President Donald Trump said Monday that he and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had a “very productive” meeting at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida as they held critical talks surrounding the next phase of the fragile Gaza ceasefire.
At a news conference after the meeting, Trump said the two leaders have “very little difference in what we’re looking at and where we want to be.” Asked whether he had concerns about how Israel was negotiating the peace proposal, Trump said he was instead concerned about “what other people are doing or maybe aren’t doing.” Israel, he said, “has lived up to the plan, 100%.”
Earlier in the day, Trump spoke with reporters about the ceasefire, as well as Iran and Venezuela, as Netanyahu stood by. He said he believed that reconstruction in Gaza would begin soon, and he threatened Iran that if it begins building up its nuclear capability, he would support another strike “immediately.”
“I now hear that Iran is trying to build up again,” he added, “and if they are, we have to knock them down. We’ll knock them down. We’ll knock the hell out of them.”
Trump emphasized that he would like to get to phase two of the Gaza ceasefire deal “as quickly as we can,” adding that “there has to be a disarmament, we have to disarm with Hamas.” He said after the meeting that Hamas “will be given a very short period of time” to disarm, but did not specify how long.
The second phase requires Hamas’ disarmament, the beginning of reconstruction of the Gaza Strip and the creation of post-war governance.
Referring to the reconstruction of Gaza after the meeting, Trump suggested that the process for “certain things” had begun, including for sanitary conditions, though he did not elaborate. About 81% of all structures in the Gaza Strip have been damaged or destroyed as of October, according to U.N. satellite assessments.
The initial phase of the 20-point proposal included limited Israeli troop withdrawal, increased aid to Gaza and the release of Israeli hostages in exchange for Palestinian prisoners. All living hostages have been released to Israel. All but one of the deceased hostages have been returned.
The talks come as progress has stalled before phase two of the agreement has even surfaced, and amid growing international concern that the proposal is at risk of collapsing.
The agreement for the ceasefire went into effect on Oct. 10, three days after the two-year anniversary of the initial Hamas attack on Israel that killed more than 1,200 people, with Hamas taking 254 hostages. According to the Gaza Health Ministry, the death toll in the Gaza Strip has surpassed 70,000 people since Israel launched its military campaign there after Hamas’ attack.
Part of Trump’s push to end the conflict is to establish a Board of Peace, proposed as a transitional administration to govern Gaza to be chaired by Trump and involve other world leaders.
But even after two months since brokering the plan, Trump faces hurdles advancing the peace deal as significant parts of it remain undefined, including the blueprint for the international stabilization force to maintain security called for by the plan, and as Israel and Hamas have accused each other of major breaches of the deal.
The truce has been further tested by several airstrikes from both sides since the ceasefire, including targeted strikes that killed a top Hamas commander in Gaza, confirmed by Hamas earlier this month.
Iranian missile tests sparked concerns in the region last week despite Trump’s claim that the country’s nuclear sites were “completely and totally obliterated” after the U.S. carried out airstrikes on key nuclear facilities in June.
During a joint news conference with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides last week, Nentanyahu said, “We are not seeking confrontation with” Iran but instead, “stability, prosperity and peace.”
Trump also gave few details Monday about a U.S. operation in Venezuela that he said took out a “big facility,” saying that there was a “major explosion in the dock area where they load the boats up with drugs.” Last week, Trump said on a conservative talk-radio show that under his orders, the U.S. military had “taken out” a facility in Venezuela two days before.









