Miami Herald

Israel and Hamas indicate no deal is imminent after Biden signals Gaza cease-fire could be close

- BY TIA GOLDENBERG, WAFAA SHURAFA AND SAMY MAGDY Associated Press

JERUSALEM

Israel and Hamas on Tuesday played down chances of an imminent breakthrou­gh in talks for a cease-fire in Gaza, after President Joe Biden said Israel had agreed to pause its offensive during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan if a deal was reached to release some hostages.

The president’s remarks came on the eve of the Michigan primary, where he faces pressure from the state’s large Arab-American population over his staunch support for Israel’s offensive in Gaza. Biden said he had been briefed on the status of talks by his national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, but said his comments reflected his optimism for a deal, not that all the remaining hurdles had been overcome.

After Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack on southern Israel, Israel’s air, sea and ground campaign in Gaza has killed tens of thousands of people, obliterate­d large stretches of the urban landscape and displaced 80% of the battered enclave’s population.

Israel’s sealing of the territory, allowing only a trickle of food and other aid to enter, has sparked alarm, with the United Nations saying a famine could be imminent.

With U.N. truck deliveries of aid hampered by the lack of safe corridors, Egypt, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and France conducted an airdrop of food, medical supplies and other aid into Gaza on Tuesday. At a beach in southern Gaza, boxes of supplies dropped from military aircraft drifted down on parachutes as thousands of Palestinia­ns ran along the sand to retrieve them.

But alarm is growing over worsening hunger among Gaza’s 2.3 million Palestinia­ns.

Two infants died of dehydratio­n and malnutriti­on at Kamal Adwan Hospital in Gaza City, said the spokesman for Gaza’s Health Ministry, Ashraf al-Qidra. He warned that infant mortality threatens to surge.

“Dehydratio­n and malnutriti­on will kill thousands of children and pregnant women in the Gaza Strip,” he said.

The U.N. Population Fund said Al Helal Al Emirati maternity hospital in Gaza’s southernmo­st town of Rafah reported that newborns were dying because mothers were unable to get prenatal or postnatal care. Premature births are also rising, forcing staff to place four or five newborns in a single incubator designed for one. Most of them do not survive, it said, without giving figures on the numbers of deaths.

Now the prospect of an Israeli invasion of Rafah has prompted global alarm over the fate of around 1.4 million civilians trapped there.

Talks to pause the fighting have gained momentum recently and were underway Tuesday. Negotiator­s from the U.S., Egypt and Qatar have been working to broker a cease-fire in which Hamas would free some of the dozens of hostages it holds in exchange for the release of Palestinia­n prisoners, a six-week halt in fighting and an increase in aid deliveries to Gaza.

The start of Ramadan, which is expected to be around March 10, is seen as an unofficial deadline for a deal.

The month is a time of heightened religious observance and dawn-to-dusk fasting for hundreds of millions of Muslims around the world. Israeli-Palestinia­n tensions have flared in the past during the holy month.

“Ramadan’s coming up, and there has been an agreement by the Israelis that they would not engage in activities during Ramadan as well, in order to give us time to get all the hostages out,” Biden said in an appearance on NBC’s

“Late Night With Seth Meyers” that was recorded Monday.

In separate comments the same day, Biden said that he hoped a cease-fire deal could take effect by next week.

At the same time, Biden did not call for an end to the war, which was triggered when Hamas militants killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted roughly 250 people, according to Israeli authoritie­s.

Israeli officials said Biden’s comments came as a surprise and were not made in coordinati­on with the country’s leadership. A Hamas official played down any sense of progress, saying the group wouldn’t soften its demands.

The Israeli officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to discuss the sensitive talks with the media, said that Israel wants a deal immediatel­y but that Hamas continues to push excessive demands. They also said that Israel is insisting that female soldiers be part of the first group of hostages released under any truce deal.

Hamas official Ahmad Abdel-Hadi indicated that optimism on a deal was premature.

“The resistance is not interested in giving up any of its demands, and what is proposed does not meet what it had requested,” he told the Pan-Arab TV channel Al Mayadeen.

Hamas has previously demanded that Israel end the war as part of any deal, an idea that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called “delusional.”

At a news conference in Doha on Tuesday, Qatari Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Majed al-Ansari said “we feel optimistic” about the talks, without elaboratin­g.

A senior official from Egypt has said the draft deal includes the release of up to 40 women and older hostages in return for up to 300 Palestinia­n prisoners — mostly women, minors and older people.

The official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the negotiatio­ns, said the proposed six-week pause in fighting would allow hundreds of trucks to move desperatel­y needed aid into Gaza every day, including to the hard-hit north.

Biden, who has shown staunch support for Israel throughout the war, left open the door in his remarks for an eventual Israeli ground offensive in the city of Rafah in southern Gaza, on the border with Egypt, where more than half of the enclave’s 2.3 million people have fled under Israeli evacuation orders.

Netanyahu has said a ground operation in Rafah is an inevitable component of Israel’s strategy for crushing Hamas. This week, the military submitted for cabinet approval operationa­l plans for the offensive, as well as evacuation plans for civilians there.

Biden said he believes Israel has slowed its bombardmen­t of Rafah.

“They have to, and they have made a commitment to me that they’re going to see to it that there’s an ability to evacuate significan­t portions of Rafah before they go and take out the remainder of Hamas,” he said. “But it’s a process.”

Israel’s offensive in Gaza has killed more than 29,700 people, most of them women and children, according to the Health Ministry in the Hamas-run territory. The Health Ministry does not distinguis­h between fighters and civilians in its death count.

The first and only ceasefire in the war, in late November, brought about the release of about 100 hostages — mostly women, children and foreign nationals — in exchange for about 240 Palestinia­ns imprisoned by Israel, as well as a brief halt in the fighting.

Roughly 130 hostages remain in Gaza, but Israel says about a quarter of them are dead.

 ?? HEIDI LEVINE for The Washington Post ?? Protesters face police water cannons Saturday in Tel Aviv as they denounce Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government and demand a deal for hostages in Gaza.
HEIDI LEVINE for The Washington Post Protesters face police water cannons Saturday in Tel Aviv as they denounce Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government and demand a deal for hostages in Gaza.

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