Consider This from NPR - Will a ceasefire deal move forward after two years of war between Israel and Hamas?
Episode Date: October 9, 2025After two years of bloodshed, Israel and Hamas have agreed to phase one of a ceasefire deal.It’s a moment of hope — and some skepticism — amid a war that’s had an enormous toll.Where might... this 20-point peace plan lead?You'll hear from NPR's Daniel Estrin, as well as some of the many people in Gaza and in Israel who’ve talked to our reporters over the last two years.For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.This episode was produced by Kathryn Fink, Matt Ozug and Michael Levitt. It featured reporting from Aya Batrawy and Anas Baba. It was edited by Christopher Intagliata and Patrick Jarenwattananon. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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After two years of bloodshed, Israel and Hamas have agreed to phase one of a ceasefire deal.
I think it's going to be a lasting peace, hopefully, an everlasting peace.
Peace in the Middle East.
That's President Trump speaking at the White House today.
It is a moment of hope amid a war that has had an enormous toll.
More than 67,000 Palestinians have been killed during Israel's military campaign in Gaza.
That's according to Gaza's health ministry.
Israeli bombs have flattened entire towns and level 10.
of thousands of buildings. In Israel, residents still feel the ripple effects of Hamas's
2023 attack. The Israeli government says 48 hostages remain in Gaza, of the 251 people taken
into captivity on October 7th. Less than half of them are believed to still be alive. And families
continue to mourn the roughly 1,200 people who were killed that day. In the last two years,
NPR reporters have met many people in Gaza and Israel, who have talked about the impact of the war
and what it would take to rebuild, move forward.
Ahmed Ayyid is a father in Gaza.
He spoke with NPR after a ceasefire was announced earlier this week
and said it was way too soon to celebrate.
He says, what exactly should I be happy for
with all the bloodshed and martyrs?
Aide says he's lost 150 family members
in the Israeli attacks over the last two years.
He's been living in a tent with his children, displaced from his home.
He says people have no food or water.
Moore Godard lost both her parents in a Hamas-led attack on her gobutz on October 7th.
She says her father's body is still being held by militants in Gaza as a bargaining chip in the war.
Recently, she told NPR's Daniel Estrin about the toll of the war.
I lost my trust in the country.
My trust in the army.
They tried to my house.
Tried to open the safe room door.
When they didn't succeed, they set the house on fire.
And nobody came.
Godard says she is mourning her parents, and also the road Israel has taken over the past two years.
They're acting out of revenge.
They're not out of values, she says.
Consider this. There is now a pathway.
to end the war between Israel and Hamas.
It's a moment of hope, but also of skepticism.
So where might this 20-point peace plan lead?
From NPR, I'm Scott Detrow.
It's Consider This from NPR.
Real quick before we get back to the show,
we have heard from listeners who say that Consider This has become a
part of their daily routine, a way to make sense of things. If that is true for you, too,
take a couple minutes and leave us a review. It's a small thing, but it really does help people
find this show. And thanks. For the first time, in a long time, the headlines out of Israel and
Gaza are about the possibility of peace. That's because late yesterday, President Trump announced
that both Israel and Hamas had agreed to phase one of the framework of a peace deal. NPR's
Daniel Estrian has been covering the war since the very beginning. He has covered the region. He has
cover the region for more than a decade. And I asked Daniel to join us to talk about this moment,
the hope that comes with it, as well as the skepticism. Daniel, it has been a long week, a long 24
hours. Thank you for talking to us for a little bit. Oh, it's great to talk to you, Scott.
Let's start with that. What is the general feeling where you are? Is it more hope or is it more
skepticism? You know, everyone here has been conditioned to be skeptical for the last two years
and two days, to be exact. We've seen ceasefire.
efforts fall through again and again. We've seen how Hamas has fought till the last man,
no matter how many civilians were killed and how much Gaza was destroyed. We have seen Israel's
leadership thwart ceasefire efforts repeatedly. We've seen how prolonged war has served
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's political survival. And yet, it is incredible for me to say
this, but for the first time, people here really are giving themselves permission to hope.
Wow. Why do you think that is? What's different this time?
President Trump has been the X factor, especially for Netanyahu. It was exactly one month ago when Hamas negotiators were sitting in Qatar meeting to consider a U.S. proposal for a ceasefire when Netanyahu ordered strikes to try to kill them. It failed, but it was a pivotal moment. Netanyahu came to the White House.
shortly after, and President Trump said, I have a peace plan. I've worked out with Arab countries. They're on board. They're going to bring Hamas on board. You better be on board, too. What's different here is that the U.S. is guaranteeing that Israel will not resume the war once Hamas releases the hostages. And that guarantee is the key factor.
And, Daniel, is the reason that that guarantee carries weight? Is that because Netanyahu has a better relationship?
with President Trump than he did President Biden?
Is it because President Trump has been so aggressive about threatening at times Hamas,
at times Israel, saying stop this at else at a certain time and people are by and large listening?
I think it's because Netanyahu has no other ally today than President Trump.
Trump was his last lifeline and Trump was able to get Netanyahu to stop the Iran more.
And now he has done the same with Gaza.
This, of course, is not the first time a U.S. president has gotten deeply involved in negotiations.
And this is not the first time that there has been a feeling of cautious optimism, right?
President Clinton got very close a couple of times to a lasting deal.
There were the Oslo Accords near the end of his second term.
He brought Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak together in 2000,
only to have things fall apart.
how are you thinking right now about the durability and the future of this new peace plan?
Well, President Trump talks about this being peace in the Middle East.
We're not there yet.
This is phase one of a deal to exchange hostages and prisoners.
This is a deal for a partial Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.
If you're thinking about peace in the Middle East, this is small potatoes.
It is a huge breakthrough.
Don't get me wrong.
But the tricky part is the next stage of the deal.
which is, will Hamas be disarmed?
What kind of multinational peacekeeping force could be in Gaza?
And then there are the very last points of President Trump's 20-point plan for the Middle East,
which discuss in these very vague terms some kind of future pathway for Palestinian self-determination,
for a Palestinian state, what successive U.S. presidents have tried to achieve.
And one fundamental shift in this war is that Israel,
has never before spoken so openly against a Palestinian state as it has now.
And the Trump administration is avoiding more discussion of the topic.
So this deal may lead down the road to diplomatic ties between Israel and other Arab countries.
But if we've learned anything from the past two years and two days of war,
it's that as long as the root issues of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict are not addressed,
most people here believe
it's just a matter of time
before the next round of violence
let's pause for a moment though
at this moment in time
and Daniel tell me
what in your mind has been lost
on both sides over the past two years
and two days as you put it
I mean what hasn't been lost
Palestinians in Gaza
have lost nearly everything
their homes their limbs
their schools
their lives
Israelis as a collective
have fundamentally lost trust in their country's ability to keep them safe.
Both peoples have experienced trauma that echo their worst chapters in history,
whether that's the Nakhba, the displacement of Palestinians in the founding war surrounding Israel's
creation or the Holocaust for Jews.
This has bred resentment, revenge, and generations on both sides that may not be,
hopeful that they can chart a better path forward.
Yeah. You've covered just about every minute of this war. I still think about talking to you
over the microphones in the very early hours of October 7th, two years ago. What moments or
stories that you've experienced are sticking in your mind today? I remember that. I spoke to you
from the hospital in southern Israel, where I stumbled upon an old college professor of mine.
who split his time between the U.S. and Israel
and his daughter was killed in the Hamas attack on October 7th.
And I called him today.
And I asked him how he's feeling in this moment.
And he spoke about his children who lost their sister in the attack.
He spoke about his grandchildren, his grandson,
who was there when his mother was killed.
And this is what he told me.
I think of my grandchildren.
It doesn't end for them.
My grandson, in particular, when his mother died literally on top of him
and his father next to him with his arm blown off by a grenade.
How does one exercise that from one's memory?
And at the same time, these kids went to a school for Arab and Jewish children
so that they will learn to understand one another, a mutual accommodation.
Can they disassociate what happened to them directly on that terrible day
from what is a deeply held value of the need for reconstructing relationships?
I don't know, but it's going to color their life as long as they live.
You know, Scott, I've heard voices also in Gaza echoing the same sentiment
that while they feel some sense of relief now,
they've lost so much.
It's hard to really embrace a sense of happiness in this moment.
And the way he just doesn't know how the future will play out,
I think that's the case for so many people,
whether it's the coming days of this deal
or the coming years of living in that region.
Yeah.
And Pierre's Daniel Estrin.
Thank you for talking to us.
Thank you for your coverage.
And I hope we can get some sleep sometime soon.
Thank you very much, Scott.
This episode was produced by Catherine Fink, Matt Ozog, and Michael Levitt,
and featured reporting from Aya Betrawi and Anas Baba.
It was edited by Christopher Intaliata and Patrick Jaron Wadana.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yannigan.
It's Consider This from NPR.
I'm Scott Detrow.
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