TEL AVIV, Israel
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday rejected Hamas' latest offer for a ceasefire and return of hostages held in the Gaza Strip, but U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said there was still room for negotiation toward an agreement.
Hamas, the Palestinian
militant group that rules Gaza, proposed a ceasefire of 4-1/2 months, during
which all hostages would go free, Israel would withdraw its troops from Gaza
and an agreement would be reached on an end to the war.
The Hamas
offer, was a response to an earlier
proposal drawn up by U.S. and Israeli spy chiefs and delivered to Hamas last
week by Qatari and Egyptian mediators.
Calling Hamas' position
"delusional," Netanyahu renewed a pledge to destroy the Islamist
movement, saying there was no alternative for Israel but to bring about its
collapse.
"The day after is the day
after Hamas. All of Hamas," he told a press conference, insisting that
total victory against Hamas was the only solution to the four-month-old Gaza
war.
"Continued military
pressure is a necessary condition for the release of the hostages,"
Netanyahu said.
But Blinken's comments,
following a meeting with Netanyahu, suggested forging a truce agreement was not
a lost cause.
"There are clearly
nonstarters in what (Hamas has) put forward," Blinken said at a late-night
press conference in a Tel Aviv hotel, without specifying what the nonstarters
were.
"But we also see space in
what came back to pursue negotiations, to see if we can get to an agreement.
That's what we intend to do."
Blinken met the leaders of
Qatar and Egypt on Tuesday and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in Ramallah
on Wednesday.
A senior Hamas official, Sami
Abu Zuhri, described Netanyahu's remarks as "political bravado" that
showed the Israeli leader's intention to further pursue conflict in the region.
Another Hamas official, Osama
Hamdan, said a Hamas delegation led by senior Hamas official Khalil Al-Hayya
would travel on Thursday to Cairo for ceasefire talks with mediators Egypt and
Qatar. Hamdan urged Palestinian armed factions to go on fighting.
Israel began its military offensive after Hamas militants from Gaza killed 1,200 people and took 253 hostages in southern Israel on Oct. 7. Gaza's health ministry says at least 27,585 Palestinians have been confirmed killed, with thousands more feared buried under rubble. There has been one truce to date, lasting a week at the end of November.
Israel had previously said it
would not pull its troops out of Gaza or end the war until Hamas was wiped out.
But sources close to the
negotiations described Hamas as taking a new, three-phase approach to its
longstanding demand to end the war, proposing this as an issue to be resolved
in future talks rather than a condition for the truce.
According to the offer
document seen by our reporter and confirmed by sources:
* During the first 45-day
phase all Israeli women hostages, males under 19 and the old and sick would be
freed, in exchange for Palestinian women and children held in Israeli jails.
Israel would withdraw troops from Gaza's populated areas.
* Implementation of the second
phase would not begin until the sides conclude indirect talks over the
requirements for ending mutual military operations and restoring complete calm.
* The second phase would
include the release of remaining male hostages and full Israeli withdrawal from
all of Gaza. The remains of the dead would be exchanged during the third phase.
Washington has cast the
hostage and truce deal as part of plans for a wider resolution of the Middle
East conflict, ultimately leading to reconciliation between Israel and Arab
neighbours and creation of a Palestinian state.
Netanyahu rejects a
Palestinian state, which Saudi Arabia says is a requirement for the kingdom to
normalise relations with Israel.
Israel has sought to capture
Khan Younis, the main city in Gaza's south. Last week, Israel said it plans to
storm Rafah, a move U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said on Wednesday
would "exponentially increase what is already a humanitarian nightmare
with untold regional consequences."
The Israeli military said it
had killed dozens of militants in fighting over the last 24 hours. It has made
similar claims throughout the fighting in Khan Younis which could not be
independently verified.
In Rafah, on Gaza's southern
edge where half of the enclave's 2.3 million people are penned against the
border with Egypt, the bodies of 10 people killed by Israeli strikes overnight
were laid out in a hospital morgue. At least two of the shrouded bundles were
the size of small children. Relatives wept beside the dead.
Bob Kitchen, vice president of
emergencies at the International Rescue Committee, said a move by Israel toward
Rafah would "end the humanitarian lifeline from Egypt."
"If they aren’t killed in
the fighting, Palestinian children, women and men will be at risk of dying by
starvation or disease" he said.
Palestinian health officials
say an Israeli airstrike killed another three people in a house in Rafah on
Wednesday. The officials said a senior Palestinian police officer and Hamas
member, Majdi Abdel-Al, was killed in an Israeli airstrike on a car that was
tasked to secure aid trucks in Rafah.
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