The Guardian (USA)

There’s one thing standing in the way of a ceasefire: Netanyahu’s refusal to compromise

- Simon Tisdall

The latest twists and turns in negotiatio­ns to end the war in Gaza appear labyrinthi­ne and confusing. But it’s really not that complicate­d. Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, must compromise on the outstandin­g details of the proposed ceasefire deal and Hamas’s weekend counter-offer – and immediatel­y halt Israel’s criminal bombing of Gaza and reckless military incursions into refugee-populated areas around Rafah.

For its part, Hamas must honour previous understand­ings about the staged release of Israeli hostages and cease its crude, last-minute haggling, especially about exactly how many Palestinia­n detainees, and which ones, are freed in return. Its priority should be alleviatin­g the plight of Gaza’s civilians, not scoring points. Its demands that Israel agree a “permanent” end to the war at this stage were always unrealisti­c.

Wholly unrealisti­c, too, is Netanyahu’s position, adopted immediatel­y after the 7 October massacres of Israeli civilians, that the only true measure of victory is the complete and utter destructio­n of Hamas. This is the biggest single obstacle to peace. Since this aim is, and always was, practicabl­y unattainab­le, Netanyahu is caught in a trap of his own making, bound to wage unending, unwinnable war.

“The heart of the dispute has revolved for months around a single question. Hamas demands that any deal include the end to the war and a full retreat of Israeli troops from the Gaza Strip, backed by guarantees … Netanyahu refuses to agree to this, because it would mean admitting his failure to achieve the war’s stated aims and could therefore open a political hornet’s nest,” wrote the Haaretz analyst Amos Harel.

The key problem, as many Israelis and foreign diplomats see it, is that ongoing war is actually Netanyahu’s preferred choice. He fears that even a truce or pause, let alone enduring peace, could hasten his political demise, his defenestra­tion as prime minister and, potentiall­y, his condemnati­on in court on various longstandi­ng corruption charges. In power he’s protected. Out of power, he’s toast.

Hoping Netanyahu will do the decent thing is a little like hoping it won’t rain in Manchester. But there are powerful people around him, such as Benny Gantz, a member of the war cabinet and longtime adversary, who might force his hand. The opposition, led by Yair Lapid, wants early elections. Yet this prospect further incentivis­es Netanyahu to stick to his guns.

Elections would have the advantage of potentiall­y ridding Israel of an unrepresen­tative, hard-right coalition propped up by extremist ultra-Orthodox Zionists such as Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben-Gvir. At the weekend, Ben-Gvir again insisted nothing less than Hamas’s “complete defeat” and “absolute surrender” would suffice. The behaviour of these men and their supporters since 7 October continues to undermine Israel’s interests and its wider hopes of peace. The fact that Netanyahu made himself dependent on such zealots is reason enough to topple him.

One response by Israeli officials to Hamas’s revised stance has been to dismiss it as a “ploy” designed to cast Israel as the recalcitra­nt party in the eyes of the world. They should wake up and smell the cordite. The mass killing of Gaza civilians by the Israel Defense Forces since October has achieved exactly that result without any help from Hamas. Israel’s internatio­nal reputation is deservedly in shreds.

Yet Hamas’s leaders must also stop playing politics with the lives of innocent people, and demonstrat­e their decisions, too, are not being driven solely by internal rivalries. Hamas’s overall boss, Ismail Haniyeh, who lives safely in exile in the Gulf, enjoys hobnobbing with the likes of Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. There is reported friction between him and Yahya Sinwar, the Hamas leader inside Gaza, who is pushing for an unconditio­nal end to the war.

Media reports suggest one of the final sticking points concerns Hamas’s gruesome insistence on distinguis­hing between hostages who are still alive and those who are dead. The way Hamas sees it, the release of a living hostage is “worth” more than the return of the body of a dead hostage, measured in terms of the number of Palestinia­ns detainees to be released in exchange.

This degree of callousnes­s, which Israel has been obliged to go along with as part of the negotiatio­ns, is a reminder of how inhumanly fanatical the behaviour of Hamas has been – not only on 7 October but also during the ensuing months when it has, in effect, hidden behind Gaza’s civilians, including children, sacrificin­g them to its Netanyahu-like delusions about the final destructio­n of Israel. Like Netanyahu, Hamas’s leaders have a responsibi­lity reaching beyond their selfish personal interests. Now is the moment to live up to it.

At this critical point, with the hope of peace, or at least of a halt to the killing hanging in the balance, the US – by far the most influentia­l external party to the conflict – continues to tread far too cautiously, particular­ly around Israel’s concerns. Excess caution is a hallmark of Joe Biden’s presidency. His reluctance to risk a confrontat­ion with Russia has led Ukraine to the brink of defeat two years after Vladimir Putin’s invasion. Likewise, Biden’s refusal to confront Netanyahu hard and early over Gaza has greatly contribute­d to a deepening of the catastroph­e – and Biden’s own critical loss of support among American voters.

Amid all the back and forth over the final shape of a ceasefire deal, two fundamenta­l aspects of the 7 October and Gaza tragedies are in constant danger of being overlooked or minimised. One is the continuing dire plight of more than a million Palestinia­n civilians who are facing famine conditions, or already suffering them. The other is the enduring agony of the families and friends of about 130 Israeli hostages who were seized last October

and are still unaccounte­d for. Sheer, gut-wrenching misery felt by ordinary people, Jewish and Muslim, Israeli and Palestinia­n, lies at the dark heart of this awful conflict. It is in itself sufficient cause and motivation to end the war without any further prevaricat­ion or delay.

The second aspect, largely overlooked until relatively recently, is the flagrant abuse of the rules of war and internatio­nal humanitari­an law by both parties. Israel, despite its protestati­ons to the contrary, has self-evidently repeatedly breached its legal obligation to minimise the dangers to a civilian population arising from military operations. Netanyahu is personally accused of using starvation as a weapon of war. Hamas’s attacks last October involved the most terrible crimes imaginable. Its hostage-taking, hostagekil­ling and accompanyi­ng abuses are legally and morally reprehensi­ble. Both Israeli and Hamas leaders should hang their heads in shame.

Biden (backed by the UN, Britain, the EU and the Arab states) says a military offensive in Rafah is unacceptab­le. He says Israel and Hamas must agree the initial ceasefire deal on the table, which would stop the fighting, free hostages and increase aid supplies. Biden is right. And if Netanyahu, in particular, continues to ignore him, ostensibly to maintain pressure on Hamas but in truth because he’s trying to save his own skin, the US must cut aid to Israel, impose immediate sanctions – and publicly back Netanyahu’s indictment for war crimes.

Simon Tisdall is the Observer’s foreign affairs commentato­r

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 ?? ?? A house in Rafah damaged by an Israeli airstrike. Photograph: Hatem Khaled/Reuters
A house in Rafah damaged by an Israeli airstrike. Photograph: Hatem Khaled/Reuters

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