Indonesia Leader Offers 20,000 Troops for Post-War Gaza
Indonesia offers 20,000 troops to support Gaza peacekeeping amid calls for a two-state solution and ongoing humanitarian crisis, Indonesia's president said at the UN General Assembly.
- Indonesia has offered to send at least 20,000 troops as peacekeepers to Gaza to safeguard any future peace deal.
- Indonesia is heartened by countries around the world that have recognized Palestinian statehood in recent days.
- Indonesia is willing to send peacekeepers elsewhere, including to Ukraine, Sudan or Libya.
21 Articles
21 Articles
Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto said in his speech to the UN General Assembly on Tuesday that the world must guarantee Israel's security. He spoke out in favor of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He said that his country was ready to send more than 20,000 people to supervise peace in the Gaza Strip. He concluded his speech with a traditional Jewish greeting.
The Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto announced it at the UN General Assembly. In his speech he reaffirmed his commitment to the solution of the two states as the only way to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, condemned the violence in the Strip and open to a future recognition of Israel if it recognizes Palestine. The long history of the contacts carried out discreetly by the most populous Muslim country in the world with the Jewish State.
Indonesia offers 20,000 troops for post-war Gaza, 'heartened' by wave of recognition of Palestinian statehood
At the United Nations General Assembly, President Prabowo Subianto reiterated Indonesia’s “complete support” for a two-state solution, which he said is key for real peace.
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