Trump 20 points, more politics less peace

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The 20-point “Trump plan” for Gaza like many “peace proposals” in this conflict contains ambitions, contradictions, and power imbalances that make it problematic from a justice and legitimacy perspective. The plan calls for an immediate ceasefire, the suspension of military operations, and a freezing of the front lines until the specified conditions are met. Within 72 hours of Israel accepting, all hostages (alive and deceased) would be returned. Israel would release a large number of Palestinian detainees, including those held since October 2023, and release the remains of deceased Palestinians.  Gaza would be governed in the interim by a technocratic, apolitical Palestinian committee, under oversight of a new international body called the “Board of Peace”, chaired by Trump (with Tony Blair mentioned).Hamas and other factions would have no role in governance, must disarm, and tunnels/weapons infrastructure would be destroyed. An International Stabilization Force (ISF) would be deployed to maintain security, train a vetted Palestinian police, control border areas, and oversee demilitarization. Israel would withdraw in phases, handing over territory to ISF/control by transitions, with a security perimeter possibly remaining until stabilization is assured. The plan emphasizes reconstruction and aid, infrastructure restoration, and an economic development plan (e.g., industrial zones, tariffs).  The plan says no forced displacement; people can leave if they want and return. It envisions eventually handing governance back to a reformed Palestinian Authority, contingent on a reform program, and mentions “a credible pathway to Palestinian statehood” (but vaguely). From these, we can see the plan is quite heavy on security demands on the Palestinian side, while critical safeguards, accountability, and self-determination guarantees remain either vague or absent. (Some analysts explicitly argue the plan “favors Israel” in its structural balance.) Power asymmetry and lack of negotiation involvement by Palestinians. The plan was negotiated largely between the U.S. and Israel and with Arab mediators. Hamas and many Palestinian stakeholders were not part of drafting, undermining legitimacy.  How can main party not involved in the plan. No enforceable guarantees for Palestinians.
The plan contains aspirational language (“pathway to self-determination”) but lacks binding commitments: e.g. how and when Israel must withdraw, what legal protections Palestinians would have, what recourse if Israel reneges. Demolition, compensation, rebuilding, and accountability left vague. There is little to no detail about reparations, compensation for demolished homes and infrastructure, or legal redress for civilians. Reconstruction is promised, but control over that and accountability mechanisms are opaque. Analysts note the absence of guarantee clauses for Palestinians. Exclusion of Hamas (or Palestinian factions) from governance. The plan bars Hamas and other factions from any role, which is especially problematic given the on-ground reality that many in Gaza retain loyalty or dependence on Hamas infrastructure. Marginalizing factions without inclusion risks sparking further resistance or undermining stability. Heavy security controls and permanence of Israeli influence
The ISF, demilitarization, security perimeters, and staged withdrawals- all give Israel leverage, potentially indefinite, over Gaza’s security. The plan allows a security presence until “stability” is confirmed, but that is a vague standard. Vagueness or lack of timeline Key have no clear deadlines or enforcement. A “phased” withdrawal and conditions-based transitions could be used to delay or stall. Risk of façade reforms and external control with the “Board of Peace” chaired by Trump/Blair and dominated by external oversight, Gaza governance could become a technocratic façade with limited real power for Palestinians. Critics warn this resembles colonial or trustee models more than genuine self-governance.  Credibility and commitment concerns.Given past failures of peace plans and broken promises, many will doubt the will or capacity of the involved parties to stick to the plan, especially under pressure. That skepticism is wide in Palestinian commentary. Regional and political constraints Muslim-majority or Arab states have limited domestic space and may face internal pressures; many may prefer symbolic support rather than bold confrontation. So even if there is widespread disapproval, coordinated, forceful protest is politically difficult.Half of the points are one-sided to Israel’s benefit”: The security and demilitarization burdens are heavy on Palestinians, while Israel retains leverage over security transition and withdrawal. The balance is skewed. Clause to compensate demolished buildings”: Indeed, the plan offers aid and reconstruction but lacks clear compensation clauses or legal enforcement for rebuilding or reparations. How can one decide the future of Palestinians without including them?” The plan’s exclusion of Palestinian factions, especially the people on the ground, weakens its legitimacy and raises the risk of resistance or rejection. Muslim countries should protest but no movement”: Many Muslim-majority states have publicly welcomed or at least not strongly opposed the plan (e.g. Pakistan welcomed it). But public diplomacy is different from robust political mobilization. Some states may see strategic or diplomatic benefit in backing a U.S. initiative, or feel limited in confronting the U.S. or Israel. Given all of the above, here is how I assess the prospects: Hamas acceptance is unlikely as is.The demands for full disarmament, exclusion from governance, and immediate release of all hostages are extremely high for Hamas. They have historically rejected disarmament without a credible guarantee of statehood or security.They are reviewing “in good faith” but have expressed reservations. Israel might accept parts, but with caveats and delays
Netanyahu has publicly accepted the plan but with significant caveats, such as maintaining security control and resisting a Palestinian. state.Israel could selectively accept parts while resisting those that limit its strategic control. Implementation will be extremely challenging if agreement is reached, putting it into practice (withdrawals, demilitarization, new governance, reconstruction) will require enormous coordination, guarantee mechanisms, enforcement, funding, and on-the-ground legitimacy.
Any breakdown would risk resumption of conflict.Regional backing may be superficial.Many Arab and Muslim states have expressed diplomatic support (for ending violence, ceasefire, etc.)  , but real pressure on Israel or the U.S. is unlikely unless there’s popular mobilization or strong geopolitical constraints.
1. Fallback to status quo or renewed conflict
If Hamas rejects or implementation fails, Israel might resume military operations. The plan even includes a clause that the terms could proceed in “terror-free areas” seized by Israel.
2. Possibility of a partial deal or modified plan
A more realistic scenario is that certain elements (ceasefire, hostage exchange, reconstruction) get agreed, while governance, security, and long-term political questions are postponed, renegotiated, or reworked.
3. Public opinion and legitimacy problems
Palestinians (in Gaza, West Bank, diaspora) and sympathetic global civil society may reject the plan as unjust, undermining any legitimacy and making implementation volatile.
I see this plan as more of a framework or pressure tool than a fair, final solution. Its function may be more to shift the diplomatic narrative, put pressure on Hamas, and position the U.S. as mediator, than to deliver justice.
Unless rebalanced significantly (stronger Palestinian safeguards, clearer timelines, binding accountability, inclusion of Palestinian voices), it risks being a trap a deal in name but not in substance.
For acceptance, the plan would need substantial modifications: explicit compensation and reconstruction guarantees, inclusion of Palestinian participation, binding enforcement mechanisms, clearer pathways to sovereignty, and phased security transitions with genuine trust-building.
Muslim nations and the Global South could play a stronger role in shaping or rejecting it, but that requires coherence, moral consistency, and willingness to challenge great power pressure.