Business Day

Palestinia­ns pin hopes on Blinken

- Nidal Al-Mughrab and Humeyra Pamuk

Palestinia­ns huddling under bombardmen­t in Gaza on Monday said that they hope a visit to the region by the US secretary of state would finally deliver a truce, in time to head off a threatened new Israeli assault on the last refuge at the enclave’s edge.

Antony Blinken arrived in Riyadh at the start of his first Middle East trip since Washington brokered an offer, with Israeli input, for the first extended ceasefire of the war.

The offer, delivered to Hamas last week by Qatari and Egyptian mediators, still awaits a reply from militants who say they want more guarantees it will bring an end to the four-monthold war in the Gaza Strip.

“Impossible to say if or when we’ll get a breakthrou­gh,” a senior US official said during the flight to the Saudi capital. “The ball now is in Hamas’ court.”

Beyond the truce itself, Blinken aims to win backing for US plans for what would follow: rebuilding and running Gaza, and ultimately for a Palestinia­n state — which Israel now rejects

— and for Arab countries to normalise ties with Israel.

“If we get a humanitari­an pause, we want to be in a position to move as quickly as possible on the various pieces of ‘day after’,” the US official said.

Washington also seeks to prevent escalation elsewhere in the Middle East, after days of US air strikes against pro-Iranian armed groups across the region.

Meanwhile, Israel has pressed on with its offensive in some of the war’s most intense combat and threatened a new ground assault on Rafah, a small city where more than half of Gaza’s population is penned against the border with Egypt.

The ceasefire proposal, described by sources close to the talks, would see a truce of at least 40 days when militants would free civilians among the hostages they are still holding, followed by later phases to hand over soldiers and bodies.

“We want the war to end and we want to go back home, this is all that we want at this stage,” said Yamen Hamad, a father of four reached by messaging app at a UN school in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza. The area is one of the few where Israeli tanks have yet to advance.

“We hope that Blinken will tell [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu enough is enough, and we hope our factions decide in the best interest of our people.”

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