Gaza Ceasefire Deal Faces Uncertainty as Netanyahu Signals Resistance
Summary
A ceasefire and hostage release agreement between Israel and Hamas is under serious strain, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu signaling reluctance to hold to its terms. The deal, which drew both cautious optimism and sharp skepticism from the outset, is now being characterized in conservative and libertarian commentary as either a capitulation or a missed opportunity, depending on the framing. Netanyahu's posture suggests he may walk back key provisions, a move that would throw the fragile agreement into further doubt. Both Reason and National Review, coming from right-of-center and right perspectives respectively, treat the deal with skepticism, though for somewhat different reasons. National Review frames it as outright disappointing, while Reason focuses on Netanyahu's apparent move to unravel it. The hostage situation and the broader question of what a durable end to the Gaza conflict would actually look like remain unresolved. Whatever the ultimate outcome, the gap between what was announced and what may actually be implemented is already It.