Netanyahu faces far-right backlash as Trump presses to end Gaza war
- By Reuters -
- Oct 06, 2025

A rift within Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s far-right coalition is emerging as a flashpoint in efforts to end the war in Gaza, threatening to derail a US push to reshape the political landscape of the Middle East.
Under pressure from Donald Trump to end the two-year-old war, Netanyahu is facing a backlash from ultra-nationalist allies whose opposition to the US president’s Gaza proposal could force the Israeli leader into early elections.
Netanyahu has embraced Trump’s 20-point plan to end the war, which calls for Gaza’s demilitarization and rules out any future governing role for Hamas, though it allows its members to remain if they renounce violence and surrender their weapons.
FAR RIGHT WORRIED BY PROSPECT OF A ‘REVIVED’ HAMAS
Hamas also responded positively, partially accepting Trump’s plan, saying it was ready to negotiate the hostages’ release and would be part of a “Palestinian national framework” as Gaza’s future is addressed.
But the idea that Hamas could still exist, let alone be in a position to continue discussing the Gaza plan after hostages are released, enraged Netanyahu’s right-wing coalition partners.
“We cannot agree under any circumstances to a scenario in which the terrorist organization that brought the greatest calamity upon the State of Israel is revived,” said National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.
“We will in no way be partners to that,” he said in a post on X after the Sabbath, threatening to quit the government.
If far-right ministers believe Netanyahu has made too many concessions to end the war, his ruling coalition — the most right-wing government in Israel’s history — could collapse a full year before the next election, which must be held by October 2026.
But insisting on more war in Gaza would antagonise the families of hostages still held by Palestinians in Gaza, and could further alienate a war-weary Israeli public as well as Israel’s international allies.
Continued conflict could also extinguish Israeli hopes that more Arab and Muslim states like Saudi Arabia or Indonesia could join the Abraham Accords, a set of US-backed agreements that normalized relations between Israel and several Arab states.
Read more: Hamas keen to reach deal, begin prisoner exchange ‘immediately’: official
TRUMP CALLS FOR HALT TO ISRAELI BOMBARDMENT IN GAZA
Expanding the Accords has been a priority for Trump as his administration pursues its own interests in the Middle East, but Riyadh has made it clear it will not normalize with Israel until the Gaza war ends and there is a path to Palestinian statehood.
Trump has called for Israel to stop bombing Gaza in order for talks on his plan to play out, starting with indirect negotiations between Israel and Hamas in Egypt on Monday for the release of all remaining hostages.
But on Saturday, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said that pausing attacks in Gaza was a “grave mistake”. He said that over time this would erode Israel’s position as it pursues its aims of freeing the hostages, eliminating Hamas and carrying out the demilitarisation of Gaza.
Ben-Gvir and Smotrich, whose parties hold 13 of the Knesset’s 120 seats, have long pushed Netanyahu to pursue sweeping, seemingly unattainable goals in Gaza. If both were to leave the government, it would likely trigger an election.
NO GAZA CEASEFIRE YET, SAYS ISRAELI GOVERNMENT
Israeli government spokesperson Shosh Bedrosian told reporters on Sunday that the military had stopped what she said was certain bombings but that there was no ceasefire in place.
The military would continue to act for “defensive purposes”, she said. Despite Trump’s call to halt the bombing, Israeli strikes on Gaza over the weekend killed dozens of Palestinians.
Netanyahu has framed the plan as a joint effort that advances the government’s goals, which include Hamas’ surrender and Israeli security control in Gaza and its perimeter.