While the direct American intervention in enforcing the ceasefire agreement in Gaza continues, and although the resolution project promoted by the American administration in the Security Council indeed provides rare international legitimacy for disarming Gaza and placing a moderate Arab stabilization force in charge, its extreme ambiguity allows Hamas a significant security loophole that enables it to maintain its authority until the next day, which is the source of concern for the occupation.
Amos Yadlin, the former head of Israeli intelligence, Aman, and Noa Shusterman Dvir, head of the Palestinian program at the "Israeli Institute," stated that "the resolution project promoted by the American administration in the Security Council aims to be a fundamental pillar in implementing Trump's plan for Gaza, with the goal of granting broad international legitimacy to the steps outlined in the plan, through the formation of a temporary Palestinian technocratic government, the establishment of an international stabilization force, the formation of a peace council, and the gradual transfer of control to the Palestinian Authority only after the agreed-upon reforms are completed."
They added in a joint article published by Channel 12 and translated by "Arabi21" that "Israel has clear and important military objectives, which include dismantling Hamas, disarming it, disarming Gaza, and ensuring that it does not pose a security threat. These objectives can be mitigated in a Security Council resolution, and unlike Trump's 20-point plan, which was signed in October by the United States, Turkey, Qatar, and Egypt, the resolution must pass a vote in a forum that includes 15 members, including Pakistan and Algeria, without the permanent members, especially China and Russia, exercising their veto against it."
Israel has clear military objectives that include dismantling Hamas and disarming it.





שתף את דעתך
Israeli concerns about the Security Council bill regarding Gaza the next day