פרעזידענט טראמפ ווארנט חאמאס פארן נישט פאלגן די רעגולאציעס
President Donald Trump delivered a stark and unambiguous warning to Hamas during a November 2, 2025, 60 Minutes interview at Mar-a-Lago, telling viewers that the group faces immediate and decisive elimination if it violates the ceasefire. “Hamas could be taken out immediately if they don't behave. They know that. If they don't behave, they're going to be taken out immediately,” the President said, framing the current armistice as contingent on strict compliance.
Trump characterized the ceasefire as “very solid” while attributing its durability to the administration’s sustained military pressure on Iran-backed proxies across the region. He pointed to recent operations that, in his telling, removed key leadership and materially weakened Hamas and Hezbollah — a posture he argued transformed the negotiating environment and made a workable truce possible. For the President, deterrence — backed by targeted kinetic action — proved more effective than prior purely diplomatic efforts.
The administration’s message is twofold: first, that the United States and its Israeli partner will not tolerate renewed mass attacks or hostage campaigns; second, that robust, calibrated force is a necessary element of sustainable peace. By publicly tying the ceasefire’s survival to demonstrable behavior on the ground, Trump signaled a clear consequence-based policy. Allies receive assurance that violations will meet an immediate response; adversaries receive a blunt reminder that restraint is in their interest.
Beyond rhetoric, the statement reflects an operational philosophy that fuses intelligence, precision strikes, and diplomatic pressure to shape adversary calculations without committing to open-ended occupation or prolonged ground campaigns. That balance — deterrence with limited application of force — is presented as the responsible path to prevent escalations while protecting civilians and allied interests.
For voters and partners watching from abroad, the President’s remarks underline a central tenet of his foreign policy: peace depends on strength, and strength depends on the credible willingness to act. As long as the ceasefire holds, Washington will remain engaged; if it collapses, Trump’s words make clear that the administration intends to answer swiftly and decisively.