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#Gaza deal 2025
The deal was brokered by the administration of President Donald #Trump and negotiated indirectly in Egypt with the help of Qatar and Turkey. While the agreement brought widespread celebration, numerous details of the broader peace plan still need to be resolved.
As of mid-October 2025, #Israel and Hamas have agreed to the first phase of a U.S.-brokered ceasefire plan to end the devastating two-year war
First-phase agreement details
The initial phase of the deal, which the Israeli cabinet ratified on October 10, includes the following key provisions:
Ceasefire: A ceasefire is to go into effect, leading to the gradual withdrawal of Israeli troops from parts of Gaza.
Hostage and prisoner exchange: All remaining hostages held by Hamas in Gaza will be released in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel. This includes both living and deceased hostages. The remaining 47 hostages are expected to be released by early next week.
Humanitarian aid: The agreement mandates a significant increase in humanitarian aid flowing into Gaza to address the humanitarian crisis. The Rafah crossing with Egypt is to reopen.
U.S. monitoring: The U.S. is deploying 200 troops to the region to monitor the implementation of the ceasefire alongside forces from Egypt, Qatar, Turkey, and the UAE. No U.S. troops are intended to enter Gaza itself.
Broader peace plan and unresolved issues
The initial agreement is based on a larger 20-point peace plan proposed by the Trump administration. However, negotiations for the plan’s later phases still face significant challenges over these unresolved issues:
Disarming Hamas: The plan calls for the demilitarization of Gaza, but Hamas has not yet agreed to this term. Trump has stated Hamas will face “complete obliteration” if they do not disarm.
Full Israeli withdrawal: While a partial withdrawal is part of the first phase, a complete Israeli withdrawal remains a point of contention for future talks.
Gaza governance: The plan outlines a temporary transitional government run by Palestinian technocrats, supervised by a “Board of Peace” headed by Donald Trump. Eventually, governance would be handed to a reformed Palestinian Authority. Hamas would have no role in this process.
Reconstruction: A major U.S.-led, internationally funded reconstruction effort is planned to rebuild the territory, which has suffered tens of thousands of casualties and widespread destruction.
Security arrangements: An international force comprised largely of Arab and Muslim troops would be deployed inside Gaza to manage security.
International response
The first-phase agreement has garnered international support, with countries like France, Germany, Russia, Egypt, and Turkey backing the broader peace plan. U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres has welcomed the deal as a “desperately needed breakthrough” and urged all parties to abide by the terms.Gaza deal 2025 – Google Search google.com/search?q=Gaza+dea…
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Oct 10, 2025
