JERUSALEM (AP) — For a lot of throughout the Center East, the Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire got here as a reduction: the primary main signal of progress within the area since conflict started greater than a yr in the past.
However for Palestinians in Gaza and households of hostages held within the territory, the news appeared solely to inaugurate a more moderen, grimmer interval of the battle there. For them, it marked yet one more missed alternative to finish preventing that has stretched on for almost 14 months.
Palestinians had hoped that any ceasefire take care of Hezbollah would come with a truce in Gaza as properly. The households of individuals kidnapped when Hamas-led militants stormed southern Israel in October 2023, in the meantime, wished a part of the settlement to incorporate returning their family members. As a substitute, the ceasefire was confined only to the fighting in Lebanon.
“We really feel it is a missed alternative to tie within the hostages on this settlement that was signed immediately,” stated Ruby Chen, whose son, Itay Chen, was taken hostage from an Israeli army base and has been declared lifeless.

Abdel Kareem Hana through Related Press
As a lot as they have been intertwined, the 2 wars have been very totally different. In Lebanon, Israel stated its purpose was to drive Hezbollah again from the international locations’ shared border and finish the militant group’s barrages into northern Israel. The ceasefire that took effect Wednesday is meant to do this.
In Gaza, Israel’s targets are more sweeping. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been resolute in insisting that Hamas have to be utterly destroyed and Israel should retain lasting management over components of the territory. Months of talks have did not get Netanyahu to again down from these calls for — or to persuade Hamas to launch hostages underneath these phrases.
For Palestinians in Gaza, meaning persevering with distress underneath an Israeli marketing campaign that has demolished much of the territory and pushed nearly your entire inhabitants from their properties. Lots of of 1000’s are going hungry whereas dwelling in squalid tent cities because the second winter of the conflict brings chilly rains and flooding.
”They comply with a ceasefire in a single place and never within the different? Have mercy on the kids, the aged and the ladies,” stated Ahlam Abu Shalabi, dwelling in tent in central Gaza. “Now it’s winter, and all of the persons are drowning.”
Palestinians really feel resigned to continued conflict

Ashraf Amra/Anadolu through Getty Pictures
The conflict between Israel and Hamas started on Oct. 7, 2023, when militants attacked Israel from Gaza, killing round 1,200 folks and taking some 250 hostage. Israel’s retaliatory offensive has rained devastation on the Palestinian territory, killing over 44,000 folks, in response to native well being officers. The officers, who don’t distinguish between civilians and fighters of their depend, say over half of the lifeless are girls and youngsters.
Hezbollah started firing into Israel a day after Hamas’ assault in solidarity with the Palestinian militant group. The 2 sides have exchanged near-daily barrages since. Transferring 1000’s of troops to its northern border, Israel ramped up bombardment of southern Lebanon and launched a floor invasion there two months in the past, killing many of Hezbollah’s leaders.
Palestinians now concern Israel’s army can return its full focus to Gaza — some extent that Netanyahu made as he introduced the ceasefire in Lebanon on Tuesday.
“The strain will likely be extra on Gaza,” stated Mamdouh Younis, a displaced man in a central Gaza tent camp. Netanyahu, he stated, can now exploit the truth that “Gaza has grow to be alone, removed from all of the arenas that have been supporting it, particularly the Lebanon entrance.”
Israeli troops are already engaged in fierce fighting in Gaza’s north, the place a two-month offensive has lower off most help and precipitated consultants to warn a famine may be underway. Strikes all around the territory recurrently kill dozens.
In signing onto the ceasefire deal, Hezbollah reversed its long-held place that it wouldn’t cease its barrages throughout the border until Israel ends the conflict in Gaza.
“This might have a psychological impression, as it should additional entrench the understanding that Palestinians in Gaza are alone in resisting towards their occupiers,” stated Tariq Kenney Shawa, a U.S. coverage fellow at Al-Shabaka, a Palestinian assume tank.
Hamas could dig its heels in

Majdi Fathi/NurPhoto through Getty Pictures
It additionally leaves Hamas — its capabilities already severely broken by Israel’s offensive — to battle alone. Hamas official Osama Hamdan appeared to simply accept Hezbollah’s new place in an interview Monday.
“Any announcement of a ceasefire is welcome. Hezbollah has stood by our folks and made important sacrifices,” Hamdan instructed the Lebanese broadcaster Al-Mayadeen, which is seen as politically allied with Hezbollah.
Khalil Sayegh, a Palestinian analyst, stated the ceasefire might make Hamas even much less in style in Gaza, by proving the failure of its gambit that its assault on Israel would rally different militant teams to the battle.
“It’s a second the place we will see the Hamas messaging grow to be weaker and weaker, as they wrestle to justify their technique to the general public,” stated Sayegh.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken stated Tuesday that the Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire might assist pressure Hamas to the negotiating desk as a result of it could present the group that the “cavalry shouldn’t be on the way in which.”
However Hamas consultants predicted that it could solely dig in each on the battlefield and in talks. Hamas has insisted it should solely launch all of the hostages in return for a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.
“I anticipate Hamas will proceed utilizing guerrilla warfare to confront Israeli forces in Gaza so long as they continue to be,” stated Shawa.
Hostage households lose hope

Ohad Zwigenberg through Related Press
Dozens of Israelis thronged a serious freeway in Tel Aviv on Tuesday evening, protesting for the return of the hostages because the nation waited to listen to if a ceasefire in Lebanon had been agreed.
Round 100 folks taken hostage are nonetheless held in Gaza, no less than a 3rd of whom are believed to be lifeless. Many of the different hostages seized by Hamas have been launched throughout a ceasefire final yr.
Ricardo Grichener, the uncle of 23-year-old hostage Omer Wenkert, stated the ceasefire with Hezbollah confirmed how the Israeli authorities was overtly disregarding the hostages.
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Regardless that Israel has inflicted larger injury on Hamas in Gaza than on Hezbollah in Lebanon, he stated “the choice to postpone a deal in Gaza and launch the hostages shouldn’t be primarily based on the identical army success standards.”
The newest effort to wind down the conflict stalled in October. U.S. President Joe Biden stated Tuesday he would start a renewed push, however his administration is now in its waning days after the reelection of former President Donald Trump.
“This ceasefire doesn’t concern our hostages. I imagine that Netanyahu forgot about them, and he simply needs to maintain preventing in Gaza,” stated Ifat Kalderon, clutching a photograph of her cousin, Ofer Kalderon, who’s a hostage and a father to 4.
“Ofer yesterday had his 54th birthday. His second birthday in Gaza,” she stated. “It’s unbelievable that he’s nonetheless there.”