Israel has accepted a brand new U.S. proposal for a short lived ceasefire with Hamas, the White Home mentioned Thursday.
U.S. President Donald Trump’s particular envoy, Steve Witkoff, expressed optimism earlier this week about brokering an settlement to halt the Israel-Hamas war and return extra of the hostages captured within the assault that ignited it.
White Home press secretary Karoline Leavitt informed reporters that Israel “backed and supported” the brand new proposal.
Hamas officers gave the Israeli-approved draft a cool response, however mentioned they needed to review the proposal extra carefully earlier than giving a proper reply.
“The Zionist response, in essence, means perpetuating the occupation and persevering with the killing and famine,” Bassem Naim, a prime Hamas official, informed The Related Press. He mentioned it “doesn’t reply to any of our folks’s calls for, foremost amongst which is stopping the struggle and famine.”
Nonetheless, he mentioned the group would research the proposal “with all nationwide accountability.”
Hamas had beforehand mentioned it had agreed with Witkoff on a “normal framework” of an settlement that will result in an enduring ceasefire, a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, an influx of aid, and a switch of energy from the militant group to a politically unbiased committee of Palestinians.
Right here’s what’s identified in regards to the rising negotiations that goal to result in an prolonged truce within the struggle in change for hostages that stay in captivity:
What do Israel and Hamas need?
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has refused to finish the struggle till all of the hostages are launched and Hamas is both destroyed or disarmed and despatched into exile. He has mentioned Israel will control Gaza indefinitely and facilitate what he refers to because the voluntary emigration of a lot of its inhabitants.
Palestinians and many of the worldwide neighborhood have rejected plans to resettle Gaza’s inhabitants, a transfer specialists say would likely violate international law.
Hamas has mentioned it’s going to solely launch the remaining hostages — its solely bargaining chip — in return for more Palestinian prisoners, an enduring ceasefire and a full Israeli withdrawal. It has supplied to surrender energy to a committee of politically unbiased Palestinians that would oversee reconstruction.
Hamas is still holding 58 hostages. Round a 3rd are believed to be alive, although many concern they’re in grave hazard the longer the struggle goes on. 1000’s of Palestinians have been killed since Israel renewed its airstrikes and floor operations after ending a ceasefire in March.
The dispute over whether or not there must be a short lived ceasefire to launch extra hostages — as Israel has referred to as for — or a everlasting one — as Hamas needs — has bedeviled talks brokered by the U.S., Egypt and Qatar for greater than a yr and a half, and there’s no indication it has been resolved.
What’s the newest ceasefire proposal?
Witkoff has not publicized his newest proposal, however a Hamas official and an Egyptian official independently confirmed among the particulars. They spoke on situation of anonymity to debate the delicate talks.
They are saying it requires a 60-day pause in combating, ensures of great negotiations resulting in a long-term truce and assurances that Israel is not going to resume hostilities after the discharge of hostages, as it did in March. Israeli forces would pull again to the positions they held throughout the ceasefire Israel ended that month.
Hamas would launch 10 residing hostages and quite a few our bodies throughout the 60-day pause in change for greater than 1,100 Palestinians imprisoned by Israel, together with 100 serving lengthy sentences after being convicted of lethal assaults.
Every day, lots of of vans carrying meals and humanitarian help could be allowed to enter Gaza, the place specialists say a virtually three-month Israeli blockade — slightly eased in recent days — has pushed the inhabitants to the brink of famine.
Why is it so exhausting to finish the struggle?
Hamas-led militants stormed southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 folks, largely civilians, and abducting 251 hostages. Greater than half the hostages have been launched in ceasefires or different offers. Israel has rescued eight and recovered dozens of our bodies.
Israel’s ensuing army marketing campaign has killed over 54,000 Palestinians, largely girls and youngsters, in response to the Gaza Well being Ministry, which doesn’t say how lots of the useless had been civilians or combatants.
The offensive has destroyed huge areas of Gaza and displaced round 90% of its inhabitants of roughly 2 million Palestinians, with lots of of hundreds residing in squalid tent camps and unused colleges.
Hamas has been vastly depleted militarily and lost nearly all of its top leaders in Gaza. It most certainly fears that releasing all of the hostages with out securing a everlasting ceasefire would permit Israel to launch an much more devastating marketing campaign to finally destroy the group.
Israel fears {that a} lasting ceasefire and withdrawal now would go away Hamas with vital affect in Gaza, even when it surrenders formal energy. With time, Hamas may be capable of rebuild its army may and ultimately launch extra Oct. 7-style assaults.
Netanyahu also faces political constraints: His far-right coalition companions have threatened to deliver down his authorities if he ends the struggle too quickly. That would go away him extra weak to prosecution on longstanding corruption charges and to investigations into the failures surrounding the Oct. 7 assault.
A broader decision to the decades-old Israeli-Palestinian battle seems extra distant than ever.
The Palestinians are weak and divided, and Israel’s present authorities — probably the most nationalist and spiritual in its historical past — is against Palestinian calls for for a state in Gaza, the West Bank and east Jerusalem, territories Israel occupied within the 1967 Mideast struggle.
The final critical peace talks broke down greater than 15 years in the past.
Magdy reported from Cairo. AP writers Fatma Khaled in Cairo and Aamer Madhani in Washington contributed reporting.
 
			 
		     
					











