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Israel considers expanding Gaza war as ceasefire talks reach an impasse

Israel considers expanding Gaza war as ceasefire talks reach an impasse

CNNa day ago
Negotiations on a hostage and ceasefire deal in Gaza appear to be at an impasse, with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu leaning towards expanded military operations and Hamas demanding the humanitarian situation be addressed before it returns to talks.
An Israeli official said Sunday that Netanyahu is 'pushing for the freeing of the hostages through military defeat (of Hamas),' while accusing the militant group of refusing to engage in meaningful negotiations.
The official said that Netanyahu wanted to combine the freeing of the hostages 'with the entry of humanitarian aid into areas outside the combat zones and, as much as possible, into areas not under Hamas control.'
Asked about plans to widen the military campaign, Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa'ar said Monday it reflected 'a wish to see all the hostages come back, and the wish to see the end of this war after the talks for a partial deal was not successful.'
It's unclear whether the Israeli government's approach is in line with that of US President Donald Trump's Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff.
Witkoff spent three hours with the families of Israeli hostages on Saturday, and the Hostages and Missing Families Forum quoted him as saying that the plan 'is not to expand the war but to end it. We think the negotiations should be changed to all or nothing. End the war and bring all 50 hostages home at the same time - that's the only way.'
'We have a plan to end the war and bring everyone home,' Witkoff reportedly added. 'Someone will be to blame' if the remaining living hostages do not return to Israel still alive, he said, according to the forum.
When asked, Witkoff's team did not offer any further information on the special envoy's comments.
Trump said Sunday that Witkoff would likely be traveling to Moscow later in the week.
Fifty hostages remain in Gaza, at least 20 of whom are believed to be alive. There was widespread shock in Israel at the release of images by Hamas at the weekend of two of the hostages - Evyatar David and Rom Braslavski - looking weak and emaciated.
Netanyahu said the images demonstrated that Hamas 'don't want a deal. They want to break us with these horrifying videos, with the false horror propaganda they're spreading around the world.'
However, the families forum warned the government against expanding the military campaign in Gaza.
'Netanyahu is preparing the greatest deception of all. The repeated claims of freeing hostages through military victory are a lie and a public fraud,' the forum said Sunday.
The forum called on Israel and Hamas to commit to bringing 'the 50 hostages home, ending the war, and then rebuilding and reviving Israel,' the statement said.
Hamas has insisted it is committed to negotiations but only when 'the catastrophic humanitarian situation' is addressed, according to Basem Naim, a senior Hamas political official.
Another Hamas official, Mahmoud Mardawi, told CNN last week there was 'no point' in continuing talks as long as Gaza's starvation crisis persists.
Hunger-related deaths in Gaza spiked in July, the World Health Organization said last week. Malnutrition rates reached 'alarming levels,' with more than 5,000 children under five admitted for outpatient treatment of malnutrition in just the first two weeks of July, WHO said.
The Hamas-controlled Government Media Office in Gaza said Monday that 600 truckloads of aid were needed every day to alleviate the hunger crisis and claimed that in the past week an average of 84 trucks a day had entered the territory.
COGAT, the Israeli agency supervising the delivery of aid into Gaza, said Monday that more than 200 trucks were collected and distributed by the UN and international organizations on Sunday.
But many of the trucks that do get in are looted, either by desperate civilians or organized gangs.
The United Nations said on Friday that nearly 1,400 people have been killed since the end of May while seeking food; 859 in the vicinity of sites run by the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) and 514 along the routes of food convoys.
The UN said that 'most of the killings were committed by the Israeli military.'
Thirty people were killed on Sunday while trying to get food, 19 of them in the north and 11 in the vicinity of an aid site run by the GHF in Rafah, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry.
CNN has reached out to the Israeli military for comment.
Opinion polls in Israel have consistently shown a large majority in favor of ending the conflict in Gaza and securing the release of the hostages. A new survey by the Institute for National Security Studies found that 38% of Israeli Jews thought it was not possible to disarm Hamas; 57% thought it was possible.
On Monday, hundreds of retired Israeli security officials urged Trump to pressure Netanyahu to end the war in Gaza.
'It is our professional judgement that Hamas no longer poses a strategic threat to Israel,' the former officials wrote in an open letter shared with the media on Monday.
'At first this war was a just war, a defensive war, but when we achieved all military objectives, this war ceased to be a just war,' said Ami Ayalon, former director of the Shin Bet security service.
But far-right members of the government are pushing for the occupation of much of Gaza and measures to encourage its population to leave the territory altogether.
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Hezbollah threatens to resume firing missiles at Israel if it intensifies operations in Lebanon
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Associated Press

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Hezbollah threatens to resume firing missiles at Israel if it intensifies operations in Lebanon

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Mamdani preaches from pulpit of radical pastor pushing reparations, abolishing police: 'Brother and friend'

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Netanyahu hints at expanded war in Gaza but former Israeli military and spy chiefs object
Netanyahu hints at expanded war in Gaza but former Israeli military and spy chiefs object

Los Angeles Times

time30 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Netanyahu hints at expanded war in Gaza but former Israeli military and spy chiefs object

JERUSALEM — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hinted at wider military action in devastated Gaza on Tuesday, even as former Israeli army and intelligence chiefs called for an end to the nearly 22-month war. The new pressure on Netanyahu came as Gaza's Health Ministry said the Palestinian death toll had surpassed 61,000. Health officials reported new deaths of hungry Palestinians seeking food at distribution points. As desperation mounts, the Israeli defense body coordinating aid announced a deal with local merchants to improve aid deliveries. Former security officials speaking out included previous leaders of Israel's Shin Bet internal security service, Mossad spy agency and the military — and ex-Prime Minister Ehud Barak. In a video posted to social media this week, they said far-right members of the government are holding Israel 'hostage' in prolonging the conflict. Netanyahu's objectives in Gaza are 'a fantasy,' Yoram Cohen, former head of Shin Bet, said in the video. 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The reports, citing anonymous officials in Netanyahu's office, said the prime minister was pushing the army, which controls about three quarters of Gaza, to conquer the entire territory — a step that could endanger hostages, deepen the humanitarian crisis and further isolate Israel internationally. Various reports have said Zamir opposes this step and could step down or be pushed out if it is approved. Israeli officials did not respond to requests for comment on the reports. Egypt is a mediator in ceasefire talks, and its President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi said Israel's war in Gaza has become a 'war of starvation, genocide and liquidation of the Palestinian cause.' El-Sissi said the war no longer aims at achieving political aims or releasing the hostages. He reiterated his call for European governments and President Trump to help stop the war and deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza's over 2 million people. 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Elsewhere in central Gaza, Al-Awda hospital said it received the bodies of six Palestinians who were killed when Israeli troops targeted crowds near another GHF aid distribution site. The GHF said there were no incidents at its sites Tuesday. Several hundred Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire since May while heading toward food distribution sites, airdropped parcels and aid convoys, according to witnesses, local health officials and the U.N. human rights office. Israel's military says it only has fired warning shots and disputes the toll. The Israeli defense body in charge of coordinating aid, COGAT, said on social media there will be a 'gradual and controlled renewal of the entry of goods through the private sector in Gaza.' It said a limited number of local merchants were approved for the plan. Mohammed Qassas from Khan Younis said his young children are so hungry that he is forced to storm aid trucks, which rarely reach warehouses these days because they are stopped by hungry crowds. 'How am I supposed to feed them? No one has mercy. This resembles the end of the world,' he said Monday. 'If we fight, we get the food. If we don't fight, we don't get anything.' It has become routine to see men returning from aid-seeking carrying bodies as well as sacks of flour. Yusif Abu Mor from Khan Younis called the current aid system akin to a death trap. 'This aid is stained with humiliation and blood,' he said, adding that aid seekers run the risk of being shot dead by Israel's military or run over by trucks in the chaotic crowds. Israel's blockade and military offensive have made it nearly impossible to safely deliver aid, contributing to the territory's slide toward famine. Aid groups say Israel's week-old measures to allow more aid in are far from sufficient. Families of hostages in Gaza fear starvation affects them too, but blame Hamas. As international alarm has mounted, several countries have airdropped aid over Gaza. The U.N. and aid groups call such drops costly and dangerous for residents, and say they deliver far less aid than trucks. Palestinians gather daily for funeral prayers. 'We are unarmed people who cannot endure this,' shouted Maryam Abu Hatab in the yard of Nasser hospital. Ekram Nasr said her son was shot dead while seeking aid near the Morag corridor. 'I had to go alone to carry my son,' she said, tears in her eyes. 'I collected the remains of my son like the meat of dogs from the streets.' She added: 'The entire world is watching. They are watching our patience, our strength and our faith in God. But we no longer have the power to endure.' Frankel and Shurafa write for the Associated Press. Shurafa reported from Deir Al Balah, Gaza Strip. Josef Federman in Jerusalem contributed to this report.

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