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The Saturday Morning Vogue Review NEWS provides readers a fresh prospective on up to date news, the latest fashions, beautiful places, very interesting people, our military people, the latest gossip, and more. The Saturday Morning Vogue Review provides readers and views with aa fresh prospective on up to date news, the latest fashions, beautiful places, very interesting people, our military people, the latest gossip, and more for 2025.

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12/22/2025

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12/22/2025

Gaza’s “Day After”: Diplomatic Deadlock and America’s Lack of Decisive Leadership

By Dr. Saeed Mohammad Abu Rahma
Researcher in Conflict and Regional Security

As diplomatic activity surrounding the “day after” in Gaza accelerates, tangible outcomes remain elusive. Despite a flurry of high-level meetings and regional consultations, no clear roadmap has emerged to guide Gaza out of its deepening political and humanitarian crisis. The latest example came after the Doha meeting held earlier this week, followed by a U.S.-hosted summit in Miami led by envoy Steve Witkoff, bringing together senior officials from Qatar, Egypt, and Turkey to discuss the second phase of the Gaza plan.
Yet, beyond symbolism, these meetings have failed to move the process forward. What dominates the scene are familiar patterns: open-ended consultations, theoretical proposals, and non-binding scenarios. This persistent stalemate highlights the depth of disagreement among the parties involved and, more importantly, the absence of a decisive international—particularly American—will capable of enforcing a workable consensus on the ground.
At the heart of the impasse lie Israel’s rigid red lines. Israel categorically rejects any post-war arrangement that allows Hamas to remain in Gaza, whether directly or through political or security reconfiguration. From Tel Aviv’s perspective, any withdrawal from the Strip must be contingent upon Hamas’s full exclusion and the complete dismantling of its military infrastructure. Israel has also made clear its strong opposition to any Turkish role in shaping Gaza’s post-war governance.
Under these conditions, diplomacy increasingly resembles negotiations conducted along parallel tracks that never intersect. While delegations shuttle between capitals, Gaza continues to sink deeper into devastation—without a credible reconstruction plan, without firm guarantees of a lasting ceasefire, and without a realistic pathway to stability.
Israel’s expected absence from the Miami summit carries notable implications. On one level, Washington may be attempting to explore alternative frameworks outside Israel’s immediate influence, possibly with the intention of presenting Tel Aviv with a fait accompli at a later stage. On another level, the absence may signal deeper divisions within the U.S. administration itself over how to manage the next phase of the conflict and what level of pressure—if any—should be exerted on its allies.
Equally significant is the choice of Miami as the venue for a meeting addressing one of the Middle East’s most volatile crises. Holding the talks outside traditional political and diplomatic hubs such as Washington, New York, or Cairo suggests a shift in American thinking—particularly associated with the re-emergence of a Trump-aligned approach. The move appears aimed at insulating the Gaza file from UN, European, and regional pressures, favoring instead a strategy based on managing outcomes and imposing realities rather than negotiating compromises.
This shift points to a broader trend in U.S. policy: moving toward imposing peace rather than mediating it. Should the current deadlock persist, Washington may resort to unilateral steps, including the imposition of a transitional authority or an international force under a loosely defined “peace framework,” bypassing the traditional consensus-building process.
One of the most striking paradoxes in the current moment is the unspoken convergence between Israel and Hamas on delaying the transition to the second phase, despite their declared enmity. Neither party appears eager to accelerate post-war arrangements. Hamas fears that any political process tied to disarmament would erode its military and political leverage. Israel, meanwhile, prefers to keep Gaza in a state of controlled uncertainty—avoiding direct responsibility for governance while simultaneously blocking the return of the Palestinian Authority in its current form and rejecting the involvement of actors it deems undesirable, such as Turkey or Qatar.
In this context, the absence of an agreement becomes the most convenient option for both sides. The status quo, however destructive, remains preferable to compromises that would force painful concessions—unless a decisive external actor intervenes to alter the calculus.
That decisive actor can only be the United States. The second phase of the Gaza plan will not meaningfully begin without a firm American decision that binds all parties to a clear timeline and enforceable arrangements. Past experience has shown that endless mediation, devoid of real pressure, merely freezes the conflict rather than resolving it. The cost of this paralysis is borne overwhelmingly by the Palestinian people.
Gaza is not simply a political or security file; it is an ongoing humanitarian catastrophe. Every delay in establishing a stable and credible post-war framework deepens the suffering and narrows the space for recovery. What is needed today is not just new political engineering, but a resolute international will—one that recognizes that time is no longer on anyone’s side.

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