Israel calls up tens of thousands of reservists for Gaza offensive
Israel calls up tens of thousands of reservists for Gaza offensive/node/2599457/middle-east
Israel calls up tens of thousands of reservists for Gaza offensive
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Israeli tanks operate in the Israel-Gaza border, as seen from Israel on May 3, 2025. (REUTER)
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Smoke rises from Gaza after an Israeli airstrike, as seen from Israel on May 3, 2025. (REUTERS)
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Updated 04 May 2025
AFP
Israel calls up tens of thousands of reservists for Gaza offensive
Israel resumed major operations across Gaza on March 18 amid deadlock over how to proceed with a 2-month ceasefire
Security cabinet scheduled to meet on Sunday to approve the expansion of the military offensive, says public broadcaster
Updated 04 May 2025
AFP
JERUSALEM: Israel was issuing orders to call up tens of thousands of reservists ahead of an expanded offensive in Gaza, Israeli media reported Saturday.
Several news outlets reported the military had begun sending the orders for reservists to replace conscripts and active-duty soldiers in Israel and the occupied West Bank so they can be redeployed to Gaza.
A military spokesperson neither confirmed nor denied the reports, but relatives of AFP journalists were among those who received mobilization orders.
According to Israelâs public broadcaster, the security cabinet is scheduled to meet on Sunday to approve the expansion of the military offensive in Gaza.
Israel resumed major operations across Gaza on March 18 amid deadlock over how to proceed with a two-month ceasefire that had largely halted the war sparked by Hamasâs October 2023 attack.
The Israeli prime minister, under pressure from his far-right supporters, without whom he would lose his governing coalition, has been increasingly vocal in his calls to continue the war since the restart of the Gaza offensive.
âIsrael will win this just war with just means,â he added.
Israel has also blocked all aid deliveries to Gaza since March 2, prompting warnings from UN agencies of impending humanitarian disaster.
Hamas on Saturday released footage of an apparently wounded Israeli-Russian hostage held in Gaza as 11 Palestinians, including three infants, were killed in a strike on the territory, its civil defense agency said.
The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said at least 2,396 people had been killed since Israel resumed its campaign in Gaza, bringing the overall death toll from the war to 52,495.
Gaza militants still hold 58 hostages, 34 of whom the army says are dead. Hamas is also holding the remains of an Israeli soldier killed in a previous war in Gaza in 2014.
The militant groupâs armed wing, the Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, released a video on Saturday showing a hostage AFP and Israeli media identified as Russian-Israeli Maxim Herkin.
In the undated four-minute video, Herkin, who turns 37 this month, was shown wearing bandages on his head and left arm.
Speaking in Hebrew in the video, which his family urged media to disseminate, he implied he had been wounded in a recent Israeli bombardment.
AFP was unable to determine the health of Herkin, who gave a similar message to other hostages shown in videos released by Hamas, urging pressure on the Israeli government to free the remaining captives.
Several thousand Israelis demonstrated outside the defense ministry in Tel Aviv on Saturday, demanding action from the government to secure the hostagesâ release.
âWeâre here because we want the hostages home. Weâre here because we donât believe that the war in Gaza today, currently, is justified at all,â Arona Maskil, a 64-year-old demonstrator, told AFP.
The government says its renewed offensive is aimed at forcing Hamas to free its remaining captives, although critics charge that it puts them in mortal danger.
A statement from the Hostages and Missing Families Forum argued that âany escalation in the fighting will put the hostages... in immediate danger.â
In Gaza, the civil defense agency said on Saturday that an overnight Israeli strike on the Khan Yunis refugee camp killed at least 11 people, including three infants.
Agency spokesman Mahmud Bassal say they were killed in the âbombardment of the Al-Bayram family home in Khan Yunis campâ at around 3:00 am (0000 GMT).
Bassal told AFP that eight of the dead had been identified and were all from the same extended family, including a boy and girl, both one, and a month-old baby.
An Israeli military spokesperson confirmed the strike, saying it targeted a âHamas member.â
Rescue workers and residents combed the rubble for survivors with their bare hands, under the light of hand-held torches, an AFP journalist reported.
Neighbour Fayka Abu Hatab said she âsaw a bright light, then there was an explosion, and dust covered the entire area.â
âWe couldnât see anything, it all went dark,â she said.
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Sudan will be âreborn in unityâ through transitional roadmap: PM
Kamil El-Tayeb Idris hails his country as a âgreat civilizationâ in UN address
He calls for easing of sanctions, international isolation of paramilitary Rapid Support Forces
Updated 10 sec ago
Caspar Webb
NEW YORK: Sudanâs new transitional prime minister has outlined plans for his country to be âreborn in unityâ after years of brutal civil war.
Kamil El-Tayeb Idris addressed the UN General Assembly in New York on Thursday, months after being appointed by his countryâs Transitional Sovereignty Council under President Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan. He is Sudanâs first civilian prime minister since the resignation of Abdalla Hamdok in 2022.
In his address, Idris said his country is a âgreat civilizationâ that has been victimized by âexistential dangersâ at the hands of the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces.
âI stand before you from the banks of the Nile, from the land where history runs as deep as the river itself, from where the deserts know the footprints of ancient kingdoms, ancient civilizations, and from where, in this present hour, the dust still carries the scent of war,â he added.
âSudan has bled. Our villages and cities have fallen silent under the shadow of unprecedented war, unprecedented invasion in the history of mankind. Our children have known fear before theyâve known the meaning of life. And yet, amid the ashes of war, thereâs a unique pulse that refuses to die.â
International law is being eroded through âthe crimes of genocide, aggression, and the employment of foreign mercenaries to occupy the territories of states and slaughter their peoples,â Idris said.
He condemned the widespread sanctions regime against certain Sudanese entities, including those operated by the Sudanese Armed Forces.
Major powers, including the US and EU, have continued to extend targeted sanctions against entities in the country.
Idris accused the RSF of carrying out systematic killing, torture, looting, rape, and the âsavage destruction of all the basic components of life.â
He added: âThese actions were deliberate. These actions were part of an integrated project to control Sudan, to plunder its wealth and to change the demographics of its population.â
His technocratic Government of Hope, formed this summer, has proposed a roadmap to bring peace to Sudan and rebuild the country.
But the international community must first âwork to stop the flow of lethal weaponsâ to the RSF, as well as criminalize and classify it as a terrorist group, he said.
Idris also called for the immediate lifting of the siege on the city of El-Fasher, which has created the worldâs worst humanitarian crisis.
He laid out the ambitions of his civilian government: achieving peace as a top priority, establishing a state based on the rule of law, fighting poverty and corruption, activating transitional justice, and laying the groundwork for comprehensive national elections with international observers, among others.
âOur doors will remain open to the UN and regional and international organizations,â he said. âWe call on the international community to support the choices of the Sudanese people and their civilian government, and to support African solutions to conflicts.â
Idris also highlighted the âdangerous deterioration and escalationâ in the Middle East, including the âcatastrophic situationâ in Palestine.
He called for the establishment of an independent Palestinian state based on the 1967 lines with East Jerusalem as its capital.
âWe condemn the blatant Israeli attack on the sovereignty of the sisterly state of Qatar, which threatens international peace and security. Without peace, thereâs no viable future,â he added.
Idris concluded his speech by pledging that âour sovereignty and territorial integrity are red lines,â adding: âWeâll never give up. I promise you, weâll never give up.â
Can Hezbollah still dictate outcomes in Syria, or have battlefield losses curtailed its once formidable influence?
Interim government claims to have arrested a Hezbollah-linked cell, but the group firmly denies any presence inside Syria
Analysts suggest Damascus may be signaling cooperation with Israel, with arrests announced days before Al-Sharaaâs UNGA visit
Updated 26 September 2025
ANAN TELLO
LONDON: Syriaâs interim authorities announced earlier this month that they had dismantled a cell linked to Lebanonâs Hezbollah. The Iran-backed group, which fought alongside the ousted Bashar Assad regime during the civil war and more recently clashed with Israel, denies any presence in Syria.
If the allegations are true, the Sept. 11 arrests raise a pressing question: Why would Hezbollah, still nursing wounds from its mauling by Israel in 2024, seek to maintain a foothold in Syria now that its old regime allies have been removed from power?
Syriaâs Interior Ministry said in a statement that specialized units, working with the general intelligence service, had arrested âa terrorist cell belonging to the Hezbollah militiaâ in the Damascus countryside.
The ministry shared photos on X, saying security forces seized ârocket launchers, anti-tank missiles, 19 Grad rockets, as well as small arms and large quantities of ammunitionâ during raids in the towns of Saasaa and Kanaker in western rural Damascus.
Weapons and ammunition allegedly seized by Syria's Internal Security Command during a security operation in the towns of Saâsa and Kanaker in western rural Damascus. (Syria's Ministry of Interior photo)
In a separate post, the ministry shared images of five men it said were arrested on suspicion of involvement in the Hezbollah cell. The suspects, it added, were âreferred to the competent authorities to continue the investigations.â
Hezbollah swiftly rejected the accusation.
âWe categorically and completely deny what the Syrian Interior Ministry mentioned regarding the affiliation of those arrested in western Damascus countryside to Hezbollah,â the groupâs media office said in a statement the same day.
The group reiterated what it called its longstanding position. âHezbollah has no presence and conducts no activity on Syrian territory, and it is deeply committed to Syriaâs stability and the security of its people.â
Fadi Nicholas Nassar, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Middle East Institute, said Tehran likely views Hezbollahâs continued activity as of a piece with âIranâs strategy to salvage what remains of its regional security infrastructure after the seismic setbacks it suffered in the Levant with the weakening of Hezbollah in Lebanon and the fall of Assad in Syria.
Supporters of Lebanon's Hezbollah group take part in a gathering in Beirut on September 17, 2025, to mark the one year anniversary of the Israeli operation in Lebanon that detonated hundreds of pagers and walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah. (AFP)
âFor now, Tehran is still banking on Hezbollah to disrupt progress in the Levant and exploit spoiling opportunities as they emerge,â he told Arab News.
âIn Syria, the Gulf states are investing significant political, economic, and technical assistance to help ensure a functioning state emerges from the ashes of years of war. Iranâs leverage lies in threatening to disrupt that progress and in waiting to twist any shift in the Syrian landscape to its favor.â
Given its weakness and the perhaps more pressing challenges to its existence in Lebanon, the strength of Hezbollahâs appetite for intervening meaningfully in Syria remains up for debate.
Sam Heller, a Beirut-based fellow with the US think tank The Century Foundation, said the group âwas hit hard by the fall of the Assad government in Syria, which came alongside Israelâs military escalation targeting the group inside Lebanon.
âThe loss of strategic depth and supply lines through Syria is particularly significant now, as Hezbollah seeks to rebuild and reconstitute some of its capabilities,â Heller told Arab News.
âThat said, the group has denied interfering in Syria, and itâs unclear whether it would now try to destabilize the country or reestablish itself there.â
Much of the Syrian Interior Ministryâs account of the Sept. 11 arrests remains unverified. Some analysts say the announcement was a message to a far more significant neighbor â Israel â that Damascus is prepared to cooperate on security.
FASTFACTS
âą Hezbollah, backed by Iran, played a critical role in preserving Bashar Assadâs regime during Syriaâs civil war.
âą Syriaâs interim government aims to seal US-mediated security and military deals with Israel by late 2025.
They consider the timing of the arrests significant, coming as they did just days before Syriaâs interim President Ahmad Al-Sharaaâs visit to New York for the UN General Assembly.
âWe do not know much about the facts and much about this story remains speculative,â Joshua Landis, director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma, told Arab News.
âIt would not be surprising if Israel worked with Al-Sharaaâs military to have this âHezbollah-linked cellâ arrested in the days leading up to Syriaâs New York appearance.â
Syrians display the national flags as they gather at Umayyad Square in Damascus on September 24, 2025, to watch a broadcast of Syrian President Ahmed Al-Sharaa (right) delivering a speech at the United Nations.(REUTERS)
Landis added that the administration of US President Donald Trump is âputting great store in Al-Sharaaâs willingness to work with Israel on security along their mutual border.â
Ali Rizk, a Lebanese security and political analyst, noted that the announcement also coincided with Israel-Syria negotiations.
He told Arab News that âfrom the start, (Al-Sharaaâs government) has made clear it is not looking for trouble with Israel, and it continues to do so despite the Israeli military operations against Syria.â
Al-Sharaa delivered a historic speech at the UN General Assembly on Wednesday â the first by a Syrian leader since 1967 â declaring Syriaâs return to the international community after decades of dictatorship and civil war.
He said Syria is âreclaiming its rightful place among the nations of the world,â outlined an agenda for reform, reconstruction, and transitional justice, and announced plans for new institutions, elections, and inclusive government.
Al-Sharaa condemned Israeli airstrikes on Syria, called for the complete lifting of remaining sanctions, and pledged accountability for war crimes, stressing Syriaâs commitment to balanced diplomacy and dialogue for regional peace.
Since taking power in December 2024, Al-Sharaa has repeatedly stressed that Syria poses no threat to Israel or any other neighbor, describing his strategy in March as one of âpatience and wisdom.â
Despite this, Israel has launched hundreds of airstrikes and incursions in Syria, destroying up to 80 percent of its strategic weapons and infrastructure within the first 48 hours of Assadâs overthrow, the BBC reported.
Israeli forces also occupied at least 460 sq. km of Syrian territory, including parts of the UN-monitored buffer zone, in violation of the 1974 Agreement on Disengagement.
In response, Washington initiated talks on a security deal. Syria hopes such an agreement will halt Israeli operations and prompt a troop withdrawal, while Israel is pressing for a demilitarized zone extending from southwest Damascus to the border.
On Sept. 17, Al-Sharaa said negotiations could yield results âin the coming days.â Speaking to reporters in Damascus, he said a potential UN-monitored security pact is a ânecessityâ that must respect Syriaâs territorial integrity and airspace.
That same day in London, Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad Al-Shaibani and Israeli Minister of Strategic Affairs Ron Dermer held US-brokered talks on a draft agreement to replace the 1974 deal.
According to Rizk, although the new government in Syria âposes a major threatâ to Hezbollah, he does ânot see Hezbollah being actively involved in such operationsâ as those allegedly taking place in the Damascus countryside.
âPost-Assad Syria has clamped down on the routes that were used to send weapons to Hezbollah,â he said, referring to the arc of territory previously used by Iran to channel materiel to its proxies across the region.
Despite this major strategic setback, which Hezbollah is likely keen to remedy, it is unlikely the group is âready for such activity, especially if you look at how it hasnât responded to the ongoing Israeli attacks on Lebanon.
âIn other words, all indications show that Hezbollah is still rebuilding itself and is not currently in the process of getting involved in military operations â be it against Syria or Israel â unless of course it faces an offensive from either or both sides that could be an existential threat.â
That restraint stems in part from Hezbollahâs losses.
In October 2023, the group began firing rockets into northern Israel in support of its Hamas allies in Gaza. After months of cross-border exchanges, the conflict suddenly escalated in September 2024, with Israeli air attacks killing multiple Hezbollah leaders, including its longtime chief Hassan Nasrallah.
Israelâs 2024 campaign crippled Hezbollahâs infrastructure and weakened its ability to mount an effective response, according to media reports.
Mourners surround the flag-draped coffins of Hezbollah fighters killed in Israeli strikes, during their funeral along in the southern Lebanese border village of Kfar Kila on March 9, 2025. (AFP)
This defanging came as a huge strategic blow for Iran, which was then left far more exposed to Israeli and US strikes against its nuclear facilities. Hezbollahâs weakening also likely played a role in the rapid implosion of the Assad regime.
Its vulnerability within Lebanon, too, has placed its future in some doubt.
Hezbollah âis under great pressure to cease its military operations, and the Lebanese government has promised to take a tough line on Hezbollah both to Western powers and Israel,â said Landis.
The US-brokered ceasefire deal reached in November 2024 requires Hezbollah to withdraw from the area between the border with Israel and the Litani River, and Israeli troops to withdraw from the same area and to cease all attacks.
Despite this, Israel continues to occupy at least five points inside Lebanese territory.
Moreover, Hezbollahâs disarmament remains a highly contested issue. Lebanonâs government faces domestic and international pressure to place all weapons under state control, while Hezbollah has warned such moves could trigger a new civil war.
Iranâs role complicates the picture. Landis says Tehran âis working overtime to push back against Western efforts to have Hezbollah permanently decommissioned.
âSyriaâs border with Israel is the ideal ground for Iran to fish in troubled waters,â he said. âThe Druze massacre in July, Israelâs bombing of Syrian military bases, and Al-Sharaaâs efforts to placate Israel make it ripe for disruption.â
Violent clashes between Druze and Bedouin armed groups in Syriaâs southern region of Suweida began around July 12. The violence swiftly escalated into widespread fighting that also involved Syrian government forces.
Bedouin and tribal gunmen keep a position during clashes with Druze fighters in Syria's southern city of Sweida, despite an announcement by the Syrian interim president of an "immediate ceasefire" on July 19, 2025. (AFP file photo)
Israel soon intervened and bombed Syrian government forces deployed to Suweida and key targets in Damascus, claiming it sought to protect the Druze community. A ceasefire, thought fragile, was reached on July 19.
Hezbollah sent thousands of fighters to Syria during the civil war to help shore up the Assad regime, playing decisive roles in battles against opposition forces.
The intervention advanced Iranâs strategic aims but cost Hezbollah dearly. Between Sept. 2012 and Feb. 2016, at least 865 of its fighters were killed in Syria, according to the Washington Institute.
Lebanese political adviser Nadim Shehade says Hezbollah âlost many more men fighting in Syria than fighting Israel and all that for what now seems like nothing.
âIf the object was to support the Assad regime, which eventually collapsed, then it was a useless and costly operation,â he told Arab News.
âAlso, very bad optics that Hezbollah, who presents itself as a resistance, ends up being the occupier displacing people from their homes and conducting starvation sieges.
âI can imagine that this looks like Hezbollahâs Vietnam. A subject they would rather avoid and in which the objectives were immoral and disgraceful.â
NEW YORK: Egyptâs foreign minister on Thursday laid out a âclear,â comprehensive Arab and Muslim vision to end the conflict in Gaza, calling for an immediate ceasefire followed by coordinated reconstruction and governance efforts.
Speaking on the sidelines of the 80th session of the UN General Assembly, Badr Abdelatty emphasized the urgent need to halt Israeli military operations and begin rebuilding.
âThe first step ⊠is, of course, ending this unjust war. This is extremely important to stop the Israeli aggression,â he told Arab News.
Following a ceasefire, Abdelatty stressed the need âto move ahead with issues related to security arrangements, as well as the governance of Gaza.â
He added: âWe in Egypt, in cooperation with Jordan, are providing training to Palestinians to be part of the security force to be deployed in Gaza, in full coordination with the Palestinian Authority.â
On the potential deployment of international forces, Abdelatty said: âWeâre open to the idea ... but it should be mandated by the Security Council and, of course, with one objective: to help and support the Palestinian Authority to realize its own independent state.â
As a transitional step, Arab countries are proposing the establishment of a neutral, non-partisan administrative committee to temporarily govern Gaza in coordination with the PA before handing over full control.
âWe have an administrative â not political, not affiliated with factions â specific committee to govern Gaza in full coordination with the Palestinian Authority for a specific period, and then to hand over,â Abdelatty said.
He also called for an international conference to be convened immediately after a ceasefire, aimed at implementing an Arab-Islamic recovery and reconstruction plan for Gaza.
âThis is extremely important because it was endorsed by the EU, by Japan, by the international community. So all components, all ingredients are there,â he said.
Abdelatty identified the main obstacle to progress as âthe lack of political will from the Israeli side. This is whatâs extremely important â to end this aggression, this war, as soon as possible, and then to move forward with the other steps.â
He added: âWeâre coordinating with Americans, with Qataris, of course, to continue our endeavors in order to reach a deal which will secure the release of all hostages and Palestinian prisoners, and to lift all impediments hindering the flow of humanitarian aid.â
Palestinian leader pledges to work with Trump, others on UN-backed Gaza plan
Abbas rejects Hamas actions, calls for disarmament and governance by Palestinian Authority
The US has put forward 21-point peace plan for Middle East and Gaza
Updated 26 September 2025
Reuters
UNITED NATIONS: Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas pledged at the United Nations on Thursday to work with US President Donald Trump, șÚÁÏÉçÇű, France and the United Nations on a peace plan for Gaza overwhelmingly backed by the world body.
The 193-member UN General Assembly overwhelmingly endorsed this month a seven-page declaration that aims to advance a two-state solution for Israel and the Palestinians and end the Gaza war between Israel and Hamas militants.
The declaration emerged from an international conference at the UN in July â hosted by șÚÁÏÉçÇű and France â on the decades-long conflict. The United States and Israel boycotted the event and have rejected the international efforts.
Trump offers 21-point peace plan
Separately, US special envoy Steve Witkoff said on Wednesday that Trump had presented a 21-point peace plan for the Middle East and Gaza during a meeting with leaders of several Muslim-majority countries on the sidelines of this weekâs UN General Assembly.
Abbas addressed the annual gathering of world leaders on Thursday via video after the United States said it would not give him a visa to travel to New York.
âDespite all that our people have suffered, we reject what Hamas carried out on October 7th â acts that targeted Israeli civilians and took them as hostages â because such actions do not represent the Palestinian people nor their just struggle for freedom and independence,â Abbas said.
Abbas rules out Hamas role, but Hamas objects
âWe have affirmed â and will continue to affirm â that Gaza is an integral part of the State of Palestine, and that we are ready to assume full responsibility for governance and security there. Hamas will have no role in governance, and it â along with other factions â must hand over its weapons to the Palestinian National Authority,â he said. âWe reiterate that we do not want an armed state.â
The points he raised are included in the declaration endorsed by the General Assembly.
âWe declare our readiness to work with President Donald Trump, with șÚÁÏÉçÇű, France, the United Nations and all partners to implement the peace planâ backed by the General Assembly, Abbas said.
Palestinians and Hamas fighters attend a funeral procession for 40 militants and civilians killed during the war with Israel, at the Shati camp for Palestinian refugees north of Gaza City on February 28, 2025. (AFP file photo).
Hamas objects
Hamas rejected the remarks by Abbas.
âWe consider the President of the Authorityâs assertion that Hamas will have no role in governance an infringement on the inherent right of our Palestinian people to decide their own destiny and to choose who governs them, and a submission â unacceptable to us â to external dictates and schemes,â Hamas said in a statement.
The group also said that its weapons âcannot be compromised so long as the occupation remains entrenched on our land and oppressing our people,â adding: âWe denounce the President of the Authorityâs call to surrender them.â
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar described Abbasâ speech as ânice wordsâ to the West and accused the Palestinian leader of failing to fight terrorism.
Abbas âsaid that he is ready to receive the Gaza Strip, which he so easily lost to Hamas in 2007. How nice of him,â Saar posted on X.
An October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel triggered the war in Gaza. Hamas killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and about 251 were taken hostage, according to Israeli tallies. More than 65,000 people, also mostly civilians, have since been killed during the war in Gaza, according to local health authorities.
NEW YORK: The issues between Israel and Palestine are not insurmountable and could be resolved through a negotiated process if there is serious political will, Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan told Arab News on Thursday.
âObviously, there will have to be a negotiated process between Palestine and Israel to finalize all of the outstanding issues. We donât see these issues as insurmountable,â he said.
âIf thereâs serious will â and we know from the Palestinian Authority that theyâre ready and will come to address these issues in a reasonable and pragmatic way â we could have a Palestinian state in relatively short order, one thatâs also very much sustainable and viable, and can live in harmony with its neighbors in Israel.â
He was speaking in New York on the sidelines of the 80th session of the UN General Assembly, where the Gaza war has dominated world leadersâ discussions.
It was preceded by the High-Level International Conference for the Peaceful Settlement of the Question of Palestine and the Implementation of the Two-State Solution, which was co-chaired by șÚÁÏÉçÇű and France.
It resulted in the adoption of the New York Declaration, a comprehensive roadmap outlining tangible, timebound steps toward the peaceful resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
The declaration, endorsed by the UNGA with overwhelming support, sets out a multi-dimensional framework addressing political governance, security, humanitarian aid, economic recovery and legal accountability.
It also calls for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, its reunification with the West Bank under the Palestinian Authority and the exclusion of Hamas, the establishment of a temporary UN-led stabilization mission, and a halt to Israeli settlement expansion.
Prince Faisal expressed hope that the two-state solution could be realized soon, describing it as the only viable path to lasting peace and stability in the region.
âIs it in the near future? I certainly hope it is because thatâs the only pathway for hope, for all of us in the region to live in security and stability in a way thatâs sustainable,â he said.
Prince Faisal noted that the foundations of a future Palestinian state are already established under international law, and that a sustainable peace would require final-status negotiations to move forward in good faith.
âThe building blocks are there. Itâs clear in the founding UN resolutions that established the State of Israel,â he said.
âThere was also a clear understanding of the foundation of the State of Palestine. The 1967 borders are understood by international law to form the borders of the state of Palestine.
On the situation in Gaza, Prince Faisal emphasized the scale of the international response and humanitarian support, but warned that reconstruction must be part of a long-term solution, not another short-term fix.
âI think weâve seen, just by the significant outpouring of aid just for the emergency relief of Gaza, that thereâs a commitment to the rebuilding of Gaza,â he said.
âBut what I do want to make clear is that itâs absolutely necessary that when we transition, hopefully soon, to a ceasefire, that this wonât be a temporary state of affairs.
âI think itâs unacceptable that we come to the international community to ask them to come together to rebuild Gaza when it was destroyed by Israel, only for the potential of the situation on the ground to exist where this could all happen again.â
He stressed the need for reconstruction efforts to be sustainable and tied directly to a political resolution.
âI think itâs absolutely critical, hand in hand with the immediate relief of the situation in Gaza, that that reconstruction be ensured to be sustainable, that we do it once and for all.
âAnd there again comes the need for a final agreement on the status of Palestine, through the Palestinian state.â
Prince Faisal also told reporters in New York that Arab and Muslim countries made clear to US President Donald Trump the dangers of Israeli annexation of the West Bank.
âSome countries made very clear to the president the danger of annexation of any type in the West Bank and the risk that poses not just to the potential of peace in Gaza, but also to any sustainable peace at all.
âAnd I feel confident that President Trump understood the position of the Arab and Muslim countries.â