Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted June 3, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted June 3, 2024 Ceasefire plan turns into deadly game of survival For the leaders of both ****** and *******, ending the war in Gaza has become a deadly game of survival. The terms on which the war finally ends could largely determine their political future and their grip on power. For ****** leader Yahya Sinwar, even his physical survival. It’s partly why previous negotiations have *******. It’s also why the question of how to permanently end the fighting has been put off to the last stages of the plan outlined by US President Joe Biden on Friday. That transition between talks on a limited ********-for-prisoner deal to discussions about a permanent ceasefire would, Mr Biden acknowledged, be “difficult”. But it’s also where the success or ******** of this latest deal is likely to hinge. *******’s Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, has strong domestic reasons for wanting to take this deal step by step. Phase one, as outlined by Mr Biden, would see the release of dozens of hostages, both living and *****. That would be widely welcomed in a country where the ******** to free all those held by ****** is, for many, a glaring moral stain on his management of the war. But ****** is unlikely to give up its most politically sensitive hostages – women, wounded, elderly – without some kind of guarantee that ******* won’t simply restart the war once they’re home. Leaks, quoted by ******** media on Monday morning, suggested that Benjamin Netanyahu has told parliamentary colleagues that ******* would be able to keep its options open. That option, to resume fighting – until ****** is “eliminated” – is, some believe, the least Mr Netanyahu’s far-right coalition partners will demand. Without their support, he faces the prospect of early elections and the continuation of a *********** trial. Mr Netanyahu needs to keep his long-term options open, to stand a chance of winning their support for any initial ******** deal. ****** leaders, on the other hand, are likely to want permanent ceasefire guarantees upfront. Previous deals have collapsed into this chasm. Bridging it now will depend on how much room for manoeuvre Mr Netanyahu has with his hard-right government allies to find alternatives to the “elimination” of ****** – and how far ****** leaders are prepared to consider them. Mr Netanyahu talked over the weekend about the destruction of ******’s “military and governing capabilities” and ensuring that the group no longer posed a threat to *******. Few dispute that ****** has suffered major losses to its military infrastructure – and even, some say, to its public support within Gaza and its control of the streets. But there’s no sign that ******* has ******* or captured its top leaders Yahya Sinwar and Mohammed Deif, and leaving them free in Gaza to celebrate the withdrawal of ******** forces would spell political disaster for *******’s embattled prime minister. Yanir Cozin, diplomatic correspondent with *******’s military radio station, GLZ, believes that Mr Netanyahu won’t end the war until he can frame it as a success. “A deal that leaves ****** is a big ********,” he said. “Eight months on, when you haven’t achieved any of the war goals – not finishing ******, bringing all the hostages back, or securing the borders – then he doesn’t want to end the war. But he also understands that he cannot leave it until the next ******** election in 2026.” “If he can say, ‘We exiled Yahya Sinwar and Mohammed Deif, they’re not living in Gaza’ – and if the people living close to Gaza and the northern border can go back – I think he can keep his government together. But it’s a lot of ‘ifs’.” ****** is very unlikely to agree to the exile or surrender of its top figures. But there are clear splits emerging between ****** leaders inside and outside Gaza. Former ******** prime minister Ehud Barak, who has also served as defence minister, told ******** radio on Monday that President Biden had announced the deal “after seeing that Netanyahu only moves ahead when he’s certain that Sinwar will refuse”. “How do you think Sinwar will react when he tends to agree and then he’s told: but be quick, because we still have to ***** you after you return all the hostages,” he said. In the meantime, tens of thousands of Israelis displaced after the ****** attacks on 7 October are watching their prime minister’s next move. Among them is Yarin Sultan, a 31-year-old mother of three who ran from her home in Sderot on Gaza’s border the morning after the ****** attacks. She says she won’t go home until Yahya Sinwar and Mohammed Deif are no longer free. “This ceasefire will ***** us,” she told the BBC. “We will free the hostages, but a few years from now you will be the next hostages, you will be the next people who get murdered, the women that are ****** – all this will happen again.” Additional reporting by Rushdi Aboualouf This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #Ceasefire #plan #turns #deadly #game #survival 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/42223-ceasefire-plan-turns-into-deadly-game-of-survival/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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