Kushner and Witkoff Join U.S. Delegation in Sharm el‑Sheikh Gaza Ceasefire Talks
U.S. envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner joined a U.S. delegation in Sharm el‑Sheikh as indirect talks between Israeli and Hamas negotiators — led by Ron Dermer and Khalil al‑Hayyah — moved to implement President Trump’s 20‑point framework, with discussions centering on the logistics and staged timetable for a hostage‑release/prisoner‑swap and an initial ceasefire. The negotiations came amid intensified Israeli operations and evacuation orders in Gaza City, mounting civilian casualties and humanitarian shortages, and widespread Palestinian skepticism about the plan’s terms and enforceability.
International
U.S. Diplomacy
Diplomacy
Military
U.S. Politics
U.S. Foreign Policy
National Security
War & Conflict
Conflict
Middle East
Humanitarian
World
Public Safety
Politics
Conflict & Security
📌 Key Facts
- Indirect ceasefire and hostage‑release talks began in Sharm el‑Sheikh, Egypt, with Israeli and Hamas delegations (led publicly by Ron Dermer and Khalil al‑Hayyah) and regional mediators present.
- The U.S. delegation was confirmed to include special envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, who were reported to travel to Sharm el‑Sheikh to join negotiations and pressure parties to reach agreement.
- The talks center on implementing President Trump’s 20‑point framework, with U.S. officials and Secretary of State Marco Rubio saying the most urgent phase is the rapid, staged release of hostages and the logistics/mechanics of exchanges.
- Reporting cites about 48 remaining hostages (roughly 20 believed alive); the proposed exchange terms include large numbers of Palestinian prisoners (reports cite about 250 life‑sentence prisoners and ~1,700 Gazans jailed) and set tight timelines (72 hours in the framework, though Egyptian officials said it could be extended up to seven days); some exchange‑for‑remains ratios and logistics were described as logistically difficult.
- Ahead of the talks Israel publicly reduced active strikes and was reported to have halted bombing and moved to a defensive posture while agreeing to an "initial withdrawal line" shared with the U.S.; Israeli negotiators and technical teams were dispatched to Sharm el‑Sheikh to work on implementation details.
- President Trump and U.S. envoys were actively pressing both sides — publicly and privately — urging rapid acceptance and warning of severe military consequences if Hamas does not agree; U.S. officials said Witkoff and Kushner would help apply pressure to clinch a deal quickly.
- The diplomatic push occurs amid intense military operations and a deepening humanitarian crisis in Gaza — including a major Israeli ground offensive in Gaza City, mass displacement (IDF and U.N. figures differ but hundreds of thousands have fled), widespread destruction of infrastructure, and very high reported Palestinian casualty totals (Gaza health authorities cited more than 67,000 dead).
- Significant uncertainty and skepticism remain: Hamas has "partially agreed" to some framework points but resisted full disarmament and some governance elements; many Palestinians and international observers questioned enforceability and logistics, and U.N., Egyptian and other officials urged rapid, verifiable implementation.
📚 Contextual Background
- A peace plan proposed by U.S. President Donald Trump called for Hamas to free all remaining hostages and for the Israeli military to begin withdrawing from parts of Gaza in phases; the plan also proposed transferring parts of Gaza to a "technocratic" Palestinian committee and deploying a temporary security force backed by Arab states.
- The proposed plan specified that Hamas would release the remaining hostages taken on October 7, 2023 within 72 hours of an agreement, and that Israel would release 250 Palestinians serving life sentences plus 1,700 other Gazans detained after the start of the conflict as part of the exchange.
📰 Sources (48)
Distrustful of US and Israel, Palestinians are cool to Trump’s Gaza plan
New information:
- On‑the‑ground Palestinian reactions: widespread skepticism and lack of trust toward the Trump plan in Gaza and the West Bank, with residents saying they will not celebrate ceasefire talks.
- Reported that negotiations progressed in Cairo between Hamas, Israel and the United States (Oct. 7, 2025) and that many Palestinians view the plan as superficial or politically motivated.
- Concrete local quotations describing how the plan’s terms (Hamas to release hostages/give up arms; Israel to end the war/release prisoners; an international board to govern Gaza) are perceived as unfavorable or unenforceable by Palestinians, with specific concerns about Israel retaining perimeter/control of crossings and supplies.
Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner heading to Egypt amid Gaza ceasefire talks
New information:
- CBS quotes White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt confirming Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner were on hand to take part in the talks.
- Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty told journalists that U.S. delegation members would join the negotiations on Wednesday (officially attributing the timing).
- Reporting specifies Witkoff and Kushner planned to travel Tuesday and arrive Wednesday to join the resumed indirect talks in Sharm el‑Sheikh.
Gaza peace talks enter their second day on the war’s anniversary
New information:
- Talks resumed for a second day in Sharm el‑Sheikh on Oct. 7, 2025.
- An Egyptian official said the parties 'agreed on most of the first‑phase terms,' including terms on release of hostages and establishing a ceasefire.
- Egypt’s Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty said U.S. delegation members would join the talks on Wednesday (Oct. 8, 2025).
- U.N. Secretary‑General Antonio Guterres publicly called the U.S. proposal an opportunity that 'must be seized.'
Israelis mourn 2 years after Hamas attack as the Gaza war grinds on
New information:
- On the Oct. 7, 2025 two‑year anniversary, large memorials were held in Israel (Tel Aviv's Hostages Square and at the Nova festival site) organized by bereaved families rather than the government, highlighting domestic divisions over Prime Minister Netanyahu's handling of the war and hostage issue.
- The article includes a direct, contemporaneous quote from U.N. Secretary‑General Antonio Guterres urging immediate, unconditional release of hostages and an end to hostilities.
- Confirms indirect negotiations were entering a second day in Egypt and frames those talks as being spurred by President Trump’s public calls and his 20‑point proposal.
Israeli who was captured on Oct. 7 pleads for return of other hostages
New information:
- First‑person account from former hostage Ohad Ben Ami describing 491 days in captivity, including being held in Hamas tunnel networks under dire sanitary and food conditions.
- Confirmation that Ben Ami’s wife, Raz Ben Ami, was freed in the February 2025 hostage‑prisoner exchange while he remained captive.
- Direct quotes expressing that roughly 48 hostages remain and a personal plea that Israeli authorities secure their return, asserting feelings of abandonment.
As the Gaza war moves into its third year, peace talks offer some hope
New information:
- Reiterates Gaza ministry of health toll of 'more than 67,000' dead and that nearly one-third are children.
- Cites U.N. estimate that 78% of Gaza structures have been damaged or destroyed.
- Includes a direct quote from Gaza civil defense spokesman Mahmoud Basal warning that post-conflict counting will reveal even higher tolls.
- Summarizes Israeli political framing (Netanyahu's statements) and notes humanitarian conditions including famine and constrained aid flows.
Mother of slain Israeli-American hostage hopes for end to war
New information:
- First‑person interview quotes from Rachel Goldberg‑Polin (mother of slain Israeli‑American hostage Hersh Goldberg‑Polin) expressing hope and describing personal loss.
- Case specifics about Hersh Goldberg‑Polin: kidnapped Oct. 7, 2023 at the Nova music festival; Hamas released video ~6 months later; he was found dead by Israeli troops in late August 2024 after ~300 days in captivity; he was 23.
- A family‑voiced tally and concern: the mother cited '42 hostages who were taken alive and survived for hundreds of days and were killed in captivity,' underscoring family fears as negotiations proceed.
Amid talks in Egypt, Trump says there's "a really good chance" for a Gaza deal
New information:
- President Trump told reporters he thinks 'we have a really good chance' of getting a deal on his plan to release remaining hostages and end the war.
- Trump said Iran signaled it wants the deal to happen.
- White House envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are expected to join the talks later in the week, per the article.
- White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said teams are 'going over the list' of Israeli hostages and Palestinian political prisoners as part of implementation planning.
Israel-Hamas negotiations to start, spurred by Trump ceasefire plan
New information:
- Hostages Families Forum (representing families of missing Israelis) sent a letter urging the Nobel Committee to award President Trump the Nobel Peace Prize for his role in the deal negotiations.
- Hamas issued a statement saying it agreed to some key points of Trump’s plan, including releasing remaining hostages and handing over control of Gaza to a technocratic international body, while still resisting other points like disarmament and political role.
- Direct, strongly worded Trump quote urging rapid progress and warning 'massive bloodshed' if talks do not move quickly; confirmation Israeli negotiators would travel to Sharm al‑Sheikh as talks begin.
Pivotal talks between Israel and Hamas begin in Egypt on eve of second Gaza war anniversary
New information:
- Talks officially launched Monday in Sharm el‑Sheikh with Israeli and Hamas delegations led by Ron Dermer and Khalil al‑Hayyah, respectively.
- U.S. envoys Steve Witkoff and (possibly) Jared Kushner are expected participants, underscoring direct U.S. involvement.
- Article reports at least 19 Palestinians were killed by Israeli strikes in the 24 hours before talks and cites a Gaza Health Ministry cumulative toll of about 67,160 dead and nearly 170,000 wounded.
- Quotes and public remarks: Egyptian President Abdel‑Fattah el‑Sisi praised the U.S. plan; Netanyahu said talks would be 'confined to a few days maximum.'
Israel, Hamas meet in Egypt to revive Trump peace plan ahead of Oct. 7 anniversary
New information:
- Meeting location explicitly identified as Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt.
- Israeli delegation described as including Mossad and Shin Bet officials plus Ophir Falk and hostages coordinator Gal Hirsch; Hamas delegation led by Khalil Al‑Hayya.
- Fox reports President Trump publicly urged negotiators to 'move fast' and called on Israel to 'immediately stop the bombing of Gaza.'
- Article notes Hamas skepticism that full disarmament and a 72‑hour complete return (including bodies) is realistic and cites Reuters on weekend strikes that killed 36 civilians.
Self-described 'unapologetic supporter of Israel' John Fetterman weighs in as Trump seeks to broker peace deal
New information:
- Sen. John Fetterman (D‑Pa.) publicly voiced explicit support for President Trump's peace/hostage framework and urged Hamas to accept the deal.
- Fetterman criticized pro‑Palestinian protesters for not pressuring Hamas to accept the plan, posting phrases such as 'Hamas > Peace' and warning that 'TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE OR, MASSIVE BLOODSHED WILL FOLLOW.'
- Fetterman accused his own party of an 'ongoing and escalating betrayal of Israel' and shared and cited recent media headlines (Mediaite, Reuters) tying his statements directly to the administration's outreach to Hamas.
Gaza Peace Talks Are Set to Take Place in Egypt
New information:
- Specifies proposed swap terms: 250 Palestinians serving life sentences and 1,700 Gazans jailed by Israel in exchange framework tied to the U.S. plan.
- Provides estimates of hostages and remains: Israel believes about 20 hostages remain alive in Gaza and seeks the remains of about 25 others.
- Reports an exchange ratio and timeline detail: for every hostage whose remains are released Israel would release the remains of 15 Gazans, and the plan calls for releases within 72 hours — which experts call logistically difficult.
- Includes a U.S. official attribution/quote: Secretary of State Marco Rubio told Fox News that Hamas had 'agreed to the president’s hostage release framework.'
What to know as Gaza ceasefire talks begin in Egypt
New information:
- Location specified as Sharm El Sheikh for Monday talks (rather than generic 'Egypt' or 'Cairo').
- NPR reports Hamas said it has 'partially agreed' to the White House 20-point framework.
- Reporting quotes President Trump telling CNN Hamas would face 'complete obliteration' if it refuses to relinquish control of Gaza.
- Secretary Marco Rubio's CBS 'Face the Nation' comment — that Hamas has agreed to the framework and talks should address logistics — is cited.
- An Egyptian official briefed to NPR expects the hostage-release timetable could be extended from 72 hours up to seven days, reflecting practical recovery/verification concerns.
Trump warns of 'massive bloodshed' if Hamas fails to agree to peace deal: 'MOVE FAST'
New information:
- President Trump posted a Truth Social message minutes before the deadline (6 p.m. ET Sunday) warning that 'MASSIVE BLOODSHED WILL FOLLOW' if Hamas does not accept the plan.
- The article confirms the deadline passed and that technical teams are to meet in Egypt on Monday to clarify final details.
- Trump said the first phase 'should be completed this week' and urged all parties to 'MOVE FAST.'
- Reuters is cited reporting Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has reportedly agreed to the 20‑point plan.
Israeli and Hamas negotiators prepare for indirect talks in Egypt ahead of possible ceasefire
New information:
- Reports Israeli delegation led by Ron Dermer is departing for Sharm el‑Sheikh (noted Monday departure).
- Says a Hamas delegation has arrived in Egypt and that talks will be indirect in Sharm el‑Sheikh.
- Confirms U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff is joining the Egyptian talks.
- Reiterates plan detail that Hamas would release the remaining 48 hostages (about 20 believed alive) within three days under the framework.
- Includes Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s on‑record characterization calling this the 'closest' prospect for full hostage release.
Trump pushing Israel and Hamas for Gaza deal within days
New information:
- Says negotiators are expected to start technical implementation talks in Cairo on Monday (Oct. 6, 2025).
- Quotes Secretary of State Marco Rubio saying '90% of the work has already been done' and that the Cairo sessions will focus on logistics for hostage/prisoner exchanges.
- Reports White House envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner are expected to join talks in Egypt on Tuesday or Wednesday to 'apply pressure' until agreement is reached.
- Includes Trump's direct assessment that he expects the negotiations to be successfully concluded 'within the next few days' and his warning that Hamas faces 'complete obliteration' if it refuses to give up power.
Full transcript of "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," Oct. 5, 2025
New information:
- Transcript explicitly names U.S. special envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner as representing the U.S. in upcoming Cairo talks.
- Face the Nation transcript quotes casualty counts on-air: 'more than 1,200' Israelis killed in the Oct. 7 massacre and 'more than 67,000' killed in Gaza—figures stated in the broadcast.
- Confirms timing: negotiators for all sides will begin meetings in Cairo 'tomorrow' relative to the Oct. 5 broadcast (i.e., Oct. 6, 2025), and includes direct quotes from President Trump calling it 'a big day.'
Rubio says release of hostages from Gaza is "most emergent and immediate phase" of Trump peace plan
New information:
- Direct, attributed statement from Secretary of State Marco Rubio calling the hostage release the 'most emergent and immediate phase' of the Trump peace plan.
- Rubio’s operational emphasis that talks should focus first on logistics and mechanics for getting hostages out quickly and that bombardments must cease to enable safe retrieval.
- Rubio urging specific regional partners (UAE, Qatar, Turkey, Jordan, Egypt) to exert pressure on Hamas to accelerate the release, and noting some decrease in bombardment activity.
Rubio says release of hostages from Gaza is "most emergent and immediate phase" of peace plan
New information:
- Secretary of State Marco Rubio explicitly said the release of hostages is the 'most emergent and immediate phase' of the proposed peace plan.
- Rubio urged that hostage release 'has to happen very quickly' and 'cannot drag on' as Cairo negotiations approach.
+ 28 more sources