Ron DeSantis Thinks 'Strong Horse' Donald Trump Might Have Secured Middle Eastern Peace
- This past week, President Donald Trump and his negotiating team brokered an emerging deal between Israel and Hamas after an Israeli military victory.
- U.S. military support and regional diplomatic pressure helped Israel seek to end Hamas's decades-long war, requiring alignment in Yemen, Lebanon, Syria, and mobilization in the Gulf region.
- The ideological outcome centers on the argument that peace must be earned, as shown by silence from Hamas supporters among Western politicians, activists, pro-Palestinian groups, and anti-Zionist media figures.
- Immediate outcomes include the prospect that hostage returns and patron pressure may plausibly end the war by forcing Hamas from government, potentially inoculating Western states from strategic disruption.
- Amid criticism of prior European approaches, Gov. Ron DeSantis, Governor of Florida, said he is optimistic that the deal might stick and that peace could finally be achieved with the president's presence.
11 Articles
11 Articles
With his 20-point peace plan, Trump has succeeded in failing diplomats: Israel, Hamas and the Arabs are moving along. Jan Fleischhauer explains why this works in the podcast.
There is once again hope for peace in the Middle East, but also much scepticism about the feasibility of the US peace plan. Two scenarios for the future
In this role, the US President likes himself best: in Washington Donald Trump celebrates himself for the breakthrough in the negotiations between Israel and Hamas. He wants to travel to the region as soon as possible.
The acceptance in principle, formulated by Hamas on October 4, 2025, of a substantial part of the peace plan proposed by Donald Trump, is very good news in a region that has been missing furiously for two years. Let us remember that it was validated not only by the Israeli Prime Minister, but also by the leaders of the major Arab-Muslim states of the world, gathered in New York on the occasion of the General Assembly of the United Nations. Howev…
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