Overview
- Clinton publicly praised the plan during a conversation at 92NY and in a Financial Times essay, saying the 20 points offer the sole workable route to stop the fighting and rebuild Gaza.
- The 20‑point framework centers on phased ceasefires, the disarmament of Hamas, amnesty for militants who lay down arms, a goal of a deradicalized Gaza and international oversight of reconstruction.
- The White House has moved to implement the plan through a Board of Peace chaired by the president and a special envoy focused on shifting from ceasefire to demilitarization and reconstruction.
- Clinton framed her support as pragmatic given the current collapse of momentum for a two‑state solution, a stance that produced surprise and strong reaction across the political spectrum.
- Supporters warn her endorsement could strengthen U.S. diplomatic leverage to implement the plan, while critics point to major security, political and governance hurdles that must be solved before reconstruction can proceed.