Historic Move Or Risky Gamble? 5 Jaw-Dropping Questions Trump’s Gaza Plan Leaves Unanswered | World News

Washington: On Monday, the White House announced a 20 -point ceasefire plan for Gaza. President Donald Trump presented this with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and greeted him as a historical. However, under the glory, uncertain provisions that can shape the future of Gaza, Palestine and the region in unpredictable ways are mixed.
Here are five critical, unresolved questions in the plan:
How will Gaza be governed?
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The proposal foresees “Temporary Transition Management of a Technocratic, Apolitical Palestinian Committee” to supervise Gaza. However, it does not give any clarity about how to establish the committee or who will choose its members.
Trump and British Prime Minister Tony Blair will lead a “Peace Board için to supervise the committee. The plan remains silent as to how the Board interacts with the Palestinian panel or made daily decisions.
Will Palestinian authority be included?
Trump’s plan states that the transition authorities will manage Gaza as to the “Palestinian authority (PA) reform and“ who can reclaim control safely and effectively.
Meanwhile, Netanyahu rejected PA’s return to Gaza. The White House said at the press conference, “Gaza will be ruled by neither Hamas nor Palestinian authority,” he said.
How will the international force work?
The plan requires a “temporary international stability force üzere to secure Gaza. It is unclear where this power will come from, which nations will send unity and what their definite tasks will be.
Will they act as an army, police or observer? Will they confront Hamas directly? Can they engage in Israeli troops to protect the Palestinians? The rules of participation remain unidentified.
When will Israel be withdrawn?
According to the proposal, Israel will withdraw on the basis of “demilitarization standards, milestones and time frames”. However, no program or criterion has been achieved.
Israel will maintain a “security circle olmadan until Gaza is considered safe from the re -revived terror threat”. Determining that security is not specified.
Is Palestinian state on the horizon?
Trump accepted the sensitive nature of the state at a press conference on Monday. “A few allies’ recognized the Palestinian state stupid… But really, I think they are doing it because they are very tired of what is going on,” he said.
The proposal talks about Palestine’s self -determination, but only behind a cloud of condition. “As the redevelopment of Gaza progresses and the PA reform program is carried out faithfully, the Palestine, which we accept as the desire of the Palestinian people, may have conditions for self -determination and a reliable way to the state,” he says.
Devletlik is conditional. Discussions may be “may”, but recognition is not guaranteed. As in other provisions, this section has been uncertain.
The White House plan promises a new era for Gaza and the region. But these unanswered questions leave a permanent uncertainty: will peace or uncertainty prevail?




