President Trump’s Eighth Cabinet Meeting Bring Details Of The Trump Peace Plan Between Israel and Many Nations

It is important to note that when Daniel 9:27 describes the final event that brings the Seven-Year Tribulation, a Seven-Year Peace Plan, we may not know ahead of time that it will be for seven years. There is nothing to preclude this Peace Plan from being the same Peace Plan that Daniel describes, without any present designation for a period of seven years. It could be that Daniel is being informed of how long the Peace Plan will last, in retrospect.

As I write, President Trump is meeting with his Cabinet at the White House, describing the events that have recently taken place concerning his Peace Plan for Israel and the Jews. I will include the transcript from this meeting in this essay.

Harris Faulkner

“What I’m learning so far is just not the historic moment that we’re in right now, but the ones that are coming. So this is a train of them, and it’s pretty remarkable. 
This cabinet meeting is the 8th under Trump’s presidency, and I’ve been saying all morning, by far, the most special, no doubt. Because when he announces the first phase of this peace deal, it means that life is going to change along a line that we’ve never been able to negotiate, at least under other presidents.”

“And it was interesting this morning, leadership for Republicans, Senator Langford, was with me on set here, and he said, Look, this is an opportunity for a nation like Saudi Arabia to have relations with Israel like we’ve never seen before. 
So you’ve got Jared Kusher there. who also has been working on the policy and the political way ahead, that side of the story. It is tremendous. And so all of this will come out, no doubt, in this cabinet meeting, which you know how President Trump likes to roll. 
He’s gonna bring it all to us live. Every American can tune in and have a front row seat to history. We will take a little care, so we can’t wait to see all you’ve been up to in D.C. and we take you live now to the cabinet room where President Trump is sitting down with his cabinet amid his historic date.”

President Trump

“So I want to thank everybody for being here, as you know, last night, we reached a momentous breakthrough in the Middle East, something that people said was never going to be done. We ended the war in Gaza, and really, on a much bigger basis, created peace, and I think it’s gonna be a last thing for you, hopefully, an everlasting peace.”

“Peace in the Middle East, and we secured the release of all of the remaining hostages, and they should be released on Monday or Tuesday, and getting them as a complicated process, and rather than tell you what they have to do together, there are places you don’t want to be, but we are getting the hostages back on Tuesday, Monday or Tuesday. And it’ll be a day of joy. I’m gonna try and make a trip over.”

“We’re gonna try and get over there. And, uh, working on the timing, the exact timing, we’re gonna go to Egypt, where we’ll have a signing, an additional sign, and we’ve already had a signing representing me, but we’re gonna have an official signing. And the amazing thing is, all of the countries over there, from Qatar to Saudi Arabia to UAE, to all of them.”

They’ve all come together for this, and they’re really, uh, probably the best relationships they’ve ever had. So it’s been really something incredible that nobody thought it was possible to get it done.”

“Indonesia’s been fantastic. The whole world has come together for this. People that didn’t get along, people that didn’t like each other. 
Neighboring countries, they, frankly, didn’t like each other, but now they, there’s this moment in time.”

“We settled seven wars, or major conflicts, but wars, and this is number eight.”

“So I want to thank Pete and the Department of War for all their help.How about we go to Marco. You could talk a little bit about what’s going on, and, uh, go ahead. Yeah?”

Marco Rubio

“Mr. President, you know, I don’t know the one day, perhaps, the entire story will be told about the events of yesterday, but, uh, you know, sufficing to say, it’s not an exaggeration, I’m not in the wood of the possible without the President of the United States being involved. 
It really began with your trip to the Middle East, where these relationships were forged in partners in the region, personal relationships, close relationships that created the foundation where all this was possible, where I think this really took a turn.”

“Remember, a month ago, now we thought this was possible. We really took a turn about a month ago, less than a couple weeks ago, is when we were at the United Nations, and you convened an historic meeting, not simply of Arab countries, but the Muslim majority countries from around the world, including Indonesia, was there. 
Pakistan was there, and created this coalition behind this planet.”

“The president had some extraordinary phone calls. and meetings. And I said, Okay… For my high degree of intensity…

There’s a geopolitical aspect. But yesterday was a human story. And because of the work you put it, and honestly, there is no, not only is there no other leader in the world that could have put this together, Mr. President, but frankly, I don’t know of any American president in the modern era that could have made this possible, because of the actions you have taken unrelated to this, and because of who you are and what you’ve done, and how you’re viewed.”

“And I think it will go down as a historic moment, and the history of our country, and something our country should be very proud of, that we have a president that’s committed to the not just peace, but to the human aspect of uniting these families.”

Michael Oren – Former Israeli Ambassador

“Listen, how does this president succeed where, certainly, the two presidents before him, Biden, Obama, did not succeed?”

“And there are very simple reasons. One is that this president was willing to use power. 
People previously thought that you could use soft power in the Middle East. Certainly that’s not gonna wash. In the Middle East, people respect presidents, leaders who exert power or project power. 
This president did it first against the hoodies in Yemen, then against Iran. And that gave him tremendous, tremendous leverage. Also personal relationships.”

“Steve Whitcoff, Jared Kushner had personal relationships throughout this entire region. Now, before I was ambassador, before I was a soldier, I was a professor of diplomatic and military history. I look at those 20 points, and I said, oh, my God, I’d never say anything like this.”

“This is a tremendous act of elegant diplomacy to get countries who don’t agree with one another. They’re mine with Israel, they’re mine with the Palestinians in the United States. Get them all to agree on a peace plan that takes, that not only solves the Gava issue, begins to address the entire Middle East complex.”

“I really don’t see any precedent for it. Certainly not in modern Middle Eastern memory. So this is how it happens. 
A combination of using power and personal relationships. that has not been done in many, many years. I also think that President Trump always had an optimism, that it could happen, that he wanted to see peace, and that if he worked hard enough at it, and got at it from every different angle, that it would be possible. And I think that is an extraordinary thing to recognize in what he has pulled off here.”

Robert Greenway – Architect of The Abraham Accords

“Look, we don’t know the details yet of what the International Peacekeeping or Observing Force would do, what a U.S. role would be. It is not a surprise that the U.S. would put additional assets on the ground to ensure that the transition of remains and hostages takes place. So until I think we know the details of what they’ll be doing, I think we can side with the president and cast on his judgment and recognize that it’s unlikely they’ll be on the ground in Gaza, but supporting, rather, an international effort.”

“In a sense, some of the most difficult things will follow the transfer, but the loss of leverage, the gathering of an international community to support the deal really forced Hamas’ hand and allowed this to happen. President Trump and the team deserve all the credit.”

“Of course. The next few steps after the transfer (of hostages) will be among the most difficult. Look, we haven’t seen it happen in Lebanon, where technocrats were supposed to take charge of the government there, and Hezbollah has not yet surrendered control.”

“I don’t know that the same will happen here, but having the hostages return and losing that leverage, then opens up a broad vista of accountability mechanisms that could be in place if they fail to make that transition. And, of course, reconstruction can occur unless technocrats come in, and some form of security is established.”

“President Trump is the president that’s introduced peace and ended conflict, eight, according to his account, and it’s a remarkable achievement. We haven’t seen any nation building, and I don’t think there’s any evidence of it to occur in Gaza.”

Laura Ingraham

“Now, Robert, uh, you worked with Jared Kushner, um, tirelessly on the Abraham Accords. No one thought that was possible, by the way. And you all pulled that off. Explain how that experience that he had with you, and working side by side with you, helped him and Whitcoff together on this jaunt across the Middle East, and also working with Turkey, Indonesia, the president gave all of them credit today. How important was that initial experience?”

Robert Greenway

“Well, look, it was a privilege for me to watch Jared and the president and other members of the team in action, and I learned a tremendous amount watching him and the president see clearly what others could not. They listened to all opinions, they evaluated judgments, but they prized facts, first and foremost, and so they saw the reality shifting on the ground, and they were able to implement and chart a path through it. That led to the brokering of the Abraham Accords, and Jared was principal in executing that in president’s direction. And so now, I think what we’re seeing is exactly the same.”

“We’re building on the foundations that they built, and we’re using the relationships that all of them have nurtured over the last few decades, and now it’s bearing fruit. And I think now we’ll also see an expansion of the Accords.”

Laura Ingraham

“Robert, yes or no? 
Will he get the Nobel Prize, or will the committee do what the committee does and keep hating Trump?

 Robert Greenway

“It’s a great question. I’m beginning to think the Nobel Prize is an insult, but if it’s not, you certainly deserved it the first term. 
He’s more than deserved it now.”

Updates to follow…



Categories: Robert Clifton Robinson

1 reply

  1. Thank you Brother Rob for doing the hard work and keeping us up to date. I praise the Lord for you.

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