Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Someone from Trump admin going to Israel soon, ‘might be me,’ Vance says

Even in the best case scenario for peace in the region, “it’s going to have hills and valleys, and we’re going to have to monitor the situation,” the U.S. vice president said.

Trump Vance
U.S. President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance walk along the West Colonnade of the White House, July 18, 2025. Credit: Daniel Torok/White House.

U.S. Vice President JD Vance might be bound for Israel soon. Or it might be a colleague, he told reporters under a wing of Air Force Two after it landed at Joint Base Andrews, in Maryland, on Sunday evening.

“We might. We’re trying to figure it out. Obviously want to go and check on how things are going,” Vance said in a gaggle, per the pool report. “I think somebody from the administration is certainly going to be over there in the next few days. It might be me, but we’re going to figure out how to travel there.”

Asked how confident he is that a truce can hold in Gaza, after Hamas attacked Israeli troops in southern Gaza on Sunday, and the Jewish state responded.

“Look, it’s going to be complicated. I mean the best case scenario, meaning if this thing absolutely produces that sustainable long term peace that the president and I hope that it will, there’s going to be fits and starts,” Vance said, per the pool.

“There are going to be Hamas is going to fire on Israel. Israel’s going to have to respond, of course. There are going to be moments where you have people within Gaza that you’re quite sure what they’re actually doing,” he said. “But we think it has the best chance for sustainable peace, but even if it does that, it’s going to have hills and valleys.”

“We’re going to have to monitor the situation,” he said.

The depth of Moscow’s and Beijing’s backing for the Islamic Republic is coming under sharp scrutiny.
The U.S. president calls for calm as diplomatic efforts continue over Israel-Lebanon truce.
Runners from Israel and abroad join subdued race following Lebanon truce.
The victory of the 45-year-old lawyer is expected to end Hungary’s automatic veto of anti-Israel initiatives in the European Union.
The tally of Israel’s fallen since 1860 reaches 25,644.
Judges rule emergency measures imposed following deadly antisemitic shooting violated constitutional protections.