Israel-Hamas Ceasefire Brings Hope, But Peace Remains Fragile
The first-phase Israel-Hamas ceasefire deal offers relief and hope, but questions linger on lasting peace, hostages, and humanitarian access.
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The first-phase Israel-Hamas ceasefire deal offers relief and hope, but questions linger on lasting peace, hostages, and humanitarian access.
Egypt has set the first phase of a Gaza ceasefire to start Thursday at noon, sending its first humanitarian aid convoy under the truce. Key deal details are being finalized.
The first phase of a Gaza ceasefire is in place, shifting focus to executing and sustaining peace amid challenges like forming a new government, rebuilding Gaza’s economy, and Hamas’ role.
Israel and Hamas have sealed phase 1 of a Gaza peace deal backed by Trump, with the UN promising more aid and reconstruction support in Gaza.
UN Secretary-General Guterres urges full compliance with the new Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal, pushing for an end to fighting and uninterrupted aid.
Despite a new peace agreement, airstrikes in Gaza City and Khan Younis killed civilians, pushing the death toll over 66,000 as hostilities continue.
Hamas says Trump’s Gaza ceasefire plan needs major amendments on war end, Israeli withdrawal timeline, weapons, and a Palestinian-led reconstruction.
Many analysts are skeptical about Trump’s 20-point Gaza peace plan, citing an imbalance favoring Israel, vague implementation details, and a sidelined two-state solution.
European leaders will join President Zelenskyy and Trump in Washington to push for a peace deal, discuss security guarantees, and shape Ukraine’s future.
After his Alaska summit with Putin, Trump shifts from demanding a Ukraine ceasefire to pushing a full peace deal, stirring reactions ahead of Zelenskyy’s DC visit.