JERUSALEM, Israel
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday threatened to withdraw from the ceasefire in the Gaza Strip and resume its fight against Hamas if the militant group does not go ahead with the next scheduled release of hostages on Saturday.
Hamas said Monday — and
reiterated Tuesday — that it planned to delay the release of three more
hostages after accusing Israel of failing to meet the terms of the ceasefire,
including by not allowing enough tents and other aid into Gaza.
US President Donald Trump has
emboldened Israel to call for the release of even more remaining hostages on
Saturday, but it wasn’t immediately clear whether Netanyahu’s threat referred
to the release of all remaining hostages in Gaza, or just the three scheduled
for release on Saturday.
Earlier Tuesday, an Israeli
official said Netanyahu ordered the army to add more troops in and around the
Gaza Strip. Netanyahu also ordered officials “to prepare for every scenario if
Hamas doesn’t release our hostages this Saturday,” according to the official,
who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss a private meeting.
Israel had signaled Monday it
planned to reinforce defenses along the Gaza border. The all-scenario plan was
announced during a four-hour meeting between Netanyahu and his Security Cabinet
that focused on Hamas’ threat, which risks jeopardizing the three-week-old
ceasefire.
So far, Hamas has released 21
hostages in a series of exchanges for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners.
President Donald Trump has
said Israel should cancel the entire ceasefire if all of the roughly 70
hostages aren’t freed by Saturday. Hamas brushed off his threat on Tuesday,
doubling down on its claim that Israel has violated the ceasefire and warned that
it would only continue releasing hostages if all parties adhered to the
ceasefire.
Trump is hosting Jordan’s King
Abdullah II at the White House on Tuesday as he escalates pressure on the Arab
nation to take in refugees from Gaza — perhaps permanently — as part of his
audacious plan to remake the Middle East.
Palestinians and the
international community have seethed over Trump’s recent comments that any
Palestinians potentially expelled from Gaza would not have a right to return.
During the first six-week
phase of the ceasefire, Hamas committed to freeing 33 hostages captured in its
Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel, while Israel said it would release nearly 2,000
Palestinian prisoners. The sides have carried out five swaps since Jan. 19.
The war could resume in early
March if no agreement is reached on the more complicated second phase of the
ceasefire, which calls for the return of all remaining hostages and an
indefinite extension of the truce.
But if Israel resumes the war,
it will face a drastically different battlefield. After forcing hundreds of
thousands of Palestinians to evacuate to southern Gaza in the early stages of
the war, Israel allowed many of those displaced people to return to what is
left of their homes, posing a new challenge to its ability to move ground
troops through the territory.
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