00:00Right, but in terms of just looking at the chronology of how things could unfold from here, I mean, a ceasefire deal, end the Gaza war, get the Israeli hostages home, and then comes a more difficult step.
00:15President Trump has to decide whether or not he's going to support statehood for the Palestinians.
00:19But if he doesn't do that, then he can't expand the Abraham Accords.
00:23So that seems to be roughly the order in which decisions have to be taken, doesn't it?
00:30I think that's right.
00:31I think you've described the order quite well.
00:35And I suppose there is an outcome that we could call a just peace that is possible.
00:46But it would require a change of direction from Israel and, frankly, from Hamas to put that into place.
00:58And I don't see any sign of either of those right now.
01:04But, you know, could there be a, you know, some end to hostilities that we could call peace that would, you know, more or less be a reoccupation of Gaza and an ethnic cleansing of Palestinians from Gaza and a continuing, you know, crackdown in the West Bank?
01:27Yes, there could be.
01:29And that may be what Donald Trump winds up endorsing.
01:34I think that he's a political party.
01:35The other could be a little bit of a, you know, a man.
01:37But, you know, let's see if this one might be a little bit of a relationship between him and his family.
01:38I think that he's a good person about it.
01:39But, you know, he's a great person that, you know, doesn't have to do anything, right?
01:39And he's talking about it.
01:41So, you know, he might be someone who could call peace that would be a little bit of a part of the future.
01:43You know, when he's talking about peace that would be a little bit of a moment.
01:45And he's talking about a little bit of something that he'd have to do, and he could do something of a way.
01:48And I think that he might be a little bit of it.