Hamas-Israel ceasefire talks on knife-edge as Blinken visits region * WorldNetDaily * by David Brummer

U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyah in Tel Aviv, Israel, Monday, Aug. 19, 2024. (Official State Department Photo by Chuck Kennedy)
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv, Israel, Monday, August 19, 2024.

JERUSALEM – As the threat of retaliation from Iran and Hezbollah hung over ceasefire negotiations between Israel and Hamas, there were mixed signals about the success or failure of the talks on Monday as U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrived in the region to try to bring the warring parties to a standstill.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met with Blinken for a three-hour meeting in Jerusalem — described as “positive” and “held in a good atmosphere,” and which concluded with the prime minister issuing a statement publicly endorsing the latest US “bridge proposal” presented to Israel and conveyed to Hamas at the end of the Doha talks last week. The bridge proposal is an attempt to manage the seemingly vast differences in expectations between Hamas and Israel — and in such a way, if possible, that the talks do not collapse entirely.

Initial reports on Sunday suggested that Netanyahu was wary of the prospects for a breakthrough, his pessimism – according to ministers with knowledge of the matter – stemming from his rejection of the idea that the IDF should abandon the Philadelphia Corridor. The stretch of land, which crosses the Gaza-Egypt border, has emerged as a key route through which Hamas smuggled men, weapons and equipment into its mafia-style stronghold.

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This is one of the key sticking points, and one where Netanyahu does not want to leave much room.

In addition to Hamas, negotiators must also consider Egypt, whose pride has been bruised and battered as the scale of the operation—and the necessary coordination—between it and Hamas has been exposed, following Israel’s continued presence in and around Rafah. The IDF even blew up a mile-long tunnel on Monday as it continues to dismantle Hamas’s terrorist infrastructure.

On Sunday night, Hamas issued an official statement rejecting the terms of a hostage release and ceasefire deal, effectively accusing Netanyahu of creating obstacles to reaching a deal.

Blinken, who met with Israeli President Isaac Herzog earlier in the day, said he came at President Biden’s direction to get the deal done and eventually terminated, in what may be the last chance to bring the hostages home.

Blinken meets Israeli President Isaac Herzog

Blinken’s views on what the Biden administration has done over the past 10 months, seemingly without urgency or direction on the matter — especially since there are high-profile American citizens among the hostages — are not on record.

Do both parties want the talks to succeed?

The answer to that question depends on who you ask. Netanyahu’s critics—and there are many of them, from political opponents, large parts of the hostage families, experts and others—claim that he is trying to find a way to derail the talks. They have accused him of sacrificing the desire to return the hostages—115 of whom are still held—to prolong a war whose stated goal of “destroying Hamas” seems amorphous.

He has been accused of letting the situation drift, using his favorite tactic of not making concrete decisions to keep his options open, and also of being loose with the seniority of the diplomatic teams he has sent to negotiate on Israel’s behalf. His Hamas critics would also point to the fact that he ordered the assassination of Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran as evidence of his lack of seriousness.

On the other hand, there is Hamas. In all the talk of shaky negotiations, we must not forget what these Gaza gangsters did on October 7 to start this war. They carried out a pogrom so twisted and brutal, and fueled by an orgiastic sense of joy, that it deliberately provoked the reaction they hoped to get from Israel.

Yahya Sinwar hoped to draw Iran and its vassals, especially Hezbollah, into a regional war, pitting them directly against Israel, with the odds potentially stacked in their favor. He may yet get his way, as Hezbollah is playing semantic games about not wanting an expected attack on Israel, while there is still a glimmer of hope for ceasefire negotiations.

If the talks do indeed fail, expectations that Iran and Hezbollah will retaliate for the targeted killings on their respective homelands – despite the prospect of the situation potentially spiraling out of control – will increase exponentially.

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