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OPINION

Defend Trump's Map of New Mideast Against Extremists

united states presidency and nations of the middle east global realpolitik

U.S. President Donald Trump stands next to Qatar Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani and Egypt's President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, during a photo during a world leaders' summit on ending the Gaza war on Oct. 13, 2025 in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt. (Evan Vucci - Pool/Getty Images)

Ahmed Charai By Monday, 15 December 2025 01:46 PM EST Current | Bio | Archive

A Historic Breakthrough — But an Illusion Now Threatens It

The Mideast is closer to genuine peace than at any time in modern history.

That did not happen by accident.

It happened because President Donald J. Trump acted as the peacemaker, shattering decades of failed assumptions, and because Jared Kushner was the builder who turned vision into reality.

Together, they created the most significant diplomatic breakthrough in a generation, proving that what was once unthinkable could be achieved when leadership replaces illusion.

The Abraham Accords demonstrated not only the possibility of peace, but the possibility of a new Mideast.

Today, that achievement is under threat from a dangerous illusion: the belief that Gaza, Lebanon, Yemen, or even Sudan can be stabilized while the armed extremist networks that dominate them remain intact.

Some policymakers argue that an International Stabilization Force can enter Gaza while avoiding direct confrontation with Hamas.

But recent developments point to a more realistic course.

President Trump's decision to place a seasoned U.S. general at the head of the American component of this mission signals a disciplined and strategic approach — one that recognizes that a stabilization force succeeds only when it strengthens, rather than restrains, the responsible actors on the ground.

Rather than replacing or limiting the IDF, a U.S.-led force under clear American command can help guide, coordinate, and reinforce Israeli operations, ensuring that the dismantling of Hamas' military capabilities is conducted with maximum precision and minimum civilian casualties.

Its purpose is not to shield Hamas, but to create the professional, controlled environment required to finish the mission responsibly and sustainably.

Under strong American leadership, the stabilization mission becomes not a substitute for decisive action, but a partner in ensuring that Gaza's future is not left in the hands of those who destroyed it and vow openly to repeat Oct. 7, 2023 whenever possible.

This same principle applies across the region.

Hezbollah’s grip over Lebanon has hollowed out the Lebanese state. The Houthis threaten global trade in the Red Sea. Across Africa — from Sudan to the Sahel — Islamist networks aligned with the Muslim Brotherhood and Iran embed themselves inside state institutions, ignite wars, and sabotage transitions to democracy.

These groups are not isolated actors. They form a single ideological ecosystem built on the manipulation of chaos, the erosion of sovereignty, and the destruction of political order.

Sudan offers one of the clearest warnings.

Behind the war between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces lies a decades-long project by the Muslim Brotherhood's Sudanese branch to seize control of the army, intelligence services, and key state institutions.

Since the 1989 coup, Islamist loyalists purged more than 13,000 professional officers, monopolized military academies, and built parallel security structures that operated above the law.

Even after Bashir al-Assad's fall, this ideological network remained embedded — waiting.

When the current conflict erupted in 2023, it was not spontaneous. Multiple credible military and intelligence sources confirm that Islamist actors inside the armed forces pushed the country into war to block military reform and prevent a transition to civilian rule.

These networks now dominate strategic decision-making and resist every attempt to reach a humanitarian ceasefire, because peace threatens their path back to power.

Sudan is not an isolated case. It's a preview of what happens when extremist networks are allowed to grow inside institutions and when the international community hesitates to confront them.

The same model Hamas imposed on Gaza, Hezbollah on Lebanon, and the Houthis on Yemen is now advancing across Africa.

Safeguarding New Mideast Requires Strength, Not Illusions

The success of the Abraham Accords showed that peace can move faster than pessimism. Arab societies want opportunity, prosperity, and dignity — not endless conflict orchestrated by militias claiming to speak in their name.

The Accords proved that Arabs and Israelis can cooperate when leadership is bold enough to ignore outdated dogmas and focus on shared interests.

That breakthrough bears Trump's unmistakable imprint of bold vision — and Kushner’s unmatched ability to engineer diplomatic solutions that hold.

But safeguarding this achievement requires confronting reality with the same clarity that produced it.

Disarmament is not optional; it is the foundation of any meaningful stabilization effort.

A force that cannot neutralize Hamas, Hezbollah, the Houthis, and similar groups is not a stabilization force — it's political anesthesia.

Gazans were not born into Hamas; they were trapped by it. Sudanese civilians did not choose Islamist domination; it was imposed through fear and coercion.

Lebanese citizens never voted to live under an Iranian militia. These extremist networks do not defend Muslims; they exploit them.

Yet there is reason for hope.

The region has already witnessed a transformation that experts once deemed impossible.

The Abraham Accords proved that when illusions are discarded, progress is attainable. This should inspire confidence — but also urgency.

Achievements of this magnitude are fragile; they must be defended.

To protect the new Mideast, the region must unite against extremist networks with discipline, purpose, and moral clarity.

Ego, rivalry, and small calculations must be set aside.

The forces of chaos work tirelessly to undo this progress; therefore, we must work even harder to protect it.

The choice before us is clear: defend the new Mideast that Trump envisioned and Kushner helped build — or watch extremist networks dismantle it piece by piece.

The time to act is now.

Ahmed Charai is publisher of the Jerusalem Strategic Tribune, TV Abraham, and Radio Abraham. He serves on the boards of several prominent institutions, including the Atlantic Council, the Center for the National Interest, and the Foreign Policy Research Institute. He is also an international councilor and a member of the Advisory Board at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Read more of Ahmed Charai's reports here.

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AhmedCharai
There is reason for hope. The region has already witnessed a transformation that experts once deemed impossible. The Abraham Accords proved that when illusions are discarded, progress is attainable.
gaza, hezbollah, kushner
947
2025-46-15
Monday, 15 December 2025 01:46 PM
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