Fighter flames in Gaza like Donald Trump says "the war is over"

It took Donald Trump less than 12 hours to bring peace to the Middle East. This is at least how the US president’s whirlwind visit was drawn up on October 13. It began with his arrival in Israel in the morning, just as the last group of living hostages was released from their two years of captivity in Gaza and ended that he stood on a stage in Sharm El-Sheikh, a coastal resort in Egypt, with a chorus of Arab leaders, with the slogan in the Middle East, as his background. World leaders have cooled you in a front room for hours while waiting for Mr. Trump would show up. When he did, the top of the hand felt: he took pictures, signed the ceasefire agreement and delivered a speech. He then asked the Grandees to keep “five minutes” of private conversations before leaving for the airport. It hardly looked like a forum to the unresolved details of Mr. Work out Trump’s post-war plan. And during his short time in Israel and Egypt, the president and his peers could provide no new details on how to achieve the next phases of his 20-point plan, which is intended to guarantee the stability, safety and reconstruction of the ruined strip. The most important thing that Mr. Trump did during his visit, perhaps was clear to Israelites that the war had indeed ended. He repeatedly told reporters on the way to the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, that “the war is over.” He continued to make this point in a long and sometimes struggling speech to the Knesset and told Israeli MPs that it was “not just the end of a war, it is the end of the era of terror and death.” The Israeli public almost doesn’t have to hear it. In surveys, more than 70% of the Israelites support that ends the war according to Trump’s plan. While the president ended up in their country, there were scenes of ominous joy, both from the families of the hostages that arose from exile, and from thousands of Israelis in the streets. But since the Peace Plan of Mr. Trump agreed, members of the ruling coalition of Israel openly expressed their hope that the ceasefire would collapse and that Israel would resume the fighting with the aim of eventually destroying Hamas and establishing a permanent Israeli presence in Gaza. Even Prime Minister Binaryamin Netanyahu, despite being the plan of Mr. Trump fully endorsed, was reluctant to spell it out to his partners and repeatedly told Israelites that “the battle is not over and that Israel is still facing” great security challenges “. Netanyahu, even suggested that Isaac Herzog, the Israeli president, should forgive the prime minister for the charges of corruption he faces in court. Ok. You understand that? “And yet, even as he celebrates his victory, Hamas tries to reaffirm his control over Gaza. The first challenge for the ceasefire came when Hamas handed only four of the remaining 28 bodies of deceased hostages to the Red Cross. And the Islamic militant group is already creating a post-war reality in Gaza. Civil clothing dressed. The ceasefire began on October 10, but is sometimes picked up and looted shortly after crossing the border. Gangid with the name Yasser Abu Shabab. tortured. In Gaza, dozens of members of the clan were killed or detained; He suggested that America gave Hamas a green light to deploy his husbands. Palestinians themselves are less soft. The plan of Trump is in the prospect.