We Need More of Trump’s Unprecedented Diplomacy
October 21, 2025
Gershon Baskin
Is the Muslim Brotherhood from Qatar and Türkiye Going to Take Over Gaza?
Many Israelis are fearful that the multinational stabilization force for Gaza will be formed
mainly of military personnel from Türkiye and Qatar. The mouthpieces of the Netanyahu
government are already screaming that the Turkish and Qatari supporters of the Muslim
Brotherhood will keep Hamas in power in Gaza through the American planned stabilization
force in Gaza. While it is true that the United States utilized the close relations of President
Trump with Qatar and Türkiye and their close relations with Hamas in order to leverage
pressure on Hamas to agree to the 20-point Trump plan and the agreement to end the war and
to return all of the hostages, the United States has no intention to allow Hamas to continue to
control Gaza and to regain its military strength.
First of all, it is entirely not clear that Turkish and Qatari troops will be part of the multinational
stabilization force for Gaza. That is yet to be decided. But even if they are, they will be among
many other troops from many other nations, including those in the region (Arab countries),
from Asia, and hopefully from Europe as well. The creation of the multinational mechanism in
the end of the war agreement made up of Egypt, Qatar, and Türkiye was done to ensure the
maximal return the hostages. This mechanism was created to ensure that Hamas continues to
make 100% effort to find and to return the deceased hostages and to provide technical support
in that effort. It has been reported that Israel has limited and prevented the entrance of
Egyptian, Qatari, and Turkish personnel and machinery into Gaza. If this has not been resolved,
it must be resolved, because those personnel and machinery are part of the process to locate
and to return deceased hostages.
Israel claims that it has the most technologically advanced team and machinery to find bodies
in a war zone. If that is the case, Israel should be using them in the 53% of Gaza which is under
the full military control and occupation of the IDF. Perhaps that is being done, and if not, it must
be done. One of the objective limitations on Hamas in locating deceased hostages is that Hamas
only has access to less than half of the Gaza Strip. Other limitations include the reality that
thousands of Gazans may be buried underneath the rubble of buildings bombed by Israel. There
is good reason to believe that Israeli hostages may also be underneath the rubble as well. Many
of the Hamas commanders who were in charge of the burial of deceased hostages were killed
by Israel and most Hamas commanders did not have this information.
Unprecedented Trumpian Diplomacy
In the process of reaching the end of war deal, following the failed Israeli attack on the Hamas
leadership in Doha, not only did President Trump force Netanyahu to apologize to the Qatari
Prime Minister, on the phone, on camera, the United States also signed a mutual defense treaty
with Qatar. This is unprecedented in US foreign policy. President Trump, Steve Witkoff and
Jared Kushner enjoyed very close relations with the Qataris even before the negotiations
between Israel and Hamas went into high gear under Trump. Those relations became even
closer after Trump needed to disassociate himself from Israel’s bombing in Doha. The mutual
defense treaty between the US and Qatar is not the only unprecedented US policy shift that has
taken place. Kushner and Witkoff admitted on the US TV program 60 Minutes that they met
directly, face-to-face with the Hamas chief Khalil al Haya. These two US businessmen/diplomats
understand the essential element of the personal touch when making difficult deals. It was that
face-to-face contact that ensured that Hamas said yes to the deal.
Witkoff had arrived to the decision to make personal contact before the Doha attack. We were
working on organizing a meeting between Witkoff and the Hamas negotiators in Istanbul to
agree to the 8-point document that was worked out by Ghazi Hamad and myself with the direct
input of Witkoff in the end of the first week of September. Witkoff proposed that the Hamas
leadership come to Istanbul to meet with him and to sign the eight-point document. Witkoff
had received the greenlight from the President to meet directly with the Hamas negotiating
team. That meeting didn’t happen and shortly afterwards, on September 9, Israel attacked the
Hamas leadership in Doha.
Also in the context of unprecedented diplomacy under President Trump, on October 9 at 2:00
in the morning the delegates from Qatar, Egypt, Türkiye, Hamas, and Israel signed the
document “Implementation Steps for President Trump’s proposal for a Comprehensive End of
the Gaza War”. What was unprecedented is that the four member Hamas negotiating team sat
in the same room across from the Israeli negotiating team. This has never happened before. In
my 18 years of contacts with Hamas I proposed many times to the Israeli officials that I dealt
with to speak to Hamas directly, instead of going through me or through the Egyptians or
others. No one ever agreed. There were even situations when I sat with the Israeli team in the
Ministry of Defense headquarters in Tel Aviv and in the presence of Israel officials, I was asked
to call Hamas and speak with them. I did this also from the offices of several ministers in Israel’s
past governments. For President Trump there are no diplomatic red lines if crossing them helps
to reach a deal.
Türkiye and Israel
Going back to the multinational stabilization force, I would like to propose to President Trump
that he uses his personal relationship with Turkish President Erdogan and his leverage on
Türkiye to reach a deal I which in exchange for Turkish involvement in the stabilization force
and in the reconstruction of Gaza, Türkiye should be required to reconcile with the State of
Israel – including the renewal of full diplomatic relations, the re-instatement of flights between
Tel Aviv and Istanbul for both Israeli and Turkish carriers, the return to two-way commerce
between both countries and the renewal of military-intelligence cooperation between the two
militaries. Türkiye must also be required to agree that it will take no part in trying to re-
establish Hamas’s control of Gaza or support Hamas or any other group in the Palestinian
territories, including Gaza to threaten Israel in any way.
Ending the War Should Also Mean Ending the Economic Blockade on Gaza
According to the agreement to end the war, the Rafah crossing was supposed to open today for
the movement of people in both directions. Israel has prevented that which is a substantive
breach of the agreement. The agreement to open the crossing should have been similar to
what was agreed to in 2005 with a more robust European inspection mechanism on the Gaza
side of the crossing. The following is what was agreed to in 2005 and worked until 2007.
The Agreement on Movement and Access (AMA) was an agreement between Israel and
the Palestinian Authority (PA) signed on 15 November 2005 aimed at improving Palestinian
freedom of movement and economic activity within the Palestinian territories, and open
the Rafah Crossing on the Gaza–Egypt border. AMA was described as "an agreement on
facilitating the movement of people and goods within the Palestinian Territories and on
opening an international crossing on the Gaza-Egypt border that will put the Palestinians in
control of the entry and exit of people." Part of the agreement was the Agreed Principles for
Rafah Crossing. According this agreement the Rafah Crossing was to be operated by the
Palestinian Authority on its side, and Egypt on its side. Only people with Palestinian ID, or
foreign nationals, by exception, in certain categories, subject to Israeli oversight, were to be
permitted to cross in and out. The PA should notify the Israeli authorities 48 hours in advance
of the crossing of a person in the excepted categories.
Rafah was supposed to be used for export of goods from Gaza to Egypt, subject to rigid control.
Imports were cleared by PA customs officials at Kerem Shalom under the supervision of Israeli
customs agents.
Now, we need to return to this agreement with several important amendments. The Rafah
crossing must be used for people and goods in both directions. The Egyptians should treat the
Palestinians crossing from Gaza into Egypt in the same way that Egypt treats all foreign nations
wishing to enter Egypt. The goods crossing into Gaza from Egypt must go through a robust EU
based inspection preventing smuggling of weapons and materials for producing weapons. The
EU should treat this crossing as if it was an entry gate into Europe. There is no reason why
goods going into Gaza or exiting Gaza should be under the discretion of the State of Israel. With
the end of the war in Gaza, it is essential that the economic blockade on Gaza come to an end –
if not, we will return to fighting in the future.
The Mandate for the Multinational Stabilization Force
Last, in order for the Trump Administration to create the multinational stabilization force there
is a need for a UN Security Council Resolution and a UNSC mandate for the force. This is the
demand of many countries willing to send personnel to the force. The force established could
be a UN Blue Helmet Force, which is generally military, police, and civilian staff provided by UN
member states and are deployed on peacekeeping missions to help countries transition from
conflict to peace. Their core purpose of a UN Blue Helmet Force is to support political solutions,
protect civilians, and help establish conditions for a sustainable peace. But, Israel is likely to
oppose a Blue Helmet Force.
Another solution could be a UN mandated multi-national force similar to the Multinational
force in Sinai created after the Israeli Egypt peace agreement. The multinational force in the
Sinai is a non-UN peacekeeping organization established in 1981 to oversee the terms of the
1979 peace treaty between Egypt and Israel. Its mission is to supervise the security provisions
of the treaty, monitor compliance, and ensure freedom of navigation through the Straits of
Tiran and the Gulf of Aqaba. The force is made up of military personnel from various countries
and has a civilian and military presence in the Sinai Peninsula. The MFO is funded by Egypt,
Israel, and the United States, along with financial contributions from other donor countries. The
MFO is headed by a Director-General and a Force Commander, who is often from a non-U.S.
contributing country. The Director-General is almost always from the United States. The U.S.
Army colonel in charge of the American contingent also serves as the MFO's Chief of Staff, a key
leadership position. The U.S. provides the single largest military contingent to the MFO, including an infantry battalion and logistics support. This exact model does not have to be
copied and pasted for the Multinational Stabilization Force in Gaza but it does need a direct US
leadership role - both to create confidence for the Israeli side, but also to ensure that all of the
participating countries fulfill all of their responsibilities, especially when and if the situation
begins to deteriorate.





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We Need More of Trump’s Unprecedented Diplomacy