logo
U.S. says Israel accepts Gaza ceasefire plan; Hamas cool to it

U.S. says Israel accepts Gaza ceasefire plan; Hamas cool to it

Japan Times2 days ago

Israel has agreed to a U.S. ceasefire proposal for the Gaza Strip, the White House said on Thursday, and Hamas said it is reviewing the plan although its terms did not meet the group's demands.
As a U.S.-backed system for distributing food aid in the shattered enclave expanded, Israeli media reported that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the families of hostages held in Gaza that Israel has accepted a deal presented by U.S. President Donald Trump's Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff.
Netanyahu's office did not confirm the reports, but White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told reporters in Washington that Israel has signed off on the proposal.
She did not detail its contents. But The New York Times quoted an Israeli official familiar with the proposal as saying the initial phase would include a 60-day ceasefire and humanitarian aid flowing through U.N.-run operations.
The Palestinian militant group Hamas said it was studying the proposal, and senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri said the group was still discussing it.
But Abu Zuhri said its terms echoed Israel's position and do not contain commitments to end the war, withdraw Israeli troops or admit aid as Hamas has demanded.
Deep differences between Hamas and Israel have stymied previous attempts to restore a ceasefire that broke down in March after only two months.
Israel has insisted that Hamas disarm completely and be dismantled as a military and governing force and that all 58 hostages still held in Gaza must be returned before it will agree to end the war.
Hamas has rejected the demand to give up its weapons and says Israel must pull its troops out of Gaza and commit to ending the war.
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a private group backed by the United States and endorsed by Israel, expanded its aid distribution to a third site on Thursday.
Heavily criticized by the United Nations and other aid groups as inadequate and flawed, the group's operation began this week in Gaza, where the U.N. has said 2 million people are at risk of famine after Israel's 11-week blockade on aid entering the enclave.
The aid launch was marred by tumultuous scenes on Tuesday when thousands of Palestinians rushed distribution points and forced private security contractors to retreat.
The chaotic start to the operation has raised international pressure on Israel to get more food in and halt the fighting in Gaza. GHF has so far supplied about 1.8 million meals and plans to open more sites in the coming weeks.
Witkoff told reporters on Wednesday that Washington was close to "sending out a new term sheet" about a ceasefire to the two sides in the conflict that has raged since October 2023.
"I have some very good feelings about getting to a long-term resolution, temporary ceasefire and a long-term resolution, a peaceful resolution, of that conflict," Witkoff said then.
Israel has come under increasing international pressure, with many European countries that have normally been reluctant to criticize it openly demanding an end to the war and a major relief effort.
Israel launched its campaign in Gaza in response to the devastating Hamas attack in southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, that killed some 1,200 people and saw 251 taken hostage into Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.
The campaign has killed more than 54,000 Palestinians, Gaza health officials say, and left the enclave in ruins.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump's Week Shows the Risks of His Full-Speed-Ahead Approach
Trump's Week Shows the Risks of His Full-Speed-Ahead Approach

Yomiuri Shimbun

time10 hours ago

  • Yomiuri Shimbun

Trump's Week Shows the Risks of His Full-Speed-Ahead Approach

Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post President Donald Trump speaks during a swearing-in ceremony for the interim U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, Jeanine Pirro, at the White House on Wednesday. His sweeping tariffs that have upended the global economy? Two federal courts struck them down this week, though by Thursday afternoon an appeals court had at least temporarily put them back in place. His boasts that he could rapidly end wars? Russia continues to escalate attacks on Ukraine. But White House officials suggested Thursday that he was on the cusp of announcing a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas. His Big Beautiful Bill? His former wingman, Elon Musk, sharply criticized it as he departed from his official post. But by Friday the two men were in the Oval Office together, lavishing praise and marveling at their friendship. President Donald Trump's second term has been marked by volatility, brought about in part by his insistence on bulling forward in search of maximum gain, even if that heightens the risk of ultimate failure. This week crystalized just how rapidly his fortunes can rise and fall. The confluence of the court ruling against his tariffs and Musk's criticism of his sweeping domestic policy bill highlighted the possibility that some of Trump's signature plans could collapse all at once. In the midst of that, a president who hates to be perceived as weak and relishes his command of social media was publicly confronted with ridicule on Wall Street, where financial traders mocked his repeated pullbacks on tariffs with a trending meme: TACO, which stands for 'Trump Always Chickens Out.' Still, Trump remains resilient, and in a week that in some ways appeared to be a low point of his presidency, somehow the TACO keeps morphing back into Teflon Don. 'He has hit a couple big bumps in the road,' said Newt Gingrich, the former House speaker and a Trump ally. 'From Trump's standpoint, he just has to fight through all this. He's being very bold and pushing the margins. And when you're pushing the margins, you occasionally run into trouble.' To those working in this White House – one accustomed to unfriendly court rulings, sneering from Wall Street, and an off-the-cuff Musk – it all had the feel of just another week. With Republicans holding power of both the House and the Senate – and with Trump holding power over almost his entire party – he has faced few outside challenges since taking office. In the opening days of his tenure, he fired inspectors general across the government, limiting the watchdogs who might launch investigations. He threatened the political careers of Republicans who criticized him or wouldn't vote for the loyalists he nominated to Cabinet posts. Democrats have been criticizing each other for being rudderless and leaderless, consumed more with infighting over their views of Joe Biden's cognitive health than on whether or how to counter Trump. That has left the courts and the financial markets as the two major checks on Trump's power. Administration officials have tried to placate investors, but in the aftermath of unfavorable rulings, they repeatedly have lashed out at 'unelected judges,' whom they accuse of thwarting the president. Much of the rhetoric Thursday was aimed at the U.S. Court of International Trade, which on Wednesday struck down most of Trump's tariffs on imported goods. The president, in attempting to implement his flurry of import taxes, had invoked a 1977 law, the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA, which grants presidents wide powers to deal with economic emergencies. The court ruled that his actions had far exceeded his lawful powers under that statute. 'We are living under a judicial tyranny,' Stephen Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff and architect of some of Trump's ambitious proposals, wrote Thursday morning on X. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt called the decision 'another example of judicial overreach' and said the three judges who struck down the tariffs, one of whom was appointed by Trump, 'brazenly abused their judicial power to usurp the authority of President Trump, to stop him from carrying out the mandate that the American people gave him.' 'The courts should have no role here,' she said. 'There is a troubling and dangerous trend of unelected judges inserting themselves into the presidential decision-making process. America cannot function if President Trump, or any other president for that matter, has their sensitive diplomatic or trade negotiations railroaded by activist judges.' A few hours later, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit said that it would grant the Trump administration's request to pause the lower court's ruling and allow his tariffs to continue for now. And on Thursday night, Trump lashed out at Leonard Leo, who played a prominent role in helping select judicial nominees, including three Supreme Court picks, during Trump's first term. He called him a 'sleazebag' and suggested that he gave bad advice on some of the judicial nominees who are now ruling against him. Trump's tariff proposals have caused a whipsaw of policies, with 145 percent tariffs initially imposed on China quickly lowered to 30 percent with a 90-day pause after a steep decline in financial markets. Trump threatened the European Union with 50 percent tariffs starting in June, then backed off over the weekend and delayed them until July 9 to provide more time for negotiations. His willingness to back away from his initial proposals spawned a meme earlier this month when a columnist in the Financial Times wrote about Wall Street's emerging TACO trade theory, which highlights how the president backs away from his threats when markets go down. Trump reacted angrily when asked about the term during an event on Wednesday in the Oval Office. 'Don't ever say what you said,' he told the reporter. 'To me, that's the nastiest question.' He defended his approach on tariffs, saying that he deliberately starts with a 'ridiculous high number and I go down a little bit, you know, a little bit.' 'You call that chickening out?' Trump said. 'It's called negotiation.' A few minutes later, he returned again to the topic. 'They wouldn't be over here today negotiating if I didn't put a 50 percent tariff on,' he said. 'The sad thing is now when I make a deal with them, it's something much more reasonable. They'll say, 'Oh, he was chicken, he was chicken.' That's so unbelievable. I usually have the opposite problem. They say you're too tough.' Trump this week also lost one of his chief allies when Musk formally left his position. On his way out, he broke in a significant way with Trump and most Republicans by criticizing the president's spending bill, which includes large tax cuts and would add trillions of dollars over the next decade to the towering national debt. 'I was disappointed to see the massive spending bill, frankly, which increases the budget deficit, not just decreases it, and undermines the work that the DOGE team is doing,' Musk said in an interview with CBS News. 'I think a bill can be big or it can be beautiful,' Musk added, 'but I don't know if it can be both. My personal opinion.' In an interview with The Washington Post this week, Musk also said that his efforts to cut the size of the federal government proved far tougher than he had expected. 'The federal bureaucracy situation is much worse than I realized,' he said. 'I thought there were problems, but it sure is an uphill battle trying to improve things in D.C., to say the least.' Trump – who in February sat alongside Musk for a Fox News interview, with each man lavishing praise upon the other – hosted Musk in the Oval Office for a news conference on Friday afternoon. And while he marked Musk's last day as a special government employee, he clearly did not want his billionaire buddy to depart. 'Elon is really not leaving,' Trump said, before presenting Musk with a golden key inside a wooden box. 'He's going to be back and forth.' Musk's criticisms this week stood out because from the first few months of the president's tenure, the two were inseparable. Trump bought a Tesla after staging a car show on the South Lawn of the White House. Musk recounted to reporters the times that the president invited him to sleep over in the Lincoln bedroom and help himself to a tub full of caramel Häagen-Dazs ice cream in the kitchen. Leavitt dismissed any criticism of the One Big Beautiful Bill – as it is officially known – and, unlike Musk, said that it could be big as well as beautiful. 'The president is very proud of the One Big Beautiful Bill, and he wants to see it pass,' she said. 'We thank him for his service. We thank him for getting DOGE off of the ground, and the efforts to cut waste, fraud and abuse will continue.' On the foreign policy front, while Trump's recent trip to the Middle East won a range of new business deals and showed him at his most comfortable, he has continued to be vexed by conflicts that he has little control over. On Thursday, White House officials fanned reports that a ceasefire agreement between Israel and Hamas was imminent. Leavitt on Thursday confirmed that Israel had signed off on a ceasefire proposal that the Trump administration had presented, and said officials were awaiting approval from Hamas. 'Those discussions are continuing, and we hope that a ceasefire in Gaza will take place so we can return all of the hostages home,' she said. But Trump has struggled to halt the war between Russia and Ukraine, a conflict he used to say he would solve within the first 24 hours of his presidency. Russian President Vladimir Putin has escalated attacks on Ukraine, openly challenging Trump, who has several times told him he must stop so that negotiations could start. And Trump, who has often deflected when he wants to buy time, has adopted a familiar refrain. Asked on April 24 about continuing to help Ukraine, he said, 'You can ask that question in two weeks.' Asked on April 27 whether he trusted Putin, he said, 'We'll let you know in about two weeks.' Less than two weeks later, on May 4, he was asked whether he had misread Putin. 'I'll tell you about in a month from now, or two weeks from now.' Two weeks later, on May 19, he was asked whether Ukraine was doing enough. 'I'd rather tell you in about two weeks,' he said. Asked again on Wednesday whether Putin was doing enough to end the war, he gave a now-rote answer: 'I'll let you know in about two weeks.'

US Proposes 60-Day Ceasefire for Gaza; Hostage-Prisoner Swap, Plan Shows
US Proposes 60-Day Ceasefire for Gaza; Hostage-Prisoner Swap, Plan Shows

Yomiuri Shimbun

time11 hours ago

  • Yomiuri Shimbun

US Proposes 60-Day Ceasefire for Gaza; Hostage-Prisoner Swap, Plan Shows

Reuters A Palestinian woman reacts in the aftermath of an Israeli strike on a house, in Gaza City, May 30, 2025. May 30 (Reuters) – The U.S. plan for Gaza, seen by Reuters on Friday, proposes a 60-day ceasefire and the release of 28 Israeli hostages – alive and dead – in the first week, in exchange for the release of 1,236 Palestinian prisoners and the remains of 180 dead Palestinians. The document, which says the plan is guaranteed by U.S. President Donald Trump and mediators Egypt and Qatar, includes sending humanitarian aid to Gaza as soon as Hamas signs off on the ceasefire agreement. The aid will be delivered by the United Nations, the Red Crescent and other agreed channels. The White House said on Thursday that Israel had agreed to the U.S. ceasefire proposal. Israeli media said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told the families of hostages held in Gaza that Israel had accepted the deal presented by Trump's Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff. The prime minister's office declined to comment. The Palestinian militant group Hamas said it had received the Israeli response to the proposal, which it said 'fails to meet any of the just and legitimate demands of our people' including an immediate cessation of hostilities and an end to the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. Hamas official Basem Naim said the Israeli response 'fundamentally seeks to entrench the occupation and perpetuate policies of killing and starvation, even during what is supposed to be a period of temporary de-escalation'. However, he said Hamas' leadership was carrying out a 'thorough and responsible review of the new proposal'. The U.S. plan provides for Hamas to release the last 30 of the 58 remaining Israeli hostages once a permanent ceasefire is in place. Israel will also cease all military operations in Gaza as soon as the truce takes effect, it shows. The Israeli army will also redeploy its troops in stages. Deep differences between Hamas and Israel have stymied previous attempts to restore a ceasefire that broke down in March. Israel has insisted that Hamas disarm completely, be dismantled as a military and governing force and return all 58 hostages still held in Gaza before it will agree to end the war. Hamas has rejected the demand to give up its weapons and says Israel must pull its troops out of Gaza and commit to ending the war. Israel launched its campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas attack in its south on October 7, 2023, that killed some 1,200 people and saw 251 Israelis taken hostage into Gaza, according to Israeli tallies. The subsequent Israeli military campaign has killed more than 54,000 Palestinians, Gaza health officials say, and has left the enclave in ruins. MOUNTING PRESSURE Israel has come under increasing international pressure, with many European countries that are usually reluctant to criticise it openly demanding an end to the war and a major relief effort. The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said on Friday that Israel is blocking all but a trickle of humanitarian aid from entering Gaza, with almost no ready-to-eat food entering what its spokesperson described as 'the hungriest place on earth'. Witkoff told reporters on Wednesday that Washington was close to 'sending out a new term sheet' about a ceasefire by the two sides in the conflict. 'I have some very good feelings about getting to a long-term resolution, temporary ceasefire and a long-term resolution, a peaceful resolution, of that conflict,' Witkoff said then. The 60-day ceasefire, according to the plan, may be extended if negotiations for a permanent ceasefire are not concluded within the set period. Senior Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri said on Thursday the terms of the proposal echoed Israel's position and did not contain commitments to end the war, withdraw Israeli troops or admit aid as Hamas has demanded. AID DISTRIBUTION The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a private group backed by the United States and endorsed by Israel, said it had distributed a total of more than 1.8 million meals this week and it expanded its aid distribution to a third site in Gaza on Thursday. GHF plans to open more sites in coming weeks. The group, heavily criticised by the United Nations and other aid groups as inadequate and flawed, began its operation this week in Gaza, where the U.N. has said 2 million people are at risk of famine after an 11-week blockade by Israel on aid entering the enclave. There were tumultuous scenes on Tuesday as thousands of Palestinians rushed to distribution points and forced private security contractors to retreat. The chaotic start to the operation has raised international pressure on Israel to get more food in and halt the fighting in Gaza. French President Emmanuel Macron said on Friday that his country could harden its position if Israel continues to block humanitarian aid to Gaza.

Hamas says it is still reviewing U.S. proposal for Gaza ceasefire
Hamas says it is still reviewing U.S. proposal for Gaza ceasefire

Japan Today

time17 hours ago

  • Japan Today

Hamas says it is still reviewing U.S. proposal for Gaza ceasefire

A Palestinian boy, injured following an Israeli airstrike, is brought for treatment to the Baptist Hospital in Gaza City, Friday, May 30, 2025. (AP Photo/Jehad Alshrafi) By ABDEL KAREEM HANA and BASSEM MROUE Hamas said Friday it was still reviewing a U.S. proposal for a temporary ceasefire in the Gaza Strip, where 27 people were killed in new Israeli airstrikes, according to hospital officials. The ceasefire plan, which has been approved by Israeli officials, won a cool initial reaction Thursday from the militant group. But President Donald Trump said Friday negotiators were nearing a deal. 'They're very close to an agreement on Gaza, and we'll let you know about it during the day or maybe tomorrow,' Trump told reporters in Washington. U.S. negotiators have not publicized the terms of the proposal. But a Hamas official and an Egyptian official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive talks, said Thursday that it called for a 60-day pause in fighting, guarantees of serious negotiations leading to a long-term truce and assurances that Israel will not resume hostilities after the release of hostages, as it did in March. In a terse statement issued a few hours before Trump spoke, Hamas said it is holding consultations with Palestinian factions over the proposal it had received from U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff. A United Nations spokesperson, Stephane Dujarric, urged the parties to 'find the political courage' to secure an agreement. While changes may have been made to the proposal, the version confirmed earlier called for Israeli forces to pull back to the positions they held before it ended the last ceasefire. Hamas would release 10 living hostages and a number of bodies during the 60-day pause in exchange for more than 1,100 Palestinians imprisoned by Israel, including 100 serving long sentences after being convicted of deadly attacks. Each day, hundreds of trucks carrying food and humanitarian aid would be allowed to enter Gaza, where experts say a nearly three-month Israeli blockade — slightly eased in recent days — has pushed the population to the brink of famine. 'Negotiations are ongoing on the current proposal,' Qatar's ambassador to the United Nations, Alya Ahmed Saif Al-Thani said Friday, referring to talks between her country, the United States and Egypt. 'We are very determined to find an ending to this horrific situation in Gaza.' On Thursday, a top Hamas official, Bassem Naim, said the U.S. proposal 'does not respond to any of our people's demands, foremost among which is stopping the war and famine.' The uncertainty over the new proposal came as hospital officials said that 27 people had been killed Friday in separate airstrikes. A strike that hit a tent in the southern city of Khan Younis killed 13, including eight children, hospital officials said. The Israeli military did not immediately comment. Meanwhile, the bodies of 12 people, including three women, were brought to Shifa Hospital on Friday from the nearby Jabaliya refugee camp. The Palestinian Red Crescent Society said the bodies of two others were brought to a hospital in Gaza City. Hospital officials also said Friday that at least 72 had been killed in Gaza during the previous day. That figure does not include some hospitals in the north, which are largely cut off due to the fighting. Since the war began, more than 54,000 Gaza residents, mostly women and children, have been killed according to the Gaza Health Ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants in its tally. The war began when Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, killing around 1,200 people, most of them civilians, and taking 250 hostages. Of those taken captive, 58 remain in Gaza, but Israel believes 35 are dead and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said there are 'doubts' about the fate of several others. Some Gaza residents said their hope for a ceasefire is tempered by repeated disappointment over negotiations that failed to deliver a lasting deal. "This is the war of starvation, death, siege and long lines for food and toilets,' Mohammed Abed told The Associated Press in the central Gaza city of Deir al-Balah. 'This war is the 2025 nightmare, 2024 nightmare and 2023 nightmare.' Abed said he and his family struggle to find food, waiting three hours to get a small amount of rice and eating only one meal daily. 'It's heartbreaking that people are being starved because of politics. Food and water should not be used for political purposes,' he said. Another Gaza resident, Mohammed Mreil, said about the possibility of a truce that: 'We want to live and we want them (Israelis) to live. God did not create us to die.' © Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store