Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted August 24, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted August 24, 2024 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Is a deal still possible? data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///ywAAAAAAQABAAACAUwAOw==Reuters A file picture of President Biden with Prime Minister Netanyahu in the Oval Office on 25 July. The Biden administration believes a ceasefire would help calm the region. Earlier this week, on live television, the mother of one of the ******** hostages held in Gaza made an offer to the ****** leader, Yahya Sinwar: Release all 109 hostages – ***** and alive – in exchange for the children of *******’s security chiefs. But Ditza Or, whose son Avinatan was kidnapped from the Nova music festival during the 7 October attacks, wasn’t pushing for *******’s leaders to sign a ceasefire deal – she was pushing them to ****** ****** *******. Ms Or, and a handful of other pro-war ******** families, are unlikely allies of *******’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who is now under immense pressure from his US ally, his security chiefs and even his own defence minister to be more flexible and reach a deal. Leaked reports of a recent phone call with his most important ally suggested that US President Joe Biden told the ******** leader at one point to “stop bullshitting” him. The implication: that Mr Netanyahu didn’t want a deal at all. As negotiations limped on in Cairo this week, aimed at bridging the gaps between ******* and ******, leaks to ******** media suggest that the gaps between Mr Netanyahu and his own negotiators and defence chiefs are getting wider. According to Dana Weiss, chief political analyst for *******’s TV Channel 12, the prime minister privately accused key negotiators and security chiefs of “weakness”, presenting himself as standing alone in defence of *******’s security interests. They have different approaches to the urgency of a deal, she says, and one reason for that is the differing level of responsibility each feels. “The military establishment feel guilty about 7 October, and feel a moral duty to bring back the hostages,” she explained. “Our government, our ministers and especially Prime Minister Netanyahu don’t feel personally responsible for 7 October, they put the blame totally on the military establishment, and therefore do not feel that same sense of urgency to go ahead with a deal.” Mr Netanyahu has said that getting the hostages home is his second priority in the war – behind victory over ******, and has emphasised his commitment to preserve *******’s security “in the face of major domestic and foreign pressure”. The man who once cherished his image as *******’s ‘Mr Security’ appears to be playing to it again, 10 months after that image was shattered by the 7 October attacks. A key sticking point in negotiations is whether ******** forces withdraw from a strip of land along Gaza’s border with Egypt, known as the Philadelphi Corridor. Mr Netanyahu appears to be sticking hard to a “red line” of keeping an ******** military presence there, citing *******’s security needs, despite leaks suggesting that his negotiators believe it is a “deal-breaker”. Senior ****** figure Hussam Badran told the BBC on Friday that the group would accept nothing less than the withdrawal of ******** forces, and that Mr Netanyahu’s position showed that he did not want an agreement, but was “manipulat[ing] through empty rounds of negotiations to gain time”. ****** is widely seen as facing tough questions over what Gaza or the Palestinians have gained from the October attacks, after more than 10 months of ******** and displacement. Compromises on prisoner exchanges are seen as easier for the group to ******** than accepting the continued presence of *******’s army in Gaza, and checkpoints for residents moving north. Egypt is also understood to be refusing any deal that does not have Palestinians in charge on the other side of their shared border. data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///ywAAAAAAQABAAACAUwAOw==data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///ywAAAAAAQABAAACAUwAOw==MOHAMMED SABER/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock The rubble of destroyed buildings in Deir Al Balah, Gaza, on 22 August 2024 ****** has not formally joined the current round of talks, and many believe Mr Sinwar’s own priority is keeping the Gaza War going in order to spark a regional conflict, which would put enormous pressure on *******, and – the reasoning goes -force its prime minister into greater concessions to end it. The risks of a wider escalation – amid threats from Iran and Hezbollah – are one reason Washington is pressing hard for a deal. The US is three months away from a presidential election, and President Biden’s administration believes a ceasefire in Gaza would help calm the region. The political analyst, Dana Weiss, says that *******’s Defence Minister Yoav Gallant agrees that if ******* does not take the path of a ceasefire deal – even temporarily – then it will be on a sure path to escalation. “For the prime minister, it’s totally the opposite,” she says. “He answers: No, if we go ahead and ***** to Sinwar now, Hezbollah and Iran see that we’re weak. We have to finish the task with ******, to prevent the war.” But, she says, Mr Netanyahu also has domestic political incentives to stall the negotiations. Among those incentives is the fact that, after months of abysmal approval ratings, he is now rising again in opinion polls. Several surveys have recently placed him at the top of respondents’ voting intentions, both in terms of his right-wing party, Likud, and his own personal profile as leader – results that were unthinkable a few months ago. All eyes are now on the next scheduled talks, due to take place on Sunday. In the meantime, Egypt has reportedly agreed to share *******’s latest proposal for the border area with ******. Mediators insist a deal is still possible, but hopes on all sides appear to be shrinking. After meeting the ******** prime minister today, Ella Ben Ami, the daughter of another ******** ********, said she looked Benjamin Netanyahu in the eye and asked him to promise to do everything and not give up until they return. She was left, she said, with “a heavy and difficult feeling that this isn’t going to happen soon”. The clock is ticking on these negotiations: for Gaza’s people, for the ******** hostages still held there in tunnels, for the region as a whole. But for Mr Sinwar and Mr Netanyahu, perhaps the most powerful ******* they have in this war is time. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #deal This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up For verified travel tips and real support, visit: https://hopzone.eu/ 0 Quote Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/107996-is-a-deal-still-possible/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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