By Ephraim Agbo
When news broke from Cairo that Israel and Hamas had reached an agreement on the first phase of a peace plan, many celebrated, but few truly paused to read between the lines. The images of jubilation in Gaza and Tel Aviv symbolized something historic — a rare convergence of relief and exhaustion. Yet beneath the surface of the cheering crowds lies a fragile political experiment — one that could either mark a genuine turning point in the Israeli–Palestinian conflict or become yet another temporary pause in a long tragedy.
The Anatomy of the Agreement
The deal, announced by U.S. President Donald Trump, promises a ceasefire, the release of Israeli hostages in exchange for Palestinian prisoners, and the withdrawal of Israeli troops from parts of Gaza. The agreement also includes a mapped territorial adjustment — though the exact coordinates remain undisclosed — leaving Israel in control of just over half of Gaza.
On paper, it looks like progress. In practice, it is a test of sequencing: can two sides with fundamentally opposing narratives of legitimacy, justice, and survival sustain cooperation long enough to implement even a temporary truce?
Israeli law requires government authorization for the release of Palestinian prisoners — a process that reflects the deep tension between domestic politics and diplomatic obligation. For Hamas, the sequencing of the hostage release is more than symbolic; it is a strategic test of whether Israel’s commitments will be matched by tangible political or humanitarian concessions.
Symbolism and Strategy in a Ruined Land
The scenes from Gaza after the announcement were striking: displaced families rejoicing amid ruins, children waving makeshift flags, elders weeping as they prayed. “We are happy the war has stopped,” one woman said, “we thank everyone who helped end the bloodshed.” Her gratitude was genuine — but also fragile. Gaza’s joy was not rooted in victory, but in relief from suffering.
In Tel Aviv, celebrations in Hostages’ Square carried a different emotion — the politics of closure. For months, families of those captured by Hamas had camped outside government offices, their grief a visible reminder of Israel’s unhealed wounds. For them, this deal is not an end, but an emotional exhale.
Two cities, two reliefs — but one shared uncertainty.
Trump’s Gamble and the Quest for Legacy
President Trump’s involvement adds another dimension to this story — the politics of legacy. With the Nobel Peace Prize announcement coming on Friday, Trump’s timing was hardly coincidental. His mediation reflects both political calculation and genuine ambition to be seen as a global peacemaker. But diplomacy anchored in personal ambition often comes with fragility: the peace process risks becoming a stage performance where applause matters more than architecture.
This is not the first time an American president has tried to broker peace between Israel and Palestine. But Trump’s approach differs in tone — transactional, image-driven, and heavy on symbolism. He presents the deal as a “win-win,” yet the asymmetry of power remains intact: Gaza is in ruins, while Israel retains military control over most of the territory. What we are witnessing is less the birth of equality than a recalibration of dominance.
The Turning Point Nobody Saw Coming
Behind the scenes, one incident may have shifted the trajectory of these talks. Early in September, Prime Minister Netanyahu allegedly authorized an operation targeting Hamas leaders in Qatar. The attempt failed and infuriated both Qatar and Washington. According to diplomatic insiders, that was the moment President Trump decided to intervene decisively — not just to stop the war, but to reclaim control of the narrative.
It was a rare convergence of outrage and opportunity: Trump, pressured internationally, saw a chance to turn crisis into prestige. Netanyahu, facing domestic pressure and a grinding conflict, saw in Trump’s plan a potential political lifeline.
The Politics Beneath the Peace
Every peace deal rests on competing incentives. In this one:
- Israel seeks normalization — an image of control and stability without fully relinquishing military dominance.
- Hamas seeks survival — political recognition and space to rebuild, even within limited sovereignty.
- The U.S. seeks validation — proof that American influence in the Middle East still carries decisive weight.
- Regional actors like Egypt and Qatar seek credit — leverage that can translate into regional prestige and aid flows.
But here’s the paradox: all these actors are incentivized to start the peace process, not necessarily to sustain it. The moment of signing is easier than the years of enforcement that follow.
Peace or Pause? The Structural Problem
The Gaza deal exemplifies what international relations scholars call negative peace — the absence of war — rather than positive peace, the presence of justice, trust, and mutual security. Ceasefires can stop violence, but they rarely end conflict if the structures of inequality and mistrust remain untouched.
Israel’s partial withdrawal may be militarily significant but politically insufficient. Without a credible reconstruction plan that restores livelihoods, Gaza risks sliding from war into humanitarian dependency — a fragile peace sustained by aid, not agency.
Meanwhile, the question of justice remains unresolved. No mention of war crimes investigations. No truth and reconciliation mechanism. No roadmap for Palestinian governance reform. The moral ledger of this war remains open — and that makes future escalation likely.
The Diplomatic Dilemma
The international community faces a classic dilemma:
- Act quickly, and risk legitimizing a deal that lacks substance.
- Act slowly, and risk losing the fragile momentum of hope.
UN Secretary-General António Guterres has promised full support for implementation, and the European Union’s foreign policy chief hailed the deal as a “significant breakthrough.” But history is full of celebrated agreements that collapsed under the weight of their contradictions — from Oslo to Camp David.
If this peace is to endure, it must be institutionalized, not romanticized. It needs monitoring mechanisms, reconstruction guarantees, and mutual accountability. Without that scaffolding, the deal will be another line in the long obituary of failed Middle East diplomacy.
The Moral Weight of Survival
The most profound truth of this deal may not be political at all — it is human. It is about people who have lost too much yet still dare to celebrate. About children who will sleep without explosions tonight but wake tomorrow amid rubble. About a region that remains trapped between fatigue and faith.
The ceasefire offers a pause — not just in fighting, but in despair. Yet for real peace to emerge, that pause must be filled with justice, with reconstruction, and with the political courage to confront uncomfortable truths on both sides.
Until then, Gaza’s celebration will remain half-lit — joyous, but uncertain; hopeful, but haunted.
In the End
This agreement is not the end of war. It is a political experiment — an uneasy handshake in the dark. Whether it becomes a foundation or a footnote depends not on the signatures in Cairo, but on what follows in the next hundred days.