WASHINGTON — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's trip to Washington this week netted President Donald Trump another nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize he covets, but the ceasefire the U.S. leader sought for the war in Gaza didn't emerge.
Despite Trump throwing his weight behind a push for a 60-day truce between Israel and Hamas, no breakthrough was announced during Netanyahu's visit, a disappointment for a president who wants to be known as a peacemaker and has hinged his reputation on being a dealmaker.
''He prides himself or being able to make deals, so this is another test case,'' said Rachel Brandenburg, the Israel Policy Forum's Washington managing director and senior fellow.
Trump's ability to strike a ceasefire deal in the 21-month war will reveal the boundaries of his influence with Netanyahu, especially after their recent joint strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities that both leaders touted at the White House this week.
Beyond the back-to-back meetings Trump and Netanyahu had at the White House this week, there was little public evidence of progress at a time when the Republican U.S. president is pushing to end the fighting.
‘Closer than we've been,' but challenges remain
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Thursday that when it comes to a ceasefire in Gaza, ''we're closer than we've been in quite a while and we're hopeful, but we also recognize there's still some challenges in the way.''
Rubio, who spoke to reporters while traveling in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, also said that Trump ''wants to see a ceasefire and we've invested a lot of time and energy.''