NewsHopes for Gaza ceasefire hinge on renewed talks Thursday

Hopes for Gaza ceasefire hinge on renewed talks Thursday

Tel Aviv. On this wall, there are photos of people still being held by Hamas following the attack on October 7th.
Tel Aviv. On this wall, there are photos of people still being held by Hamas following the attack on October 7th.
Images source: © East News | OREN ZIV

12 August 2024 06:17

Hamas called on Sunday evening for mediators involved in ceasefire talks in the Gaza Strip to present a plan based on previous agreements, instead of new proposals and negotiations. The U.S. is urging both Hamas and Israel to quickly accept a ceasefire. Another round of talks is scheduled for Thursday.

The leaders of the U.S., Egypt, and Qatar, countries mediating the negotiations, have called on Israel and Hamas to resume talks on Thursday regarding a ceasefire in the 10-month-long war and the exchange of Israeli hostages for Palestinian prisoners. Negotiators are pushing for the talks to end with an agreement.

Israel announced that it would send its negotiators to the meeting. Hamas initially reported that it was analyzing proposals, but now suggests that it will not participate in the new round of talks, wrote Reuters.

Hamas wants proof. And a return to the previous plan

Hamas "calls on the mediators to present a plan for the implementation of what was presented to the movement and accepted by Hamas on July 2; agreements based on the plan of U.S. President Joe Biden and the U.N. Security Council resolution," said the evening statement from the ruling Palestinian organization in the Gaza Strip.

As emphasized, the mediators "should force the occupant (Israel) to comply with this plan, instead of conducting further talks or presenting new proposals," which only gives Israel time to continue the aggression and "genocide of Palestinians."

The plan presented by Biden at the end of May three-step ceasefire plan includes, besides a permanent ceasefire, the exchange of hostages for Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails, as well as the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip. So far, negotiations have hit a deadlock, with both sides accusing each other of setting new conditions and blaming each other for the failure of the talks.

Sunday's statement from Hamas is a negotiation tactic through which this organization aims to secure better terms of agreement - commented a senior Israeli official quoted by the Times of Israel portal. He added, "if Hamas does not want to come to the negotiation table, we will continue to destroy its forces in the Gaza Strip."

A chance to calm tensions in the Middle East?

The U.S. sees in the agreement not only a chance to end the war in the Gaza Strip, which has already claimed nearly 40,000 Palestinian lives, but also to broadly calm tensions in the Middle East. The situation in the region is the toughest it has been in months, with growing concerns about a serious escalation of the conflict between Israel and Iran and its allies, including the Lebanese Hezbollah.

The Israeli newspaper Haaretz, citing diplomatic sources, wrote on Sunday that mediators suggested to both sides that if Thursday's talks do not bring a breakthrough, they will be blamed for the failure of the negotiations.

The U.S., which until now has solely blamed Hamas for the impasse in the talks, is growing impatient with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's stance and fears that he may yield to his far-right coalition partners, who oppose the agreement, the newspaper noted. It added that the White House would then publicly accuse him of harming the negotiations, portraying him as partly responsible for the failure of the talks.

On the other hand, Egypt and Qatar, which have so far mostly criticized Israel, have also made it clear that they will explicitly criticize Hamas if it sabotages the negotiations, added "Haaretz".

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