Iran, Gaza, and the Gamble

January 8, 2026
US President Donald Trump with Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu, on 13 October 2025. | Photo: Flash90
US President Donald Trump with Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu, on 13 October 2025. | Photo: Flash90

What a wonderful difference to be in Israel after the release of the living

hostages and with the ongoing repatriation of those deceased, nearing completion. Including the return of Hadar Goldin’s body which had been snatched by Hamas in 2014 and held by them for 11 years.

President Trump is rightly being hailed as a hero and deserving of multiple Nobel Peace prizes.

There is widespread agreement to and acceptance of the overall American 20-point peace plan by Israelis, whilst at the same time, very deep scepticism that it is actually doable or deliverable.

Not a single Israeli I met thought that this was more than a pause, even if an extended one perhaps. But a most welcome pause at that.

On the one hand, as I have written on multiple occasions, only the Arab/ Moslem world is capable of bringing the Palestinians to any compromise and this is Trump’s strength—his strong relationship with even the worst of them.

On the other, the promotion of Turkey and Qatar to central roles, is a major threat to Israel, philosophically and materially. Now and into the future.

More quickly than Israel seems to be able to keep pace with, old understandings are now fluid, many balls are in play and every situation can develop in multiple ways.

In just some examples: Egypt has a huge build-up of military forces that goes way beyond the peace agreement; generally, Israel’s hereto sacrosanct Qualitative Military Edge, is now a grey area with Saudi Arabia for instance, in advanced talks to get the most sophisticated US planes, without firstly having to recognise or normalise relations with Israel; Syria’s al-Sharaa, strongly backed by Turkey, has been welcomed in the White House; a real war still rages with Hezbollah in Lebanon; Iran is threatening to attack Israel again; and as noted earlier, Turkey and Qatar, the principal supporters and funders of Hamas along with Iran, are publicly touted as friends of President Trump.

All this against the background of the Saudi visit this week to the White House and the American sponsored United Nations resolution being drafted for the Security Council.

In Israel, Jerusalem in particular, it is well neigh impossible to get around the road closures and traffic jams, as a continuing parade of high ranking US officials come and go.

The Israeli media call this ‘Bibisitting’—both a play on a 2015 Likud commercial and currently, an array of Trump representatives ensuring that Prime Minister Netanyahu sticks to the Trump Plan and that Israel will not be the party that is responsible for its breakdown.

After the failed attack on Hamas leadership in Qatar, and after Trump made Israel apologise, he also promised that Israel would not do so again.

The presence of American administration figures, as well as senior American military officers, with 200 of them based in Kiryat Gat, but also in situation rooms around the country, aim to ensure that Trump’s promises on Israel’s behalf, especially as they pertain to Gaza, are monitored and kept.

What is interesting in its own way, is that it may even be the policies that Netanyahu desires, but cannot say, for internal coalition reasons. It may also suit him to have it imposed as it were, by President Trump.

Netanyahu’s popularity is such that if an election were held today, it is just as possible that he gets re-elected, as that

he does not. He remains the single most popular politician in all opinion polls.

The political opposition remains divided against itself, with no clear leader to coalesce around and Trump’s relationship with Netanyahu, a major factor for and against.

There is no doubt that Trump’s friendship, which is real, and his very positive and well appreciated actions, come with a big bear hug and that this is the most overt and strongest takeover of Israeli independent policy making in my lifetime. You see it each and every day, in many ways.

“Basically, Trump was and remains a two stater to one degree or another. If not now, at some future time… if not actually realised because of Palestinian opposition, allowing the Arab/Moslem states to say that ‘they had tried.’”

This is what happens when you have a series of Israeli government policy vacuums and a very friendly but paternalistic relationship with a superpower that believes in ‘father knows best.’

President Trump’s letter to President Herzog seeking a pardon for Prime Minister Netanyahu is another first, crossing a line on internal matters that has never been crossed before.

Why? That depends on which camp—the pro or anti-Netanyahu—one sits in.

Trump has genuine regard for Netanyahu, but also believes they know how to work together, or how far they can push each other.

Trump is transactional and not ideological. He is a deal maker. A process that requires give and take.

For some in his administration, like Ambassador Huckabee, Rubio et al, they are ideologically in synch with those who understand that Judea/Samaria/West Bank are the heart of the Jewish homeland, biblically and historically.

But Trump in both his first and current terms, without denying such claims, has used annexation, or rather stopping Israeli annexation of these areas, as one of his main negotiation carrots with Arab/Moslem countries.

Basically, Trump was and remains a two stater to one degree or another. If not now, at some future time. And if not actually realised because of Palestinian opposition, allowing the Arab/Moslem states to say that ‘they had tried.’

Not opposed to some partial Israeli annexation perhaps, but keeping a window open for some sort of Palestinian entity on the horizon. It is all about the deal.

Ideological or not, with the practicalities of keeping not only Israel, but also the Arab/Moslem states on board, Trump has ensured that there is now renewed focus by Sec of State Marco Rubio, on alleged settler violence in Judea/Samaria/West Bank.

On Friday the US, Qatar, Egypt, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, Pakistan, Jordan and Turkey, jointly issued a statement of support for a UNSC resolution that included an offer towards “a pathway to Palestinian self-determination and statehood.”

Again, something the Israeli government found hard to deal with due to the usual internal coalition constraints, which has now escalated to the United States taking this forward without Israeli agreement, concerned that not doing so, may affect the Gaza plan.

The Gaza plan itself is evolving with numerous creative ideas emerging to deal with the facts on the ground. Talk at the moment is that there may be a portion of Gaza controlled by Israel, another by the still to be formed international force and the third, an area possibly controlled by Hamas.

No Arab force seems to want to come to Gaza to have to fight Hamas, and Trump does not want Israel to do it for fear of the deal collapsing. The creative part is that reconstruction may only happen in the two areas not controlled by Hamas. With the hope that the Gazans will get rid of Hamas themselves in order to benefit from reconstruction.

Whether this comes to ultimately be the plan or not, it shows continuing American engagement and focus on Gaza, which is a big positive for Israel.

The whole situation, with some serious loss of Israeli independent policy making, whilst at the same time, Israel being in a stronger place militarily and security wise than possibly ever before, always remembering this was achieved with great Israeli sacrifice, puts us in unfamiliar territory.

Which raises a whole set of questions about Zionism, what self-determination really is and how far it can be outsourced, all by itself.

But for now, the atmosphere in Israel is positive, hopeful and optimistic.

Am Yisrael Chai.

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  • Dr Ron Weiser AM is a Life Member of the ZFA Executive, Past President of the ZFA and Hon Life Pres of the Zionist Council of NSW.

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