every day — while all the enemies of the deal try to scramble it every day. I doubt Trump appreciates just how herculean an effort it will be, how much time and political capital it will require from him personally and how much he will have to squeeze both Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, Hamas and America’s Arab allies to do things that they not only won’t want to do, but that could be dangerous for them to do both politically and physically. While Netanyahu said he agreed to this plan, I will believe it when I hear him saying it in Hebrew to his own people and Cabinet. Friedman’s first rule of Middle East reporting: What people tell you in private is irrelevant. All that matters is what they say in public to their own people in their own language. In Washington, officials lie in public and tell the truth in private. In the Middle East, officials lie in private and tell the truth in public.

And Hamas, whose surviving leadership is mostly hiding in a bunker in Doha, Qatar, still has to sign on. “There are so many ways that Netanyahu or Hamas can sabotage this,” Nahum Barnea, the Yedioth Ahronoth columnist, told me — but, like me, he thinks it’s worth a try and commends those who drew up the plan.

Because it is so necessary in so many ways. For starters, anyone with the most rudimentary knowledge of warfare and where it is going can see that Israelis and Arabs and Iranians cannot afford for there to be another war. Smarter and cheaper drones and even missiles are being distributed ever farther, super-empowering more actors faster.

I don’t need to remind Israelis that on June 1 more than 100 Ukrainian drones that had been smuggled into Russia struck air bases deep inside Russia, damaging or destroying at least a dozen warplanes, including long-range strategic bombers. I am guessing that this daring surprise attack cost Ukraine something closer to a big shopping spree at Best Buy than anything approaching the roughly $80 million price of a single Lockheed Martin F-35 fighter jet in Israel’s fleet.

Second, Netanyahu can say all that he wants, as he did on Monday, that if Hamas does not accept this plan, “Israel will finish the job by itself” in Gaza, which Trump said he’d support. Easier said than done. If that happens, Israel will have a permanent military occupation of Gaza facing a permanent insurgency — which its own military leadership opposes. Some “finish.” That is why now that Trump has put this deal on the table, it will not be easy for Bibi or Hamas to definitively reject it.

That leads to the final reason this deal is necessary even if it seems impossible. The proliferation of social media, particularly TikTok, means that video of every single civilian casualty — every dismembered civilian — can now be broadcast to the smartphone of everyone on the planet. So, as Israel is discovering, the only way it can defeat an enemy like Hamas, embedded among civilians, is at the price of making itself a pariah among nations and having its sports teams, academics and entertainers shunned around the world.

Netanyahu can declare, with some real justification, that Israel is defending Western democratic values by defeating the Islamo-fascist Hamas in Gaza. Hamas is a terrible organization — most of all for Palestinians. But today any teenager on TikTok can also see how, at the same time, Bibi and Israel’s Jewish supremacists are perpetuating Western-style settler colonialism in the West Bank. No one is fooled — and I mean no one.

A “Pew poll, carried out in March 2025, found a significant shift in younger Republicans’ views of Israel since 2022, with views of Republicans under 50 years old becoming far more negative of Israel (50%) compared to 35% in 2022 — a 15-point shift,” according to University of Maryland professor Shibley Telhami, who analyzed this and other survey data.

This peace plan is necessary because we must not give up on a two-state solution — no matter how unlikely, because it remains the only just and rational outcome for this conflict. But we have to recognize that we cannot get there from here.

We need a bridge that builds trust where every shred of trust has been destroyed. This plan proposes to do so by effectively creating a U.N.-approved mandate for putting Gaza under the supervision of an international governing body and military force with Arab approval and input from the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank. The logic is that until and unless Palestinians in Gaza can build and demonstrate the capacity to govern there, it is impossible to talk about a two-state solution.

But to give Palestinians the best chance to demonstrate that, they need not only international support, but also for Israel to get out of the way in Gaza, and, I would add, halt all Israeli settlement-building in the West Bank, which has been designed to erase any possibility of Palestinian sovereignty there one day. Israel must be made to leave open the possibility of Palestinian statehood if the Palestinians achieve certain governance metrics. Only Trump — whose plan acknowledges statehood “as the aspiration of the Palestinian people” — can force that upon Bibi.

But here is the hidden incentive for Israel to seize on this Trump plan. Israel’s devastating destruction of both Iran and Hezbollah’s military capacity was a tactical military victory that has opened up enormous new possibilities for regional integration.

It led to the toppling of Iran’s puppet regime in Syria and paved the way for a fragile democratic coalition to take power there. It created the space for Lebanon’s best leadership duo since the civil war — President Joseph Aoun and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam — to free Lebanon’s frail democracy from the death grip of Iran and Hezbollah. It has also opened more space for the democratically elected government of Iraq to gain better control of the pro-Iranian militias there.

At the same time, it has triggered a quiet debate inside Iran about the whole efficacy of spending billions of dollars, and making Tehran an international pariah, to support losers like Hamas and Hezbollah and permanently threaten Israel.

If, if, if this Trump peace plan can create a bridge back to a two-state solution, it will give enormous leeway for Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Syria and even Iraq to consider joining the Abraham Accords and normalize relations with Israel.

In other words, it would turn the tactical military defeat Israel and the Trump administration inflicted on Iran in the 12-day war into a strategic achievement.

Trump actually went out of his way in his White House news conference on Monday to signal to Iran that he is open to a new relationship, if Tehran is. “Who knows, maybe even Iran can get in there,” Trump said, speaking of the Abraham Accords, with Netanyahu standing close by.

Raghida Dergham, executive chair of the Beirut Institute, observed the other day in a smart essay published in Annahar Al-Arabi, that for this to happen, Israel must overcome its “siege mentality and militarized bravado” and Iran must overcome its “bazaar mentality, swinging between bluster and concession, escalation and retreat.”

Iran’s leadership, she noted, keeps moving “one step toward compromise and two steps toward escalation, still clinging to the illusion that time favors them. But beneath their defiance lies quiet panic. In this cornered state, Tehran continues to make costly miscalculations, particularly around Israel and the dwindling myths of the so-called ‘Axis of Resistance,’ led by the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps in Lebanon, Iraq and Yemen, and to a lesser extent in Syria, where Iran’s networks have been severed.”

If this Trump deal goes ahead, it will so isolate Iran that maybe, finally, it will also trigger a real internal struggle and change of strategy there.

My bottom line: If you are a betting person, bet that the necessary will be impossible — you have a lot of history on your side that says the closer we get to peace, the more the haters will derail it.

If you are a hoping person, hope that this time will be different.

If you are praying person, pray that everything you know about this region, its current leaders and the poisonous legacy of the Gaza war will be overcome — because somehow the key players all realize that this really is the last train to somewhere decent and the next one, and all those ever after, will be nonstops to the gates of hell.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Add ET Logo as a Reliable and Trusted News Source



Source link

Tags: ImpossiblePeaceplanTrumps
ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

Electronic Tattoos – The Forewarned Mark Of The Beast

Next Post

A Beginner’s Guide to Filing a Personal Injury Claim After a DUI Accident

Related Posts

edit post
Tomatoes Rs 600 per kg, capsicum Rs 300: Pakistanis are paying a heavy price after conflict with Afghanistan

Tomatoes Rs 600 per kg, capsicum Rs 300: Pakistanis are paying a heavy price after conflict with Afghanistan

by TheAdviserMagazine
October 24, 2025
0

Prices of essential goods have sharply increased in both Pakistan and Afghanistan after border closures disrupted cross-border trade between the...

edit post
Goldman aims for ‘PE returns’ with new ETF

Goldman aims for ‘PE returns’ with new ETF

by TheAdviserMagazine
October 23, 2025
0

Goldman Sachs Asset Management is teaming up with MSCI Inc. to launch an exchange-traded fund that aims to deliver returns...

edit post
Tesla’s weak earnings show how the ‘Musk Magic’ Premium is inflating its share price

Tesla’s weak earnings show how the ‘Musk Magic’ Premium is inflating its share price

by TheAdviserMagazine
October 23, 2025
0

Over the past year, on the day after Tesla unveils its latest quarterly report, this writer has calculated a metric...

edit post
Former BLS chief warns Powell is “flying blind” at a pivotal time for the Fed

Former BLS chief warns Powell is “flying blind” at a pivotal time for the Fed

by TheAdviserMagazine
October 23, 2025
0

The Federal Reserve faces an unprecedented challenge as it prepares to set interest rates next week—making its decision with almost no...

edit post
With  trillion pay package on the line, Elon Musk blasts influential firms telling shareholders to reject it: ‘Those guys are corporate terrorists’

With $1 trillion pay package on the line, Elon Musk blasts influential firms telling shareholders to reject it: ‘Those guys are corporate terrorists’

by TheAdviserMagazine
October 23, 2025
0

Elon Musk stole the show in the final minutes of Tesla’s Wednesday earnings call to label the advisory firms pushing...

edit post
One Nation, One Workforce: Govt plans integrated system to ensure social-security portability for all workers

One Nation, One Workforce: Govt plans integrated system to ensure social-security portability for all workers

by TheAdviserMagazine
October 23, 2025
0

New Delhi: The ministry of labour and employment plans to build a unified One Nation Integrated Workforce Architecture that will...

Next Post
edit post
A Beginner’s Guide to Filing a Personal Injury Claim After a DUI Accident

A Beginner’s Guide to Filing a Personal Injury Claim After a DUI Accident

edit post
Drivers, Challenges & Key Players

Drivers, Challenges & Key Players

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
edit post
77-year-old popular furniture retailer closes store locations

77-year-old popular furniture retailer closes store locations

October 18, 2025
edit post
Pennsylvania House of Representatives Rejects Update to Child Custody Laws

Pennsylvania House of Representatives Rejects Update to Child Custody Laws

October 7, 2025
edit post
What to Do When a Loved One Dies in North Carolina

What to Do When a Loved One Dies in North Carolina

October 8, 2025
edit post
Probate vs. Non-Probate Assets: What’s the Difference?

Probate vs. Non-Probate Assets: What’s the Difference?

October 17, 2025
edit post
California Attorney Pleads Guilty For Role In 2M Ponzi Scheme

California Attorney Pleads Guilty For Role In $912M Ponzi Scheme

October 15, 2025
edit post
Baby Boomers Are Flocking to This Florida Town — but Not for the Weather

Baby Boomers Are Flocking to This Florida Town — but Not for the Weather

October 9, 2025
edit post
Ikea CEO Jesper Brodin may get chance to run UN division like a business

Ikea CEO Jesper Brodin may get chance to run UN division like a business

0
edit post
SBI-Owned B2C2 Announces Zero-Fee Stablecoin Swap Platform for Institutions

SBI-Owned B2C2 Announces Zero-Fee Stablecoin Swap Platform for Institutions

0
edit post
China strikes conciliatory tone ahead of expected Trump-Xi meeting

China strikes conciliatory tone ahead of expected Trump-Xi meeting

0
edit post
WEP/GPO Repealed—Now What? 6 Steps for Teachers, Firefighters, and Public Workers to Recheck Benefits in 2025

WEP/GPO Repealed—Now What? 6 Steps for Teachers, Firefighters, and Public Workers to Recheck Benefits in 2025

0
edit post
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals – ALNY: Volkskrankheit Bluthochdruck im Visier!

Alnylam Pharmaceuticals – ALNY: Volkskrankheit Bluthochdruck im Visier!

0
edit post
Fireblocks buys Israeli crypto wallet co Dynamic

Fireblocks buys Israeli crypto wallet co Dynamic

0
edit post
Alnylam Pharmaceuticals – ALNY: Volkskrankheit Bluthochdruck im Visier!

Alnylam Pharmaceuticals – ALNY: Volkskrankheit Bluthochdruck im Visier!

October 24, 2025
edit post
China strikes conciliatory tone ahead of expected Trump-Xi meeting

China strikes conciliatory tone ahead of expected Trump-Xi meeting

October 24, 2025
edit post
Hyperliquid Price Breaks Key Resistance as B Fundraising and IPO Plans Gain Traction

Hyperliquid Price Breaks Key Resistance as $1B Fundraising and IPO Plans Gain Traction

October 24, 2025
edit post
Tomatoes Rs 600 per kg, capsicum Rs 300: Pakistanis are paying a heavy price after conflict with Afghanistan

Tomatoes Rs 600 per kg, capsicum Rs 300: Pakistanis are paying a heavy price after conflict with Afghanistan

October 24, 2025
edit post
Europe Fears A US Civil War – Whiskey Rebellion To Now

Europe Fears A US Civil War – Whiskey Rebellion To Now

October 24, 2025
edit post
US Dollars Go On-Chain as Uphold and Vast Bank Fuse Banking With Blockchain

US Dollars Go On-Chain as Uphold and Vast Bank Fuse Banking With Blockchain

October 23, 2025
The Adviser Magazine

The first and only national digital and print magazine that connects individuals, families, and businesses to Fee-Only financial advisers, accountants, attorneys and college guidance counselors.

CATEGORIES

  • 401k Plans
  • Business
  • College
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Economy
  • Estate Plans
  • Financial Planning
  • Investing
  • IRS & Taxes
  • Legal
  • Market Analysis
  • Markets
  • Medicare
  • Money
  • Personal Finance
  • Social Security
  • Startups
  • Stock Market
  • Trading

LATEST UPDATES

  • Alnylam Pharmaceuticals – ALNY: Volkskrankheit Bluthochdruck im Visier!
  • China strikes conciliatory tone ahead of expected Trump-Xi meeting
  • Hyperliquid Price Breaks Key Resistance as $1B Fundraising and IPO Plans Gain Traction
  • Our Great Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use, Legal Notices & Disclosures
  • Contact us
  • About Us

© Copyright 2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Financial Planning
    • Financial Planning
    • Personal Finance
  • Market Research
    • Business
    • Investing
    • Money
    • Economy
    • Markets
    • Stocks
    • Trading
  • 401k Plans
  • College
  • IRS & Taxes
  • Estate Plans
  • Social Security
  • Medicare
  • Legal

© Copyright 2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.