Thursday, September 5, 2024

Netanyahu tells Fox hostage deal ‘not close,’ blames Hamas rejectionism


Netanyahu tells Fox hostage deal ‘not close,’ blames Hamas rejectionism


Speaking to the “Fox and Friends” morning show, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says that a hostage deal is not about to be sealed. “There is not a deal in the making, unfortunately.”

“It’s not close,” he says, blaming Hamas rejectionism and stressing that there are unresolved issues beyond the future of the Philadelphi Corridor.

Netanyahu says his red lines “have become redder,” and that most of the public backs the cabinet decision to remain on the Gaza-Egypt border for the foreseeable future.

Most of the prime minister’s arguments to Fox around the Philadelphi Corridor mirror what he said during two press conferences this week.

Asked about an NBC report that American hostage families pushed the Biden administration to close a unilateral deal with Hamas if necessary, Netanyahu says he doesn’t know what was said at the meeting, but “I don’t judge the families. They’ve gone through this horrible anguish.”




Speaking at a conference in Tel Aviv, US Ambassador Jack Lew says that “progress continues to be made” on attempts to reach a hostage deal, “including on the key issues.”

Lew seems to indicate that the most intractable topic is not the Philadelphi Corridor: “Negotiations have gotten into the most difficult issues, some of which are not the subject of most of the public discussion.”

“The public debate masks where the real difficult issues are,” says Lew at the Institute for National Security Studies.

Lew says that the US is trying to put together a proposal with Israel, Egypt, and Qatar “that when it’s presented to Hamas, it’s clear the pressure will be on Hamas to accept it.”
He implies that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s recent press conferences about the need to remain on the Gaza-Egypt border for the foreseeable future are not torpedoing talks: “Very strong public comments sometimes coexist with residual flexibility, almost always.”

Lew says that US President Joe Biden’s “No” response to a question on whether Netanyahu was doing enough to reach a deal is not an indication that Washington is blaming Israel. “I wouldn’t overread a one-word answer,” he says. “If you ask me, everyone needs to do more.”

Lew emphasizes that the current negotiations are not trying to nail down the final details of the 2nd phase of a deal.

“That happens when you’re well into phase 1,” he says. According to the proposal under discussion, a 2nd phase would see a permanent ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, the withdrawal of IDF troops from Gaza, and the release of all hostages.



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