Sharm el‑Sheikh summit yields peace pledge; Netanyahu absent as U.S. pushes 'Phase Two'
At a Sharm el‑Sheikh summit co‑chaired by President Trump and Egypt’s el‑Sisi, nearly three dozen world leaders backed a Gaza ceasefire and signed a largely vague peace pledge as Hamas released remaining hostages and parties agreed to prisoner releases and partial Israeli pullbacks; Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declined to attend, citing the Simchat Torah holiday despite Trump’s efforts to secure his presence. The United States is pushing a “Phase Two” 20‑point plan focused on Gaza reconstruction, regional normalization and a multinational security force that would require U.N. authorization, and has deployed CENTCOM personnel to Israel to monitor the ceasefire while negotiations continue over force composition and the plan’s provenance.
📌 Key Facts
- A Sharm el‑Sheikh summit co‑chaired by President Trump and Egypt’s President el‑Sisi convened to back the Gaza ceasefire, with nearly three dozen countries and top UN/EU representatives attending; Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas was present.
- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu did not attend the summit—his office cited the proximity of the Simchat Torah holiday—despite Trump having intervened to secure an invitation and reports some Arab states balked at his presence.
- Trump and other leaders signed a Gaza agreement and a joint peace pledge; Trump declared "peace in the Middle East," called the deal "achieved the impossible," said mediators will begin "Phase Two" of a 20‑point plan, and some outlets characterized the pledge as vague.
- Under the ceasefire, Hamas released the final 20 living Israeli hostages; Israel began freeing hundreds of Palestinian prisoners, pulled back forces from parts of Gaza, and agreed to reopen five border crossings to expand humanitarian aid flows.
- The U.S. is deploying roughly 200 CENTCOM personnel to Israel to monitor and support ceasefire implementation (officials say none will enter Gaza); Adm. Brad Cooper participated in talks and a U.S. command center could be operational in about 2½ weeks.
- Plans for a multinational security/peacekeeping force and interim Gaza governance remain unresolved: Egypt and some countries have expressed readiness to contribute troops within a U.N.‑mandated framework, and officials say a U.N. Security Council resolution would be needed to authorize and define the mission.
- Credit and origin disputes surfaced over the 20‑point plan—Secretary of State Antony Blinken said it built on a Biden‑era framework while Trump rejected that claim—and Trump publicly urged Israeli President Herzog to pardon Netanyahu during Knesset remarks.
- Vice President J.D. Vance identified key U.S. negotiators (Marco Rubio, Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner) and said some Muslim‑majority countries, including Indonesia, had committed to deploy ground troops to secure Gaza—a claim that was later tempered by Indonesian denials and caveats from other officials.
📚 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.
- U.S. officials in 2025 described a two-phase approach to ceasefire negotiations in which an initial hostage release would be followed by an Israeli military pullback to a previously held boundary position, while decisions about Gaza's future governing structure could be negotiated concurrently.
📰 Sources (17)
- Trump declined to commit to a two-state solution, saying “We’ll have to see,” and emphasized focusing on Gaza reconstruction.
- He said any decision on Gaza’s political end-state will be made with regional and international partners.
- Reiterates that roughly 200 U.S. personnel will help monitor and support the ceasefire implementation.
- Notes Israel agreed to reopen five border crossings to increase aid flows into Gaza.
- WSJ says the summit ended with a 'vague peace pledge' signed by Trump and the leaders of Turkey, Egypt and Qatar, citing a draft document reviewed by the Journal.
- Netanyahu was initially not asked to attend; Trump helped secure an invitation, but Netanyahu declined, citing the Simchat Torah holiday, with some Arab states balking at his presence.
- Trump’s Knesset remarks framed the effort as 'the historic dawn of a new Middle East.'
- Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif publicly praised President Trump at the summit, calling him a 'man of peace.'
- Sharif said he would like to nominate President Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize.
- Confirms Pakistan’s participation at the Sharm el-Sheikh summit supporting the Gaza ceasefire and next steps.
- Antony Blinken claims Trump’s 20-point Gaza plan was adopted from and built on a framework developed during the Biden administration.
- Blinken says the Biden team briefly secured a January ceasefire that led to the release of 135 hostages before it collapsed.
- Blinken credits Trump for reaffirming principles of no platform for terrorism, no annexation, no occupation, no forced population transfers, and aiming for conditions leading to a credible pathway to a Palestinian state.
- Trump dismisses Blinken’s claim as a 'joke' in remarks to Fox News aboard Air Force One, blaming Biden/Obama policies for regional conflicts.
- Trump says the Gaza peace agreement has been signed at Sharm el‑Sheikh and declares 'peace in the Middle East.'
- Confirms Hamas released the final remaining 20 living hostages on Monday.
- Trump says mediators will now begin work on 'Phase Two' of the 20‑point plan.
- On‑camera quotes from Trump framing the deal as 'achieved the impossible.'
- Trump has arrived in Sharm el‑Sheikh, Egypt, and is speaking live at the Gaza summit.
- Nearly three dozen countries are represented at the summit, per the AP/PBS report.
- White House excerpts preview Trump’s summit message calling this a 'once-in-a-lifetime chance' and urging Palestinians to abandon violence, with a stated 'hand of friendship' extended to Iran.
- Trump met Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah el‑Sisi in Sharm el‑Sheikh ahead of the Gaza summit and reiterated that the ceasefire and peace process are moving forward.
- AP/PBS specify that “more than two dozen” countries are expected to be represented at the summit.
- Netanyahu was invited to the summit but declined, with his office citing proximity to a Jewish holiday.
- Trump pledged to help rebuild Gaza and urged Palestinians to turn away from violence; he also extended a “hand of friendship” to Iran despite earlier U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear sites this year.
- Timing detail: Trump arrived in Egypt hours late after extended Knesset speeches; he met with some hostage families at the Knesset, and 20 hostages were released Monday under the ceasefire.
- Netanyahu’s office said he will not travel to Egypt for the summit due to a Jewish holiday, clarifying mixed reporting about his attendance.
- New on-record appeal: Trump urged President Herzog to pardon Netanyahu during the Knesset speech.
- Netanyahu will not attend the Sharm el‑Sheikh summit, citing the proximity to Simchat Torah.
- Trump said he is running late to the summit after extended Knesset proceedings and may meet freed hostages at Sheba Medical Center.
- Additional rhetoric: praise for Miriam Adelson; ‘hand of friendship’ extended to Iran; repeated assertion Israel has ‘won.’
- Public, on‑camera declaration in the Knesset that the Gaza war is 'over' as Trump takes a victory lap for the ceasefire deal.
- New emphasis that Trump wants Israel and Arab states to 'embrace the opportunities' for a broader settlement, explicitly including Iran.
- Acknowledgment that a multinational security force and interim Gaza governance require further negotiation despite the ceasefire.
- Summit for Peace is convening in Sharm el-Sheikh co-chaired by President Trump and Egypt’s President el-Sissi to back the Gaza ceasefire.
- Israel and Hamas are not attending; Netanyahu won’t travel due to a Jewish holiday; PA leader Mahmoud Abbas arrived for the summit.
- Egypt’s foreign minister publicly urged continued U.S. engagement, including potential 'deployment on the ground,' and said a UN Security Council resolution is needed to mandate an international peacekeeping force.
- Summit expected to last about two hours, with a joint Trump–el-Sissi statement anticipated after.
- Context updates: Hamas released the 20 remaining living Israeli hostages and Israel has begun freeing hundreds of Palestinian prisoners; Israeli troops pulled back from parts of Gaza as aid groups prepare large shipments.
- Netanyahu will not attend Monday’s Sharm el-Sheikh peace summit co-hosted by President Trump and Egypt’s President el-Sisi.
- Netanyahu’s office cited time constraints related to Shemini Atzeret and Simchat Torah (Oct. 13–15) as the reason.
- Expected attendees include leaders from Turkey, Jordan, Britain, Germany, France, Italy, and top UN/EU representatives; PA President Mahmoud Abbas is slated to attend.
- Israeli opposition figure Yair Golan publicly condemned Netanyahu’s decision in comments to Fox News.
- Indonesian FM denied Israeli media reports that President Prabowo Subianto would visit Israel, tempering speculation about imminent normalization.
- Trump secured Netanyahu’s participation in the Sharm summit via a call to Egypt’s Sisi, potentially strengthening efforts to expand the Abraham Accords.
- Netanyahu agreed to attend after Trump urged him during their ride from Ben Gurion Airport to the Knesset.
- Egypt confirms some countries have expressed readiness to deploy forces to Gaza and that Cairo itself will commit troops within a UN‑mandated framework.
- Details a Security Council pathway to authorize and define the international force’s mission.
- Vance said the President is set to depart 'this evening' for the Middle East to meet hostages.
- He publicly identified Marco Rubio, Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner as key members of the negotiating team.
- He claimed commitments from Muslim‑majority countries, extending to Indonesia, to deploy ground troops to secure Gaza.
- Confirms CENTCOM personnel will be on the ground in Israel by Sunday to monitor the ceasefire.
- Specifies composition and specialties of the U.S. team and that none will enter Gaza.
- Details that Adm. Brad Cooper participated in Sharm el‑Sheikh talks and is now in Israel; command center could be operational in ~2.5 weeks.