Trump says Hamas facing tight ceasefire decision deadline

By 
 updated on July 4, 2025

Hamas is teetering on a 60-day ceasefire deal, with Donald Trump declaring their decision looms within 24 hours, as the Daily Mail reports. The proposal, backed by Israel and the U.S., aims to halt Gaza’s bloodshed, but skepticism runs high given past failures. Trust in Hamas’ commitment feels thinner than a Gaza aid package.

Israel greenlit the ceasefire terms first, offering a phased withdrawal from Gaza in exchange for hostages, while mediators from the U.S., Qatar, and Egypt push for a permanent end to the conflict. A prior ceasefire collapsed when Israeli strikes were said to have killed over 400 Palestinians, proving promises of peace often dissolve faster than woke talking points. The deal hinges on Hamas releasing living and deceased Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners.

Trump’s optimism, touting a “done deal” on Truth Social, smells of bravado when Hamas’ track record suggests defiance. U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee echoed the sentiment, pinning hopes on Hamas’ unlikely cooperation. Their faith in terrorists playing nice ignores the chaos since October 2023.

Hamas’ 2023 attack ignites conflict

Hamas’ Oct 7, 2023, assault on Israel, killing 1,200 and snatching 250 hostages, sparked Israel’s relentless military response. Over 56,000 Palestinians are said by some estimates to have died since, with large proportions of Gaza residents displaced, per Gaza’s Health Ministry. The progressive chorus cries “genocide,” but Israel is defending its survival, not chasing headlines.

Israel’s blockade after a March 2024 ceasefire collapse choked off Gaza’s aid, leaving humanitarian conditions in tatters. Expanded military operations followed, with strikes on Jan. 30, 2025, killing dozens more. Bleeding hearts may wail, but Hamas’ rockets don’t exactly scream “peace.”

Since May 2024, thousands of Palestinians are said to have perished in Israel’s campaign, a grim toll fueling accusations of war crimes Israel firmly denies. Netanyahu’s vow on Jan. 30 to retrieve all hostages resonates with Israelis tired of Hamas’ games. Public support for ending the war surged, especially after Israel’s strikes on Iran.

Netanyahu’s hostage pledge gains traction

“I feel a deep commitment,” Netanyahu told Nir Oz kibbutz residents, promising to bring every hostage home. His resolve, backed by Israel’s military might, contrasts with Hamas’ stalling tactics. The prime minister’s upcoming Washington meeting with Trump signals a unified front against terror.

Trump’s earlier pitch for a U.S. takeover of Gaza, slammed as “ethnic cleansing” by the UN and rights experts, haunts the ceasefire talks. “I want the people of Gaza to be safe,” he told reporters, dodging the controversy with less grace than a DNC spin doctor. His focus now is on sealing the deal, not rehashing old fights.

The ceasefire’s 60-day window, mediated by Qatar and Egypt, promises a pause in Israel’s Gaza operations. Trump’s Truth Social post hailed their efforts, urging Hamas to accept or face worse. Yet, expecting Hamas to prioritize peace over propaganda is like waiting for a woke campus to embrace free speech.

Trump’s diplomatic push intensifies

Trump’s Jan. 30 White House meeting with Saudi Defence Minister Prince Khalid bin Salman touched on expanding the Abraham Accords. “A lot of people are going to be joining,” Trump boasted, eyeing broader Middle East stability. The Saudi’s subsequent call with Iran’s military chief hints at backchannel maneuvering.

Hamas’ decision, due within 24 hours, holds Gaza’s fate in the balance, Trump warned. “We’ll see what happens,” he told reporters, his confidence masking the region’s volatility. Betting on Hamas to choose reason over rockets feels like a long shot.

Israel’s phased withdrawal plan, tied to hostage releases, aims to de-escalate while mediators chase a lasting ceasefire. Past betrayals, like the March 2024 collapse, loom large. Hamas’ history of breaking accords makes this deal as fragile as a Gaza ceasefire itself.

Ceasefire's potential spurs hopes

Netanyahu’s pledge to retrieve all hostages aligns with Israel’s high public demand for peace. His Jan. 30 comments, “We will bring them all back,” carry weight amid rising domestic pressure. Yet, Hamas’ intransigence could derail hopes faster than a CNN fact-check.

Trump’s push for the ceasefire, coupled with his Abraham Accords expansion, paints a vision of the Middle East as calm. Critics may scoff, but his deal-making grit outshines the hand-wringing of globalist elites. Still, Hamas’ next move remains the wildcard.

Gaza’s residents, displaced and starving, need more than promises, but Hamas’ grip ensures misery persists. The 60-day ceasefire, if accepted, could ease their plight, but only if both sides ditch the usual double-cross. For now, the clock ticks, and the world waits on Hamas’ verdict.

About Alex Tanzer

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