Las Vegas Review-Journal

Progress cited in cease-fire talks

Potential deal would include release of hostages, prisoners

- By Ethan Bronner

JERUSALEM — Senior Israeli officials said progress has been made in negotiatio­ns for a cease-fire in Gaza that would include the release of hostages and Palestinia­n prisoners.

“We’ve reached a critical point,” Foreign Minister Israel Katz told Army Radio on Monday. “If matters work out, a large number of hostages will return home and then, in stages, everyone. But remember that we are dealing with Hamas and there is not a lot of time. I am more optimistic than I was.”

Defense Minister Yoav Gallant told military recruits that progress in the war has allowed Israel “to make difficult decisions to return the hostages. I think we are at an appropriat­e point.” A session of the security cabinet, which generally meets on Thursday evening, has been called for Tuesday, television channels reported.

The comments were the most positive in months from top officials on the talks between Israel and Hamas, which have been mediated by the U.S., Egypt and Qatar.

Just last week, Israeli officials said large gaps remained between the two sides, with the Iran-backed terrorist group demanding a complete withdrawal of Israeli troops from Gaza before any hostages would be freed.

Yet internatio­nal pressure has intensifie­d on the Israelis since a missile strike killed seven aid workers delivering food to displaced Palestinia­ns a week ago, with President Joe Biden telling Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that ongoing U.S. support depends on improved steps to protect civilians.

On Sunday, Netanyahu announced a withdrawal of combat troops from the city of Khan Younis after four months of fighting, the first significan­t scaling back of ground forces since a weeklong cease-fire that ended in early December. Some have interprete­d the move as a signal to Hamas a deal is on the table.

The scaling back of ground forces — alongside the ministers’ comments — angered Netanyahu’s far-right coalition partners who want the war to continue until Hamas is destroyed. They threatened to bring down the government if there’s a permanent cease-fire, or the prime minister decides against an offensive on the Gazan city of Rafah — seen as the last bastion of Hamas and its leaders.

Gallant said the soldiers were being withdrawn from Khan Younis so they could prepare for an eventual invasion of Rafah.

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, from the Religious Zionism party, called on Netanyahu to convene an urgent meeting of the extended cabinet to discuss the developmen­ts in the war.

“I have been warning for weeks that instead of taking our foot off the gas we should increase the pressure on Hamas in Gaza, and this is the only way we can return the abductees and destroy Hamas,” he said.

Israeli public broadcaste­r Kan said Smotrich is sending a message to Netanyahu that his party won’t go along with a permanent cease-fire nor a hostage deal that goes too far.

For its part, Hamas, designated a terrorist organizati­on by the U.S., Canada and the European Union, said on Monday there’d been no progress in the talks.

The war started on Oct. 7 when thousands of Hamas terrorists broke into Israel from Gaza, killing about 1,200 people and abducting 250. Israel attacked by air, sea and land, and has killed some 33,000 Palestinia­ns, according to the Hamas-run Health Ministry in Gaza.

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Israel Katz

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