Trump's artificial respiration to Netanyahu

Despite the fact that many Zionist analysts believe that Netanyahu and Trump are in a cautious and pessimistic mood toward one another, their overt and covert discussions about the state of affairs in the region and Palestine continue.
According to a public opinion survey conducted in the occupied territories, US President Donald Trump's proposal to drive Palestinians out of Gaza has boosted the popularity of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's right-wing coalition and raised the number of seats anticipated in the Knesset to 53, up four seats from the previous week's poll. If elections were held today, Netanyahu's coalition would win 53 seats, up from 49 seats in the previous poll, according to a poll in the Israeli newspaper Ma'ariv.
In actuality, Trump wanted to offer the occupying regime's prime minister a concession in return for agreeing to the ceasefire in Gaza (which Netanyahu was forced to accept), specifically to offer a plan for the forced relocation of Palestinians to nations like Egypt and Jordan.
This atmosphere-building has helped to strengthen the Netanyahu-led coalition to some degree, but it hasn't been able to secure the quorum needed to form a new coalition yet. Stated differently, Netanyahu's predicament is worse than he and others, including his finance minister Smotrich, had anticipated!
In the meantime, there is another point that should not be overlooked: with the subsiding of the emotional and propaganda dimensions of Trump’s plan in the occupied territories and the explicit stances of the countries of the region and, more importantly, the Hamas and Islamic Jihad movements, it has become clear to the residents of the occupied territories that such a plan is not feasible and is merely a kind of pumping of false hope into the Zionists who were defeated in the Gaza and Lebanon wars.
There is an expiration date on Netanyahu's exploitation of Trump's plan, but it hasn't changed the political survival equation for the prime minister of the occupying regime in Jerusalem and his cabinet at the top of the Tel Aviv power structure.
It is evident that Netanyahu has encountered a comprehensive crisis that he has not only been unable to control, but has also been unable to adequately characterize and assess in its early phases. Given these complex circumstances, even Trump's and the American Republicans' artificial respiration cannot help the ruthless and barbaric Prime Minister of the occupying regime of Jerusalem and his allies. This incapacity means that Netanyahu's cabinet has lost the ability to predict present and future events in the Gaza Strip and, by extension, the region.