The US President Donald Trump again predicted the “definitive end” of the war in the Gauze Between Hamas and Israel in the next two or three weeks.
“I think in the next two to three weeks, you will have a definitive end to Gaza,” Donald Trump said, speaking to reporters at the Oval Office.
“It’s hard to say because they have been fighting for thousands of years. But I think we are doing a great job, “he said, adding that the war” must end, but as the Israelis said “they cannot forget on October 7th”.
Asked by a journalist if the US is making diplomatic efforts towards this goal, Trump said that “there was … a very serious diplomatic boost”, while Foreign Minister Marko Rubio also intervened.
“He has never stopped. We were always looking for a solution. We want it to end. But it has to end without Hamas, “Rubio said.
In essence, with this statement he adopts the position of Israel, which has set a condition for the end of the war the complete tradition and disarmament of Hamas, which is unlikely to do so.
It is unknown, however, that Donald Trump’s assessment is based on the end of the Gaza war, given that Israel has made it clear that it is not interested in a gradual ceasefire with which Hamas has agreed.
On the contrary, as the Times of Israel reports, Israel is proceeding with its plan to complete the city of Gaza.
However, Trump often uses the timetable of “two weeks” to predict significant developments, both at the US and internationally.
He is mentioned in these two weeks for both the war in Ukraine and Iran’s nuclear and duty talks, but he has almost never fallen into his forecasts.
‘I have a good relationship with Netanyahu’
At the same time, Donald Trump asked whether he had come into contact with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently replied that he had a good relationship with him and that they had worked to hurt Iran’s nuclear program.
“We had great success in Iran. We rejected their threat. It would be a horror to have nuclear weapons, and they would have used them too, ”Trump said
He said about the war in Gaza that “at some point, it will be settled … Better to settle it soon.
And he concluded: “Between hunger and all other problems, worse than hunger” are the “people who are killed.”