
President-elect Donald Trump’s envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, is considering a visit to the war-torn Gaza Strip as part of his efforts to keep a ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas on track, according to a transition official with direct knowledge of the ceasefire process. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading.
Main Idea: Steve Witkoff is considering a visit to Gaza as President-elect Donald Trump’s team tries to keep the new ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas from breaking down.
Key Points:
A fragile ceasefire could fail, raising oil price swings, market stress, and fresh pressure on US taxpayers if fighting and aid needs grow.
A sustained deal could free hostages, reduce violence, and lower the risk of a wider war that could unsettle US households and businesses.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
The main geographic focus of the article and the location of the ceasefire, humanitarian crisis, and possible visit.
Central negotiating and conflict actor tied to the ceasefire, hostage release, and fighting in Gaza.
His directive to Witkoff and pressure on the ceasefire negotiations are central to the story.
Trump’s Middle East envoy and the article’s central actor considering a Gaza visit and managing ceasefire implementation.
Israeli prime minister whose decisions and interactions with Witkoff are a major part of the article.
His team’s negotiations are referenced as part of the ceasefire process that Witkoff joined.
Named Israeli official mentioned in connection with Netanyahu and the negotiations.
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Sign in to commentImplicitly central through U.S. military aid to Israel and the U.S.-backed negotiation process.