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Saturday: 13 December 2025
  • 30 September 2025
  • 23:07
Researcher Trumps plan is a necessity due to Washingtons concern about Arab and Islamic circumnavigation

Khaberni - Researcher in Palestinian affairs, Suhail Diab, said on Tuesday that US President Donald Trump's plan to end the war in the Gaza Strip was aimed at providing answers to central issues, the most important of which is saving Israel, considering the initiative as a necessity due to the United States' concern about the wide Arab and Islamic circumnavigation following the Israeli aggression on Gaza.

Diab added, during his appearance on the program "Voice of the Kingdom", that all axes of the Middle East now see Israel as a source of destabilization in the region, which has become a major concern for the US administration and specifically Trump, amid what he saw as Israel’s growing isolation in the region.

He pointed out that what he described as an "international tsunami related to the two-state solution" started from Western Europe and reached the New York conference, and did not stop at the Atlantic borders, but extended to the American interior, and even inside the corridors of the Republican Party led by Trump.

He mentioned that more than 50% of the supporters of the Republican Party now support the establishment of a Palestinian state, and believe that Israel has become a burden on American taxpayers, which prompted Trump to present this necessity initiative that seeks to show a degree of understanding for the Arab and Islamic world, after dismantling regional alliances, striking Doha, and rising Arab anger.

Diab confirmed that what we are facing today is "not a peace agreement, but a little more than a ceasefire and much less than a peace agreement", describing the current situation as "‫هلامية".

He indicated that one of the major traps in the plan is that it produces two contradictory scenarios: either it is used as a platform to launch towards a historical political settlement including a two-state solution or it is merely an American-Israeli attempt to pass a "black cloud" over Tel Aviv and Washington, and to block any possibility of reaching the two-state solution in the near future.

Trump had published on Monday, September 29, 2025, a 20-point plan to end the war in Gaza, which still requires the approval of the relevant parties, and specifically stipulates his chairmanship of the committee overseeing the transitional phase in the sector.

The international reactions to Trump's plan to end the war on Gaza, which still require the approval of the relevant parties and specifically stipulates his chairmanship of the committee overseeing the transitional phase in the sector, have followed one another.

A well-informed Palestinian official confirmed that Hamas began studying Trump's peace plan for the Gaza Strip on Tuesday, within its leadership framework and with other Palestinian factions, indicating that the discussion may take days.

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