In a dramatic flourish befitting his larger-than-life persona, President Trump unveiled his ambitious 20-point peace plan for the Israeli-Hamas war on October 3rd from the White House Rose Garden. Flanked by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and a cadre of international envoys, Trump declared it a “monumental deal to end the bloodshed once and for all,” outlining an immediate ceasefire, the release of all remaining Israeli hostages (both alive and not), and a pathway to Palestinian self-governance—sans the terror apparatus that has plagued the region for decades.
The plan’s highlights include a hostage-prisoner exchange, Hamas’s complete disarmament with amnesty for compliant militants, phased Israeli withdrawals from Gaza, and economic incentives to rebuild the Gaza Strip under international oversight. No Gazan would be forcibly displaced, Trump emphasized, but those yearning for peace could emigrate freely.
Hamas, in a calculated display of partial compliance, has agreed to release the hostages (both alive and not) and accept a new governing body in Gaza to oversee reconstruction and daily affairs. Yet, true to form, they’re hedging on the critical disarmament clause, insisting on “phased implementation” and “security guarantees”—classic weasel words that scream delay and deception from these perennial saboteurs of peace.
On the surface, it’s a masterstroke: a blueprint for coexistence that sidesteps the failed two-state fantasies of yesteryear. Yet, as history’s grim ledger reminds us, deals with Islamofascist outfits like Hamas, Hezbollah, and their forebears in the PLO—puppeteered by the fanatical Iranian mullahs—have invariably crumbled into dust, replaced by rivers of Jewish blood. These groups, cloaked in the garb of resistance but animated by jihadist venom, have a track record of duplicity so egregious it borders on the pathological.
Time and time again, they’ve inked agreements only to shred them at the first whiff of vulnerability, resuming their orgy of rockets, suicide bombings, and tribal savagery. Trump’s plan may gleam with optimism, but without ironclad enforcement—and severe consequences for transgressions, it’s just another invitation for these terror mongers to reload and re-aim—especially when they dangle hostage releases like bait while clutching their weapons like lifelines.
Let’s rewind to the PLO’s sordid saga, the original sin of Palestinian “diplomacy.” In 1993, under the Oslo Accords, Yasser Arafat’s Palestine Liberation Organization—then the darling of far-Left Western gullibility—shook hands with Israel in a ceremony on the White House lawn, pledging mutual recognition and an end to violence. Israel ceded land, armed Arafat’s forces, and bent over backward for peace.
What did the PLO deliver? A grotesque betrayal: the Second Intifada of 2000, a five-year frenzy of stabbings, shootings, and bus bombings that claimed over 1,000 Israeli lives. Arafat, that Nobel Peace Prize fraud, pocketed concessions while his thugs glorified “martyrs” who targeted Jewish schoolchildren. The accords, hailed as a breakthrough, were nothing but a Trojan horse for escalation, proving the PLO’s word as worthless. Even gestures like prisoner swaps and interim governance bodies—echoing Hamas’s latest nod to a new Gaza authority—served only as smokescreens for the inevitable bloodletting.
Enter Hamas, the PLO’s more rabid spawn, a Sunni jihadist hydra sworn to Israel’s annihilation in its genocidal charter. Since wresting Gaza from Arafat’s heirs in 2007, Hamas has orchestrated at least six major ceasefire pacts with Israel—each a cynical interlude for rearming.
Take 2008’s Operation Cast Lead truce, brokered by Egypt: Hamas pledged calm in exchange for eased blockades. Within months, they barraged southern Israel with Qassam rockets, provoking the very retaliation they now wail about. Fast-forward to 2012’s Pillar of Defense ceasefire: another Egyptian-mediated lull, shattered by Hamas’s relentless barrages, killing civilians and shattering any illusion of goodwill.
The pattern repeated in 2014’s Protective Edge, where Hamas violated every humanitarian pause—firing rockets even during their own-proposed lulls—turning Gaza into a launchpad for terror. By 2019 and 2021, these “hudnas” (temporary truces in Islamist parlance) were mere facades, allowing Hamas to stockpile Iranian Grad missiles while feigning restraint. The October 7, 2023, massacre—1,200 slaughtered, 250 kidnapped, and too many raped to count—was the fruit of that deception, a barbaric eruption that exposed Hamas not as a liberation movement, but as a death cult masquerading as one.
Now, with hostages as their human shields and a vague promise of a post-Hamas governing body, they’re playing the same game: concede the symbolic to hoard the substantive, all while dragging feet on disarmament that would neuter their jihadist core.
Hezbollah, the Shia counterpart to Hamas’s Sunni fanaticism, offers no redemption arc—only an endless reel of treachery.
Born from Iran’s 1982 export of revolution amid Israel’s Lebanon incursion, Hezbollah has been a perpetual thorn, its 2006 war a masterclass in broken understandings. UN Resolution 1701 ended that 34-day bloodbath with a ceasefire mandating Hezbollah’s disarmament north of the Litani River. Did these Iranian-funded fanatics comply? Hardly. They fortified bunkers, amassed 150,000 rockets, and probed Israel’s borders with “resistance” raids, culminating in the 2024 escalations that dragged Lebanon into ruin.
By early 2025, Hezbollah’s “defeat” and grudging acceptance of an unfavorable truce only underscored their playbook: fight, feign peace, then fester. From the 1983 Beirut barracks bombing that murdered 241 US Marines to cross-border ambushes, Hezbollah’s honor is as mythical as their “divine victory” propaganda. Their selective agreements—perhaps releasing captives here, nodding to a technocratic council there—mirror Hamas’s current hedging, buying time for the mullahs’ arsenal to replenish.
Lurking in the shadows, the Iranian mullahs pull every string, their theocratic empire built on exported jihad.
Since the 1990s, Tehran has funneled billions to Hamas and Hezbollah—training fighters, smuggling arms, and greenlighting atrocities—all while feigning diplomatic niceties. Even as the PLO inked Oslo, Iran bankrolled its rejectionist wings, ensuring no deal would be stuck.
After the 2015 nuclear accord, the ayatollahs pocketed sanctions relief only to double down on proxy wars, coordinating Hamas’s 2023 rampage with Hezbollah’s salvos. These bloodthirsty clerics, ensconced in their mosques and madrasas, view agreements as infidel tricks, arming a global terror network from Yemen’s Houthis to Gaza’s tunnels. Hamas’s waffling on disarmament? Straight from Tehran’s script: promise governance facades to the world, but keep the guns for the graves.
Trump’s 20-point vision—demanding Hamas’s military evisceration and Iranian exile from Gaza—could shatter this never-ending cycle if enforced with the vigor it deserves and if severe consequences are undertaken at any transgression. Global leaders from Pakistan to the EU have hailed it tentatively, sensing a pivot from endless war.
Yet, optimism must yield to vigilance. Hamas’s history isn’t happenstance; it’s doctrine. Their leaders, gorged on Iranian petro-dollars, have never honored a pact without a knife behind their back. As Israel pauses its righteous campaign at Trump’s behest—halting Gaza strikes to test the waters—let us remember the graves of Oslo’s innocents, the craters of Cast Lead, the widows and orphans of October 7th.
Beware, world: Trust Hamas at your peril. Their “commitment to peace”—releasing hostages and toying with a new governing body while hedging on disarmament—is a siren’s song, luring the naive to slaughter.
Only unyielding resolve—border walls, drone surveillance, the complete disarmament of Hamas, and zero tolerance for violations—with severe consequences for any breach—can forge real security. Otherwise, Trump’s bold stroke risks becoming another chapter in the annals of Islamofascist perfidy. Let’s hope this time is different.
When we come back, our segment on America’s Third Watch, broadcast nationally from our flagship station WGUL, AM860 and FM93.7 in Tampa, Florida.
In Closing…
President Trump’s bold 20-point Gaza blueprint: a beacon of hope amid the rubble. With hostages set for release and a fresh governing body on the horizon, this plan could chart a real and true path to rebuild, disarm, and thrive, free from terror’s grip. Trump’s vision, worthy of a Nobel Peace Prize, demands full enforcement, sidelining Iranian puppeteers once and for all, and exacting consequences for transgressions.
But let’s be crystal clear: Hamas’s hedging on disarmament reeks of their blood-soaked playbook—Oslo’s ghosts, endless hudnas turned massacres. Trust them? Never. Yet in Trump’s unyielding resolve, I can see dawn breaking. Peace is possible—if we demand it. Thanks for tuning in, and stay vigilant, my friends.
Until next time…