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Gaza truce deal weeks, not a day away, says Israel official as sticking points hamstring progress

Gaza truce deal weeks, not a day away, says Israel official as sticking points hamstring progress

News2410-07-2025
A Gaza ceasefire deal is unlikely by the end of the week, says an Israeli official.
Israel and Hamas have yet to reach agreement on the main sticking points.
US President Donald Trump met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to discuss Gaza.
Israel and Hamas may be able to reach a Gaza ceasefire and hostage-release deal within one or two weeks but such an agreement is not likely to be secured in just a day's time, a senior Israeli official said on Wednesday.
Speaking during Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's visit to Washington, the official said that if the two sides agree to a proposed 60-day ceasefire, Israel would use that time to offer a permanent ceasefire that would require the Palestinian militant group to disarm.
If Hamas refuses, 'we'll proceed' with military operations in Gaza, the official said on condition of anonymity.
US President Donald Trump met Netanyahu on Tuesday for the second time in two days to discuss the situation in Gaza, with the president's Middle East envoy indicating that Israel and Hamas were nearing an agreement on a US-brokered ceasefire proposal after 21 months of war.
Trump had previously predicted that a deal could be reached this week, raising speculation about a possible announcement before Netanyahu leaves for Israel on Thursday.
READ | Israel minister demands Netanyahu ends Gaza ceasefire talks with 'Hamas murderers in Doha'
On Wednesday, however, Trump appeared to extend the timeframe somewhat, telling reporters that while an agreement was 'very close', it could happen this week or even next - though 'not definitely'.
A source familiar with Hamas' thinking said four days of indirect talks with Israel in Qatar did not produce any breakthroughs on main sticking points.
The Israeli official, who briefed reporters in Washington, declined to provide details on the negotiations.
Trump's Middle East special envoy Steve Witkoff told reporters at a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday that the anticipated agreement would involve the release of 10 living and nine deceased hostages.
Netanyahu's visit came just over two weeks after the president ordered the bombing of Iranian nuclear sites in support of Israeli air strikes.
Trump then helped arrange a ceasefire in the 12-day Israel-Iran war.
Abdalhkem Abu Riash/Anadolu via Getty Images
Trump and his aides have tried to seize on any momentum created by the weakening of Iran, which backs Hamas, to push both sides for a breakthrough to end the Gaza war.
The Gaza conflict began with a Hamas attack on southern Israel in October 2023 that killed approximately 1 200 people and saw 251 hostages taken, according to Israeli figures.
Around 50 hostages remain in Gaza, with 20 believed to be alive.
Israel's retaliatory war has killed more than 57 000 Palestinians, Gaza's health ministry says, and reduced much of Gaza to rubble.
Netanyahu has used his US visit to publicly thank Trump for joining with Israel in striking Iran.
Doaa Albaz/Anadolu via Getty Images
Trump has repeatedly declared that the US bombing of three of Iran's nuclear sites had 'obliterated' them, though some experts have questioned the extent of the damage and raised the possibility that Iran had secreted away part of its enriched uranium stockpile before the strikes.
The Israel official said Israeli intelligence indicated that Iran's enriched uranium remained at Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan, the sites that the US hit in June, and had not been moved.
The official suggested, however, that the Iranians might still be able to gain access to Isfahan but it would be hard to remove any of the material there.
Iran has always denied seeking a nuclear weapon.
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Graham's comments come as the humanitarian situation in Gaza has reached crisis levels. Roughly a quarter of the exclave's population is facing famine-like conditions, a U.N. World Food Programme official said last Monday. Democrats, international partners and even podcaster and comedian Theo Von are imploring both the U.S. and Israel to substantially increase the flow of aid into Gaza. Israel's military on Sunday paused fighting in three major population centers inside Gaza to increase the delivery of humanitarian aid. Airdrops of aid have also resumed in the area. 'Israel is going to work with the U.N., the World Food Programme, to get some food into these people, who need it,' Graham told Welker. But even against that backdrop, the likelihood of a negotiated peace appears murky. The White House exited diplomatic talks with Hamas last week, with Special Envoy Steve Witkoff concluding that the U.S.-designated terrorist group 'does not appear to be coordinated or acting in good faith.' 'I think they want to die,' Trump told reporters outside the White House on Friday. Israel occupied Gaza, which had been an Egyptian territory, in the 6-Day War of 1967, and it had retained forces there until June 2005; since then it has periodically sent forces into the territory in response to incursions from Hamas or to prevent them. Graham said he agreed with the president that talks with the militant group Hamas were futile. 'I think President Trump has come to believe, and I've certainly come to believe, there's no way you're going to negotiate an end of this war with Hamas. Hamas is a terrorist organization who is chartered to destroy the state of Israel,' he told Welker. 'They're religious Nazis.'

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