
Relief poured into the streets of Khan Younis and Tel Aviv at once: fireworks and flags in Gaza, tears and chants in Hostages Square. After nearly two years of relentless war, Israel and
Hamas have agreed to the first phase of a cease-fire framework, with a hostage-prisoner exchange and an Israeli pullback to an āagreed lineā as the opening steps. The celebratory scenes arrived with their shadow: a gnawing fear that this fragile deal could still collapse in the details and the timing.
US President Donald Trump announced the agreement reached in Sharm el-Sheikh, saying both sides had signed the initial phase and that all hostages would be released āvery soonā as Israel redeploys its forces inside Gaza. On the ground, Israelis and Palestinians marked the moment with hopeātempered, realistic, conditional hopeābecause theyāve been here before, and before hasnāt held. Reporting from Tel Aviv and southern Gaza captured the mix of jubilation and dread, as families of hostages and displaced Gazans waited for whatās promised next: safe return and safe passage, respectively. CNN documented both scenes and the unease behind them, noting ongoing bombardment even after the announcement and warnings from the Israeli military to ābe ready for any scenarioā as details are ironed out as per CNN.
Whatās In The Deal, And What Isnāt
- The structure: Phase one pauses hostilities, trades hostages for Palestinian prisoners, and has Israeli troops pull back to an internal line inside Gaza while monitoring continues. Trump said āallā hostages would be released; Israeli estimates suggest roughly 48 remain in Hamas custody, with about 20 believed alive, according to multiple outlets tracking the talks and briefings.
- The timing: Israelās security cabinet convened to approve the planās first-stage terms, a procedural but politically fraught step in a government divided over any concessions, as live blogs chronicled through the day.
- The trade: Between 1,700 and 2,000 Palestinian prisoners are slated for release, though high-profile figure Marwan Barghouti is not on the list, Israeli officials stressed.
Whatās conspicuously not in the first phase: a binding path for Hamasās disarmament, a consensus plan for Gazaās civil governance, or a credible architecture to prevent relapse into fighting if negotiations stall. Those are existential questions deferred, not settled.
A Peopleās Reaction: Joy, And A Flinch
In Tel Aviv, Hostages Square became what itās been for two years: a civic forum where pain and persistence coexisted. Families thanked Trump publicly and privately for prying open this diplomatic window. But many refused to pronounce the moment real until they see their loved ones āgetting on the Red Cross vehicleā and crossing into IDF custody. That skepticism is practical, not performative. Israelis have been burned by āalmostā too many times.
In Gaza, the celebrations were unmissableāand so was the devastation. A young girl in Gaza City told a reporter that maybe now she could go home. But then came the refrain that defines Gazaās present tense: go home to what? Entire neighborhoods are rubble; schools and universities remain shuttered. Palestinians greeted the deal as an end to a nightmare, then immediately braced for the morning afterāshelter, food, medicine, trauma.
The Politics Behind The Smiles
Deals like this donāt spring from goodwill. They emerge from pressure. Netanyahuās coalition has been tugged toward maximalist objectives and toward the imperative to bring hostages homeāthose political forces have been in open conflict. Internationally, Israel has grown isolated over the scale of its campaign and the collapse of civilian life in Gaza. Domestically, the hostage families have become a conscience the government canāt ignore. Trumpās intervention gave both sides a face-saving on-ramp to a pause while promising āstrength, durable peaceā to skeptical right-wing allies. The Guardianās explainer walked through why the timing finally converged: military stalemate, regional mediation, American leverage, and political fatigue on all sides.
On the Palestinian side, Hamas has absorbed enormous battlefield and reputational costs. Regional patronsāQatar, Egypt, Turkeyāhelped corral the movement toward concessions that would have been unthinkable in earlier phases of the war. That support is not unconditional. Any ānext phaseā that sidelines Palestinian political representation without a legitimate alternative risks unraveling the very calm the deal seeks to buy.
The Humanitarian Ledger And The Rule-of-Law Test
The humanitarian ledger is staggering, and it must shape what comes next. The death toll has climbed into the tens of thousands, the majority women and children, according to Gazaās health authorities, with extreme hunger and disease stalking the displaced. In September, an independent United Nations inquiry concluded Israel had committed genocide against Palestinians in Gazaāfindings the Israeli government vehemently rejects; no court has rendered a final legal judgment. The allegation underscores a legal and moral crisis that canāt be papered over by a photo op or a prisoner exchange. If a cease-fire is to be more than an intermission, it has to be paired with accountability, aid access, and reconstructionāfast, verifiable, and insulated from political grandstanding.
The Hard Problems Start Now
- Governance: Who runs Gaza during and after a phased withdrawal? Israeli officials have floated variants of ālocal councils,ā international stabilization forces, and conditional Palestinian Authority roles. Each carries legitimacy and security trade-offs. A plan imposed without Palestinian consent will not hold, and a vacuum will not last.
- Security guarantees: Israel will not accept a return to October 6 status quo. Palestinians will not accept an open-air prison 2.0. Creative arrangementsāthird-party monitoring, demilitarization tied to political rights, credible timelinesāwill make or break this.
- Reconstruction: Itās not just money, though it will take tens of billions. Itās supply lines, deconfliction, contractor safety, and governance that reduces theft and corruption. Aid groups warn that without full operational access, the cease-fireās promise will falter on contact with reality.
The broader democratic lens here is unavoidable. Peace that sidelines democratic normsāself-determination, rule of law, equal protectionāwonāt be peace. It will be a lull. If the US is going to own this deal, it has to own the civic architecture that follows: real Palestinian political renewal, real limits on collective punishment, and a real path out of permanent emergency rule. Otherwise the celebration we saw this week will become another artifact of hopeās muscle memory in a region thatās collected too many.
For now, letās allow the euphoria to breathe. Families may get their people back. Children may sleep through the night. The cease-fireās first step is a mercy, and mercies are rare in this war. But to turn a pause into a future, the architects have to build for the thing theyāve avoided saying out loud: a political settlement that recognizes Palestinian rights and Israeli security as co-equal requirements, not bargaining chips. Anything less is a countdown to the next siren.