
Netanyahu faces pressure from far right over new cease-fire proposal
Both Israelis and Palestinians have referred to the latest proposal as a 'partial deal' because it postpones addressing key disputes between Israel and Hamas. It neither ensures the release of all the hostages nor the end of the war, though theoretically it could tackle them in a second stage.
Hamas has said it is willing to release all the hostages on the condition that Israel ends the war. But Hamas has not publicly accepted Netanyahu's conditions for doing so, which include the group's disarmament.
Amid the political maneuvering, the violence continued in Gaza.
Hospitals in the enclave said they had received the bodies of 34 Palestinians killed Tuesday, including women and children, as Israeli strikes continued across the territory. Nasser Hospital said an airstrike killed a mother, father and three children in their tent overnight in Muwasi, a camp for hundreds of thousands of civilians.
Advertisement
'An entire family was gone in an instant. What was their fault?' the children's grandfather, Majed al-Mashwakhi, said, sobbing.
Israel's military did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the strikes.
The gulf between Hamas and Israel's position on a cease-fire, analysts say, suggests that a partial deal is more realistic than a comprehensive one.
The terms approved by Hamas were similar to those Israel has previously accepted and include both a temporary cease-fire and a path to an agreement to end the war, according to officials briefed on its contents, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive diplomacy. Netanyahu has not publicly shared his position on the new cease-fire proposal.
In July, President Trump said Israel had agreed to 'the necessary conditions' to finalize a 60-day cease-fire, during which the United States would 'work with all parties to end the war.' At the time, the agreement on the table called for the release of 10 living hostages and the bodies of 18 others during the 60-day period in exchange for Palestinian prisoners. Talks to reach that deal ultimately collapsed.
In six weeks, the war will enter its third year. Some 1,200 people were killed and 251 abducted in the Hamas-led attack that ignited the war Oct. 7, 2023, according to Israeli authorities. Since then, more than 60,000 Palestinians in Gaza have been killed, said the Gaza Health Ministry, which does not differentiate between civilians and combatants in casualty counts.
Itamar Ben Gvir, the national security minister, said Monday that Netanyahu does not have a 'mandate to go to a partial deal.'
Advertisement
Bezalel Smotrich, the finance minister, rejected what he called 'stopping in the middle with a partial deal that abandons half the hostages and that could lead to the suspension of the war in defeat.'
'It is forbidden to surrender and give a lifeline to the enemy,' he said.
Netanyahu relies on the support of Ben Gvir's and Smotrich's parties to maintain the stability of his government.
Last week, Netanyahu suggested Israel was no longer interested in a deal that would involve the release of only some hostages.
'I think that is behind us,' he told the Hebrew-language channel of i24 News.
But Tuesday, Gila Gamliel, a minister in Israel's security Cabinet and an ally of Netanyahu, did not rule out the latest offer.
'There's a proposal,' she told Channel 14. 'We know what it says.
'We will examine what we will say about that,' she added.
In early August, Steve Witkoff, the Trump administration's special envoy for peace missions, told families of Israeli hostages at a meeting that Trump now wanted to see all the living hostages released at once.
'No piecemeal deals; that doesn't work,' Witkoff said, according to an audio recording of part of the meeting published by the Ynet Hebrew news site. 'Now we think that we have to shift this negotiation to 'all or nothing' — everybody comes home,' he said.
'We have a plan around it,' he added, without elaborating. A participant in the meeting confirmed that Witkoff made such remarks.
The shift in focus from 'all or nothing' to a partial deal came after Netanyahu advanced his plan for the military to occupy Gaza City.
Advertisement
Egypt and Qatar, both strongly opposed to the prime minister's plan, helped craft the new terms for a cease-fire. While the countries have been calling for an end to the war, their proposal likely focused on starting with a partial deal because they were aware of the irreconcilable positions Israel and Hamas have staked out on ending the conflict.
'They're trying to force Israel not to invade Gaza City,' said Tamer Qarmout, a professor of public policy at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies. 'That's the basic goal.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
3 minutes ago
- The Hill
Kinzinger: Trump claiming to be war hero ‘just nuts'
Former Republican Rep. Adam Kinzinger (Ill.) criticized President Trump for claiming to be a war hero in the wake of the Iran strikes, arguing it is offensive to those who have served in combat. 'Yeah. I mean, look, this is just nuts. This is nuts. And they're going to find — his people are going to find a way to justify this,' Kinzinger, a frequent Trump critic, told CNN's Erin Burnett on Tuesday. 'Listen, when they were putting out something honoring the Army's 250th anniversary, they put out a picture of Donald Trump in his military academy uniform, which has nothing to do with the military except they drill you.' Kinzinger, who retired from Congress in 2021 and is now a senior contributor on CNN, was asked to weigh in on Trump's recent remarks on 'The Mark Levin Show.' 'He's a war hero because we work together. He's a war hero,' Trump told conservative radio host Mark Levin, referring to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. 'I guess I am too.' 'Nobody cares, but I am too. I mean, I sent those planes,' he added, just months after the U.S. bombed three nuclear facilities near Tehran in defense of Israel. Kinzinger, who served in the Air Force and was deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan, pressed back against the rhetoric but added that he hopes the president is able to facilitate a ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine. 'You can like what he's done. That's fine. I hope he gets a resolution in Ukraine,' he said. 'But to put himself on the same level of people that have actually gone out and served this country, not claimed bone spurs, is an offense to anybody who served.' 'And frankly, you just take somebody that served, calling themselves a war hero, even that would be inappropriate,' the former GOP lawmaker, who said recently that he feels closer to a Democrat nowadays, told CNN. 'For a guy that never served to say it, it's nuts.' Kinzinger added, 'But somebody, they'll defend it, they'll find a way.' The comments come as Trump is looking to facilitate a Russia-Ukraine peace deal after meeting with both leaders and seeking another ceasefire in the Middle East between Isreal and Hamas.


The Hill
3 minutes ago
- The Hill
Palestinians deserve a state now for the same reasons Jews did in 1948
Soon, the Palestinian people will be recognized as a sovereign nation in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank by most countries. They now have the political and moral momentum toward achieving this goal. The world owes Palestinians independence and sovereignty for the same reasons it granted the Jews living in British Mandatory Palestine their independent state in 1948, only a few years after six million Jews had been gassed to death in German concentration camps. This will happen despite an expected U.S. veto next month in the United Nations, and in spite of the political alliance between President Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Trump is pragmatic; he will come to support the creation of a Palestinian state, as most Americans already do. This is because the case for Palestinian independence has been getting clearer and more urgent with every Israeli bombing of mostly innocent Gazans, and with every death from starvation caused by Israel's withholding of food. Most countries now recognize a sovereign Palestinian state. In total, 147 members of the United Nations, or 76 percent of its members, have already recognized the Palestinian state. And of the five members with power to reject Palestinian independence, China and Russia are already known supporters. France and the United Kingdom said they will support sovereign Palestine next month before the U.N. votes on the matter. The lone veto is expected from the U.S., but Trump is likely to change his mind. Ehud Olmert, Israel's Prime Minister from 2006 to 2009, supports an independent Palestinian state. A large segment of Israelis already supports the creation of an independent Palestine, though such support has has declined as the war has progressed. Hundreds of high ranking past members of the Israeli government, the Israeli Parliament, and Israel Defense Forces support Palestinian independence. And for the first time, Israeli human rights organizations such as B'Tselem, and medical associations are calling on the international community to stop the indiscriminate killing of Palestinians by the Israel's Defense Forces. The Arab League of twenty-two Arab nations has called Hamas to disarm and relinquish the Gaza Strip to make peace possible. According to recent Gallup poll, 55 percent of Americans and 41 percent of Republicans support an independent Palestine. And according to The Times of Israel, President Trump recently said that the destruction, killing, and starvation of Palestinians in Gaza were done by Benjamin Netanyahu to keep him in office. This points to a likely U.S. backing of independence. Furthermore, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) — a ardent Trump supporter — recently characterized Israel's actions against the Palestinians in the Strip as genocide. Netanyahu himself is partly responsible for the expected creation of an independent Palestinian state because of his increasingly brutal tactics and strategies against the Palestinians. For example, the International Court of Justice ruled that Israel's actions have violated the Genocide Convention and issued a warrant for Netanyahu's arrest. Israel had worldwide sympathy and empathy when Hamas invaded its territory and savagely murdered 1,200 Israelis. That action led to a declaration of war against Hamas. But the situation has since changed. The war quickly devolved into a war against all Palestinians in the strip. If the strategy were to get rid of them through indiscriminate killing and mass starvation of innocent people, I am not sure what they would be doing differently. Netanyahu's failure has led much of the world community to believe that that the war in Gaza is no longer a retaliation against Hamas for the atrocities of October 2023, but rather a war to do away with a whole people. The world community in the U.N. will soon reject such behavior and vote to grant independence to Palestine. It is about time for the U.S. to join such cause.


Newsweek
4 minutes ago
- Newsweek
The Bulletin August 20, 2025
The rundown: Israel has approved plans for an offensive to take over Gaza City with a focus on "terror infrastructure," in particular a tunnel network, an Israeli military official said, adding that keeping civilians out of harm's way was a "top priority." Find out more. Why it matters: Gaza City is in the north of the 26-mile coastal enclave and has been devastated by Israeli military strikes over the past 22 months. The plans for the operation dubbed "Gideon's Chariots" was drawn up by the Israel Defense Forces' Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir, the military official told a briefing. "We will be moving into a new phase of combat, a gradual, precise, targeted operation in and around Gaza City, which currently serves as Hamas' main military and governing stronghold," the official said. "Our mission remains very simple and hasn't changed a bit for almost two years, to bring our hostages home, every single one of them and to defeat Hamas, dismantle its governing and military capabilities." Read more in-depth coverage: Trump Suggests He's a War Hero: 'I Guess I Am' TL/DR: Israel's military says it controls about 75 percent of Gaza. What happens now? Netanyahu is likely to face more protests at home against an expanded war and demands for an immediate end to the military campaign in return for the release of all the hostages. Deeper reading Israel Approves Plans for Gaza City Offensive