This week, President Donald J. Trump yet again proved his critics wrong and made the impossible happen again. Israel and Hamas have agreed to a sweeping ceasefire and prisoner exchange that will see all remaining hostages returned home and begin the first steps toward ending a brutal two-year war. It’s a monumental breakthrough — one that cements Trump’s legacy as the most effective peace negotiator in modern history.
The deal, announced Wednesday night, represents the first phase of Trump’s 20-point peace plan unveiled in late September. Under its terms, Hamas will release all living hostages within days, while Israel will withdraw its forces from most of Gaza “to an agreed upon line.”
In exchange, Israel will release some 2,000 Palestinian prisoners, including 250 convicted of murder, as part of a broader effort to rebuild trust and reset relations between the two sides. Five border crossings — including Rafah, between Gaza and Egypt — will reopen immediately, allowing hundreds of trucks filled with food, medicine, and reconstruction materials to pour into the devastated territory.
For Israelis, the announcement brought scenes of unfiltered joy. Families of the hostages gathered in Tel Aviv waving American flags, popping champagne, and chanting “Nobel Prize to Trump!” Residents of Gaza likewise took to the streets, celebrating what many hope will mark the end of two years of bloodshed and destruction.
“This is the day we have been waiting for,” said one man in Deir al-Balah. Even Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — not known for handing out compliments lightly — hailed the agreement as “a critical turning point,” crediting “our great friend and ally President Trump” for making it possible.
The mechanics of the deal are pure Trump: bold, unconventional, and unapologetically driven by results. After a week of relentless pressure on both sides, Trump bulldozed through the diplomatic stalemate that had existed since the war began on October 7, 2023. His plan calls for Hamas to eventually disarm in exchange for amnesty and the chance to remain in Gaza or relocate elsewhere.
In the long term, the U.S. will lead an international reconstruction effort, with Arab and Muslim nations providing security inside Gaza and Israel maintaining a defensive perimeter along its border. It’s the same pragmatic formula that guided Trump’s earlier successes – focus on strength first, and peace will follow.
In Jerusalem, families who have waited two long years for word from their loved ones woke up in disbelief. “We cried all morning,” said one woman. “It’s been two years that we are in horror.” In Gaza, where entire neighborhoods have been flattened, there was cautious optimism mixed with grief. “We have lost so much,” said Mohammad Al-Farra. “Despite our happiness, we cannot help but think of what is to come.”
Trump’s comments to hostage families captured the directness that has long defined his approach to foreign policy. “The hostages will come back,” he told them. “They are all coming back on Monday.” True to form, he didn’t hedge or equivocate — he promised results and delivered them.
While the ceasefire still faces procedural hurdles, including approval by Israel’s Security Cabinet and parliament, momentum is squarely on Trump’s side – and the side of peace. The Israeli president, Isaac Herzog, has already endorsed the deal, saying it has his “full support.” And with both Israeli and Hamas officials confirming that the first exchanges could begin within 72 hours of formal approval, the Middle East may finally be on the verge of quiet after years of chaos.
For the Trump administration, this agreement is not an isolated success but part of a much larger pattern. Since returning to office, Trump has revived his first-term doctrine of “peace through strength,” leveraging America’s global influence to end violent conflicts rather than start new ones. In just the past year, his team has brokered or facilitated peace agreements between Azerbaijan and Armenia, Cambodia and Thailand, Israel and Iran, Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, India and Pakistan, Egypt and Ethiopia, and Serbia and Kosovo. Each of these deals reflects a return to old-fashioned dealmaking — the kind that prioritizes results over rhetoric and reality over ideology.
Critics, as always, will look for reasons to downplay this accomplishment. They’ll question whether Hamas will truly disarm, or whether Gaza can ever be governed peacefully. They’ll ask whether it’s fair to credit Trump for a deal that required cooperation from so many actors.
But the fact remains that none of this would have happened without him. For years, world leaders talked about peace; Trump delivered it. He has proven once again that decisive leadership, not the failed foreign policy establishment or endless diplomatic niceties, is what moves history forward.
At a time when the world is starved for good news, Trump’s peace deal offers something extraordinary — not just hope, but results. In the streets of Tel Aviv and Gaza alike, the hopeful spirit told the story better than any pundit could.
And for a president who has built his career on doing what everyone else said couldn’t be done, this may be one of his most remarkable achievement yet.
Shane Harris is the Editor-in-Chief of AMAC Newsline. You can follow him on X @shaneharris513.
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