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Trump declares that the Palestinians will have no right to return to the territories they now occupy… The US president seems to be eluding concrete answers on the Palestinian issue, fuelling scepticism and confusion with strongly and deliberately ambiguous phrases

Recent statements by US President Donald Trump continue to raise doubts about his plan for the situation of the Palestinians and the future of Gaza. Speaking during an interview on Fox News, Trump stated that the Palestinians would not have the right to return to Gaza under his plan, but added that they would receive ‘much better housing’.

A statement that sounds contradictory: while on the one hand the right of return is denied, on the other hand better living conditions are promised, without however clearly explaining how this plan would be realised or what the actual fate of the Palestinians currently living in Gaza would be, given that they would be denied the right to return. The vagueness of his words raises concerns and dismay about a possible lack of concrete commitment by the US administration to the Palestinians, making the proposal appear more like a mere political statement rather than a well-defined strategy.

Uncertainty has been fuelled by the very wording of Trump’s statements, which hinted at ‘building a permanent place for the Palestinians’ but without going into detail on how this process will be managed or how the geopolitical context will evolve. The sense that emerges is that Trump is trying to avoid clear commitments, leaving room for interpretations that could lower expectations of the plan, making it difficult to understand what the true scope of the proposal will be and with that the possibility of hiding the real plan behind this proposal at the moment.

This ambiguity fuels the suspicion that Trump is trying to maintain a vague profile, without addressing the real implications of his words. The lack of concrete details and the tendency not to clarify fundamental issues such as Palestinian rights risk leading to a new phase of confusion. A situation that could soon precipitate into a new phase of the conflict, even more bitter than the one that occurred until the ceasefire of January 2025.

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