On Air Now

Just Great Music

Midnight - 6:00am

With one of his proudest achievements on the line, will Trump force Netanyahu's hand?

You are viewing content from Fosse 107 Loughborough. Would you like to make this your preferred location?

Tuesday, 23 September 2025 04:19

By Mark Stone, US correspondent

The moment could have felt so different. It should have felt so different.

It was supposed to come a long time ago, and it was supposed to be the outcome of a peace process, of reconciliation, of understanding, of coexistence and of healing.

If it had happened the right way, then we'd be celebrating two states living alongside each other, coexisting, sharing a capital city.

As it happened: France recognises Palestinian state

Instead, the recognition of Palestine as a state comes out of the rubble of Gaza.

It has come as a last-ditch effort to save all vanishing chances of a Palestinian state.

Essentially, the countries which have recognised Palestine here at the UN in New York are jumping to the endpoint and hope to now fill in the gaps.

Those gaps are huge.

Even before the horror of the Hamas attack on 7 October 2023, there was almost no realistic prospect of a two-state solution.

Israeli settlement expansion in the West Bank and Benjamin Netanyahu's divide-and-conquer strategy for the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank and Hamas in Gaza had made reconciliation increasingly hard.

The Hamas attack set back what little hope there was even further, while settlement expansion by the Israelis in the West Bank accelerated since then.

The same questions which have made all this so intractable remain.

How to share a capital city? Who controls Jerusalem's Old City, where the holy sites are located? If it's shared, then how?

What happens to the settlements in the West Bank? If land swaps take place, then where? What happens to Gaza? Who governs the Palestinians?

And how are the moderates on both sides emboldened to dominate the discourse and the policy?

Hope rests with Trump

Right now, Palestinian extremism is holding out in Gaza with the hostages, and Israeli extremism is dominant on the other side, with Netanyahu now threatening to fully annex the West Bank as a reaction to the recognition declarations at the UN.

It all feels pretty bleak and desperate. If there is cause for some hope, it rests with Donald Trump.

Over the next 24 hours in New York, he will meet key Arab and Muslim leaders from the Middle East and Asia to present his latest plan for peace in Gaza.

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Egypt, Jordan, Turkey, Indonesia, and Pakistan will all participate in the meeting.

They will listen to his plan, some may offer peacekeeping troops (a significant development if they do), some may offer to provide funding to rebuild the strip and, crucially, all are likely to tell him that his Abraham Accords plan - to forge ahead with diplomatic normalisation between Muslim nations and Israel - will not happen if Israel pushes ahead with any West Bank annexation.

Netanyahu will address the UN at the end of the week, before travelling to the White House on Monday, where he will tell Trump what he plans to do next in both Gaza and the West Bank.

Read more from Sky News:
Typhoon brings 183mph winds as thousands evacuated
Flights suspended at European airport after drone sightings

If Trump wants his Abraham Accords to expand and not collapse - and remember the accords represent a genuine diplomatic game changer for the region, one Trump is rightly proud of - then he will force Netanyahu to stop in Gaza and stop in the West Bank.

He is the only man in the world who can.

Sky News

(c) Sky News 2025: With one of his proudest achievements on the line, will Trump force Netanyahu's hand?

More from National News

5 Day Forecast

  • Tue

    Sunny intervals

    16°C

  • Wed

    Sunny intervals

    16°C

  • Thu

    Sunny intervals

    17°C

  • Fri

    Sunny intervals

    17°C

On Air Now and Next

  • Just Great Music

    Midnight - 6:00am

    Up late or up early, we've got Just Great Music interruption-free.

  • Breakfast with Mark Foster

    6:00am - 10:00am

    Mark wakes you up his way each weekday

Recently Played

Follow us on Social Media