September 30, 2025
After a White House meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Trump unveiled a 20-point peace plan for the Gaza Strip on Monday that aims to end Israel’s war on Gaza, free the remaining Israeli hostages and remove Hamas from power. Netanyahu expressed support for the deal, but he has already backed away from key elements, including a call for Israel to eventually pull its troops out of Gaza. Hamas has not responded yet to the deal. As part of his 20-point peace plan, Trump announced the establishment of an international transitional governing body called the “Board of Peace,” which Trump would head.
After a White House meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Trump unveiled a 20-point peace plan for the Gaza Strip on Monday that aims to end Israel’s war on Gaza, free the remaining Israeli hostages and remove Hamas from power. Netanyahu expressed support for the deal, but he has already backed away from key elements, including a call for Israel to eventually pull its troops out of Gaza. Hamas has not responded yet to the deal. As part of his 20-point peace plan, Trump announced the establishment of an international transitional governing body called the “Board of Peace,” which Trump would head.
Palestinian human rights attorney
Diana Buttu says the deal is “certainly not a plan that is going to end the
genocide. What they’re simply attempting to do is repackage it.” Buttu also
notes that while Trump met with Netanyahu before announcing the plan,
Palestinians were not consulted. Buttu asks, “Why is it that Palestinians have
been forced to negotiate an end to their genocide?”
 
 AMY GOODMAN: During a White House meeting
with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Trump unveiled a
20-point plan to end Israel’s war on Gaza, free Israeli hostages and remove
Hamas from power. On Monday, Netanyahu expressed support for the deal, but he’s
already backed away from key elements. Hamas has not responded yet to the deal.
The Palestinian Authority and several Arab countries have expressed support for
Trump’s proposal. As part of his 20-point peace plan, Trump announced the
establishment of an international transitional governing body.
 
 AMY GOODMAN: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu spoke after President Trump.
 
 AMY GOODMAN: Trump’s plan outlines steps
that could lead to a, quote, “credible pathway to Palestinian
self-determination and statehood,” unquote. But after the meeting, Netanyahu
said he would, quote, “forcibly resist,” unquote, Palestinian statehood.
Netanyahu has also rejected the plan’s call for Israel to eventually pull its
troops fully out of Gaza. The two men ultimately refused not to take questions
— refused to take questions after their joint statements yesterday at the White
House.
Thanks so much for being with us, Diana. Can you respond to what has been put forward and President Trump being the head of this, what they’re calling a Board of Peace, with Tony Blair one of the key players in this, the former British prime minister?
 
 DIANA BUTTU: Well, this plan that has been
put forward is certainly not a plan that is going to end the genocide. What
they’re simply attempting to do is repackage it. And the reason that I say this
is that what Israel wants is to be able to get the Israelis back, but there is
no guarantee whatsoever that they’re going to stop the killing of Palestinians
in any way, shape or form. Instead, what we see is that this is a plan in which
Israel will continue to have the ability to continue to attack Palestinians, to
continue to take over Palestinian land, to continue to attack Palestinian
hospitals, schools and so on, with absolutely no oversight and no
accountability internationally or otherwise. And the idea that this is being
called a peace plan is not only a farce, but is an insult to anybody who
actually believes in peace.
 
 JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Diana, the proposals talk
about the creation of an international stabilization force that would take over
from the Israeli military the security of Gaza, but no clear sense of how this
force would be created and who — the United States would apparently control it.
Could you talk about that, as well?
 
 DIANA BUTTU: Yes, certainly. This plan is
actually very, very, very vague, and one of the things that comes out of it is
that, to me, it looks as though it’s an Israeli plan that has been repackaged
as being an American plan. And I say this because there were no Palestinians
who were consulted in the creation of this plan. In fact, it was just Trump who
discussed it with Arab leaders, and then Trump discussing it with Netanyahu. He
didn’t meet with the Palestinian president. In fact, he didn’t even allow him
to travel to the United States for the U.N. General Assembly meeting. And so
there’s nothing in there where there’s any form of Palestinian agency. So, they
talk about some sort of international force, but it’s not at all clear.
And so, this is my fear, is that everybody wants to see an end to this genocide, and this is why you see so many people who have said that they welcome this plan. But the part two of this plan is the part where it is terrifying, where we’re going to see that rather than there being Palestinian agency, instead, the very people who have carried out this genocide, the very people who funded this genocide, are going to be the ones who are going to be in charge of Palestinian lives. And that’s America and the United States — America and Israel.
 
 JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Also, the proposal supposedly
recognizes, quote, “the aspirations of the Palestinian people” for their own
state, independent state. But as it’s been made clear by Netanyahu, he will
oppose that. So, how do you accept a plan, but at the same time reject the key
aspect of what the entire struggle of the Palestinian people has been for?
 
 DIANA BUTTU: This is why this is an Israeli
proposal that has just been repackaged into an American one. And so, he’s made
it clear that he never wants to see a Palestinian state. He’s said this for
decades. I just don’t know why people don’t believe him. And now he said it
very clearly. And the Americans have also said it very clearly, that they’re
not going to see a Palestinian state, either.
 
 AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about the role of
the Arab countries, the Gulf countries? You have Netanyahu, apparently, with
President Trump, calling the prime minister of Qatar and apologizing for
bombing Doha, for violating its sovereignty and killing — well, there were
something like six people killed, but apologizing for killing the Qatari
security officer, and then Trump now announcing that there’s a deal being made
between Israel, Qatar and the United States, what that is. And, of course, it’s
in Qatar, where the Hamas officials apparently are going to weigh, apparently
as early as today, this deal. The last time they were weighing a U.S. deal,
Israel bombed them, though didn’t kill the major figures there.
 
 DIANA BUTTU: Yes. So, this apology was
hardly an apology, the fact that it took President Trump to get Netanyahu to
make a half-hearted apology. And I think that one of the reasons that Netanyahu
didn’t take any questions yesterday was because he didn’t want to answer the
question of whether he indeed apologized to Qatar.
Thanks so much for being with us, Diana. Can you respond to what has been put forward and President Trump being the head of this, what they’re calling a Board of Peace, with Tony Blair one of the key players in this, the former British prime minister?
And so, this is my fear, is that everybody wants to see an end to this genocide, and this is why you see so many people who have said that they welcome this plan. But the part two of this plan is the part where it is terrifying, where we’re going to see that rather than there being Palestinian agency, instead, the very people who have carried out this genocide, the very people who funded this genocide, are going to be the ones who are going to be in charge of Palestinian lives. And that’s America and the United States — America and Israel.

 
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