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OPINION

Trump Team Defied Conventional Wisdom, Brought Mideast Peace

a nation of middle east region united states presidential and cabinet level diplomacy

A billboard displays: "Don't stop all the way to normalization" with pictures of U.S. President Donald Trump, United States Special Envoy to the Mideast Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner and U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Oct. 12, 2025 in Tel Aviv, Israel. (Alexi J. Rosenfeld/Getty Images)

Debra J. Saunders By Wednesday, 15 October 2025 03:02 PM EDT Current | Bio | Archive

For the last 20 living Israeli hostages who spent 738 awful days in captivity  starved, isolated and afraid  the worst nightmare is behind them.

"The war is over," President Donald Trump told Politico's Dasha Burns on Air Force One as they flew to the Mideast ahead of the signing of the ceasefire deal he brokered.

"It's over. You understand that?"

Four deceased hostages also were transferred Monday; 24 bodies that were supposed to go home Monday remain with their Hamas captors.

The day must have been sweet for President Donald Trump.

He and his band of disruptors were supposed to be world-class bunglers on the global stage, amateurs who couldn't hold a candle to the establishment foreign policy dons who worked for seasoned hands like former President Joe Biden.

Remember how insiders mocked Trump's real estate developer picks to corral the Mideast-son-in-law Jared Kushner and special envoy Steve Witkoff  because they lacked international-community credentials?

The two businessmen look pretty good these days at a job for which they never trained.

It turns out that sometimes you get more done by turning to people who don't know the long list of things that, in the realm of realpolitik, can't be done.

Team Trump "shook up the chess board," Dan Senor, one-time chief spokesman for the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq, told CNN, when he demanded that the remaining hostages be released all at once. "I thought this will never happen," Senor confessed.

Didn't we all?

"The transformation of Donald Trump," Foundation for Defense of Democracies executive director Jonathan Schanzer told me, has been a journey.

Not long ago, the conventional wisdom was that Trump would be a one-term president.

Now in his second term in the White House, he can claim the mantle of a peacemaker.

Trump doesn't speak from a high horse.

Instead, he talks about what works and what doesn't.

His message to Muslim-majority nations: "Decades of fomenting terrorism and extremism, jihadism and antisemitism, have not worked."

This approach, I believe, is part of the reason   Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif used the summit to join other world leaders in supporting Trump's desire to win next year's Nobel Peace Prize.

That suggestion sends columnist for The New York Times, Maureen Dowd, over the edge.

Trump will never "get his short, stubby fingers" on the coveted prize, she wrote.

It doesn't matter if he should succeed in delivering peace to the Mideast, she argued. He's not worthy because he trolls on social media and he "is siccing American troops on blue cities."

For two years, many Americans have watched the Gaza war and suspected that this was a conflict which would never end in peace.

Then Trump came along, determined to get both sides to yes, and peace appears as a possibility. Peace also means that Trump could end his time in office with the legacy of a world peacemaker  who relied on two real estate developers.

One of the things I love about covering politics: the surprises.

Debra J. Saunders is a fellow with Discovery Institute's Chapman Center for Citizen Leadership. She has worked for more than 30 years covering politics as well as American culture, the media, the criminal justice system, and dubious trends in public schools and universities. Read Debra J. Saunders' Reports — More Here.

© Creators Syndicate Inc.


DebraJSaunders
President Donald Trump. He and his band of disruptors were supposed to be world-class bunglers on the global stage, amateurs who couldn't hold a candle to the establishment foreign policy dons who worked for seasoned hands like former President Joe Biden.
kushner, pakistani, witkoff
547
2025-02-15
Wednesday, 15 October 2025 03:02 PM
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