Trump peace board Gaza envoy warns imperfect ceasefire risks being permanent

Nickolay Mladenov, the Gaza high representative of U.S. President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace.

Nickolay Mladenov, the Gaza high representative of U.S. President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

The Gaza high representative of U.S. President Donald Trump’s Board of Peace warned Thursday (May 21, 2026) that the status quo in the divided and devastated territory — including an imperfect ceasefire — risks becoming “permanent” reality.

In its first report to the UN Security Council, the board called militant group Hamas’s refusal to disarm and relinquish control “the principal obstacle” to moving to the second phase of the ceasefire deal.

But Gaza high representative Nickolay Mladenov told the council that implementation of the deal “cannot advance through Palestinian obligations alone.”

Gaza remains gripped by daily violence as Israeli strikes continue, with both the military and Hamas accusing one another of violating the truce.

“The continued killings, Israeli restrictions affecting humanitarian flows are not abstract issues,” said Mr. Mladenov, who appeared by video.

Violations like the still-rising death toll were impacting Palestinians’ belief in whether Gaza’s safety and recovery could ever become a reality, he said.

“I want to be clear about the risks of inaction by the parties,” he said. “The risk is that the deteriorating status quo becomes permanent: a divided Gaza, Hamas holding military and administrative control over two million people across less than half the territory.”

“Those people are likely to remain trapped in the rubble, dependent on aid with no meaningful reconstruction, because reconstruction financing will not flow where weapons have not been laid down,” Mr. Mladenov said.

The ultimate result of leaving a generation of traumatized children to grow up in tents would be “no security for Israel, and no viable pathway to Palestinian self-determination,” he said.

In January, Washington said it was moving into the second phase of the peace plan that calls for the disarmament of Hamas, whose unprecedented October 7, 2023 attack on Israel triggered the massive offensive in Gaza.

It also calls for the gradual retreat of Israeli forces and the deployment of an international stabilizing force.

Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem denounced Mladenov’s comments as an attempt to “pressure” Hamas, saying in a statement that it amounted to “adopting the Israeli narrative and an attempt to create justifications” for occupation of Gaza.

He affirmed Hamas’s commitment to the ceasefire and stated that it was “ready to immediately and fully hand over governance to the National Committee for the Administration of the Gaza Strip,” which is to manage the territory during a transitional phase.

Addressing the Council, Israeli representative Jonathan Miller accused Hamas of “using the delay to consolidate control, rebuild its capabilities, and strengthen its grip over the civilian population.”

“This is not a political organisation transitioning to diplomacy,” Mr. Miller said. “This is a terrorist army preserving its capabilities for the next war.”

The ceasefire officially came into effect on October 10, a few days after the second anniversary of the start of the war triggered on October 7, 2023, by Hamas’s attack against Israel.

The first phase of the truce saw the release of the last hostages seized in October 2023 in exchange for Palestinians detained by Israel.

The transition to the second phase — involving Hamas’s disarmament and a gradual withdrawal of the Israeli army, which still controls more than 50 percent of the Gaza Strip — has been stalled for weeks as international attention has been focused on Iran and the Strait of Hormuz.

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