Trump Remains Committed to Gaza Ceasefire, but Restraint Becomes Harder for Netanyahu

The Ceasefire in the Gaza Strip Has Been Fragile Since U.S. President Donald Trump Willed It Into Existence Earlier This Month

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has heard growing grumbling from coalition partners about Israel’s tepid response thus far, and the issue represents a line of attack from the opposition that would resound among the Israeli public as the country moves into an election year. Here seen at a Feb. 4, 2025, White House press conference held with President Donal Trump.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has heard growing grumbling from coalition partners about Israel’s tepid response thus far, and the issue represents a line of attack from the opposition that would resound among the Israeli public as the country moves into an election year. Here seen at a Feb. 4, 2025, White House press conference held with President Donal Trump.

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The ceasefire in the Gaza Strip has been fragile since US President Donald Trump willed it into existence earlier this month.

And on Tuesday, the cords keeping war from breaking out again in Gaza frayed further, as Hamas operatives opened fire on IDF troops in Rafah, nine days after it carried an attack in the same city that left two Israeli soldiers dead.

Tuesday’s attack in Rafah came as Israel’s patience was already wearing dangerously thin.

After Hamas failed to return any bodies of slain hostages for a week, it said on Monday night that it would hand over remains it had found that day. Instead, Israel discovered that the casket contained the partial remains of Ofir Tzarfati, a hostage whose body was already recovered by the military in early December 2023.

If that wasn’t enough, an Israeli drone caught Hamas staging the fake “discovery” of Tzarfati’s remains on Monday afternoon in eastern Gaza City in front of the Red Cross.

Even the Red Cross, which maintains strict neutrality as a guiding principle, issued a rare statement calling Hamas’s fakery “unacceptable.”

Published originally on October 29, 2025.

Read the entire article at the Times of Israel.

Lazar Berman is the diplomatic correspondent at the Times of Israel, where he also covers Christian Affairs. He holds an M.A. in Security Studies from Georgetown University and taught at Salahuddin University in Iraqi Kurdistan. Berman is a reserve captain in the IDF’s Commando Brigade and served in a Bedouin unit during his active service.
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