Monterey Herald

Panetta co-leads letter pushing for peace talks

- By Pk Hattis pkhattis@santacruzs­entinel.com

A group of congressio­nal representa­tives, co-led by Rep. Jimmy Panetta (D-Carmel Valley) and Rep. Brad Schneider (D-Illinois), have sent a letter to President Joe Biden urging continued negotiatio­ns to bring about peace in the Middle East, according to a release from Panetta's office.

Signing onto the letter were 29 members of Congress who were encouraged by Biden's recent comments expressing cautious optimism that a temporary cease-fire in Gaza that could pause the fighting and bring home hostages may soon be reached.

“A temporary pause in fighting will not only help release the hostages and give desperatel­y needed relief to the millions of civilians displaced by this war, it can also open a path to permanentl­y ending the conflict,” reads the letter. “To achieve this outcome, the United States must work with Palestinia­ns, Israelis, Egyptians, and our allies to create a provisiona­l recovery administra­tion to secure Gaza until a permanent government can be establishe­d. The people of Gaza and Israel, and across the region, deserve hope for a chance to create a renewed, reimagined future for themselves and their children.”

According to the release, Biden has said an agreement could be reached in the coming days before the start of Ramadan.

Included within the letter is a continued call for Hamas to release all hostages, sustained entry of substantia­l humanitari­an relief into Gaza, creation of a “provisiona­l recovery administra­tion to secure Gaza until a permanent government can be establishe­d,” diminishme­nt of terror groups and a call for Israel to recognize the “legitimacy of Palestinia­n aspiration­s for self-determinat­ion and freedom in the West Bank and Gaza.”

The current conflict began after 1,200 people, mostly civilians, were killed and 250 hostages were taken by Hamas-led militants on Oct. 7 after they rushed across the southern Israeli border.

Since that attack almost five months ago, more than 30,000 Palestinia­ns have been killed and more than 70,000 wounded in the Gaza Strip, health officials in the area have said, according to a report from the Associated Press.

According to the release from Panetta, he was among the first members of Congress to visit the Middle East in the wake of the Oct. 7 attack. Since the attack, Panetta's office wrote that he has traveled to the region as part of two bipartisan, bicameral congressio­nal delegation­s to meet with Israeli and Arab leaders and push for the release of hostages and peace negotiatio­ns.

“We resolutely believe that peace is possible — that a Jewish democratic state of Israel can live with in safety and security alongside a viable, democratic Palestinia­n state,” the members wrote in the letter. “As was true with previous agreements, the path to peace requires an agreement directly negotiated between Israelis and Palestinia­ns, supported and reinforced with U.S. leadership. We are fully committed to work

with your Administra­tion, Israel, and the Palestinia­ns to move toward that dream.”

The letter also comes a few days after Michigan's primary election, where more than 100,000 Democratic voters cast ballots for “uncommitte­d” in the presidenti­al race.

The vote was meant to protest Biden's support for Israel's war against Hamas in Gaza amid the swelling death toll and was enough to earn the “uncommitte­d” campaign two primary delegates.

Still, Biden won the state by a large margin with more than 618,000 votes and 115 delegates.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Rep. Jimmy Panetta co-led a group of 29congress­ional representa­tives in sending a letter to President Joe Biden urging continued negotiatio­ns for peace in the Middle East.
CONTRIBUTE­D Rep. Jimmy Panetta co-led a group of 29congress­ional representa­tives in sending a letter to President Joe Biden urging continued negotiatio­ns for peace in the Middle East.

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