logo
Huckabee blames Europe for stalled Gaza talks, highlighting a growing Western divide

Huckabee blames Europe for stalled Gaza talks, highlighting a growing Western divide

Associated Press9 hours ago
JERUSALEM (AP) — U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee sought Wednesday to blame a recent breakdown in Gaza ceasefire talks on the decision by some European leaders to recognize Palestinian statehood.
Talks over a lasting ceasefire have repeatedly stalled since the early months of the war sparked by Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attack — and long before there was any talk of major European states recognizing Palestinian statehood.
The decisions were announced by France, Britain and other countries after the Trump administration's Mideast envoy had already walked away in frustration from the negotiations, which happened behind closed doors. It's unclear how and when they began to break down.
But Huckabee's remarks in an interview with The Associated Press point to a sharp divide among Western nations about how to approach the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and the rift has only deepened since President Donald Trump took office.
Many European countries have sought to pressure Israel — the stronger party — and frame the pursuit of a two-state solution as a way to address the root causes of a conflict that long predates the war in Gaza. But the Trump administration has given Israel wide latitude to end the war on its terms.
A dispute over which side should be pressured
The White House fully supported Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's decision to end an earlier ceasefire that Trump had helped broker and resume wide-ranging military operations, during which Israel prevented food, medicine and other goods from entering Gaza for more than two months.
Trump appears to have adopted Israel's position that further military pressure — including a planned offensive into some of the most densely populated areas of Gaza — will force Hamas to surrender.
'We will only see the return of the remaining hostages when Hamas is confronted and destroyed!!!' Trump posted this week on his Truth Social site.
Meanwhile, France, Britain and more than two dozen other Western-aligned nations have expressed mounting outrage at Israel's actions, demanding that it halt the fighting and do more to facilitate humanitarian aid. The moves to recognize Palestinians statehood — which were largely symbolic — were in part aimed at pressuring Israel to halt its offensive.
Britain explicitly linked the two, saying it would hold off on recognizing a Palestinian state if Israel agreed to a ceasefire in Gaza, stopped building settlements in the West Bank and committed to a two-state solution.
Israel's current government and most of its political class were opposed to Palestinian statehood even before the war, and they now say it would reward Hamas and allow the militants to eventually carry out more Oct. 7-style attacks.
'A counterproductive effect'
Huckabee, who is himself a longtime opponent of Palestinian statehood, said the 'noise that has been made by European leaders recently ... is having the counterproductive effect that they probably think that they want.'
'If they believe that unilaterally calling for a two-state, a Palestinian state recognition, immediately brings them closer, the sad truth is it's taking them further away,' he said.
The AP sought comment from the foreign ministries of France and Britain, which did not immediately respond.
Most Palestinians believe the decades-old conflict is rooted in Israel's military occupation of lands they want for an independent state and its continuous expansion of Jewish settlements. Attempts to negotiate a two-state solution going back to the early 1990s repeatedly broke down as violence flared, and no serious or substantive talks have been held since Netanyahu returned to office in 2009.
On Wednesday, Israel approved plans for settlements in an area known as E1 outside Jerusalem, which the Palestinians and others say will cut the West Bank in half and make the establishment of a viable and contiguous state virtually impossible.
Past U.S. administrations joined their Western allies in vehemently opposing such plans. Trump and Huckabee — a strong supporter of Israeli settlements — did not.
Ceasefire talks have shown signs of progress
The ceasefire talks have continued, with Hamas saying this week that it accepted a proposal from Arab mediators that is similar to an earlier one advanced by the U.S. and accepted by Israel. Israel and the U.S. have not yet responded to the offer.
Huckabee said he could not elaborate on the talks beyond saying he would not trust that Hamas is serious until they 'put their signatures on it' and that the group could be 'stringing this along,' as the U.S. and Israel have alleged in the past.
The main disagreement has been over the conditions in which the war would end.
Hamas has said it will only release the remaining hostages in exchange for a lasting ceasefire and an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, while Israel says it is committed to returning all the hostages, defeating and disarming Hamas, and maintaining lasting security control over the territory.
In Israel, many blame Netanyahu for the failure of the talks, accusing him of seeking to prolong the war in order to keep his far-right governing coalition intact. Hundreds of thousands took to the streets over the weekend to protest his planned offensive and call for a deal to return the captives.
___
Follow AP's war coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Nightmare Battle of Fallujah Still Has Lessons to Teach
The Nightmare Battle of Fallujah Still Has Lessons to Teach

Bloomberg

time16 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

The Nightmare Battle of Fallujah Still Has Lessons to Teach

On Aug. 7, the Israeli war cabinet made a controversial decision to continue Israel Defense Forces (IDF) ground attacks against Hamas in Gaza, despite intermittent ceasefire efforts and the ongoing danger to the remaining hostages. The decision has been condemned by many nations, including some — like France, the UK, Canada and Australia — that are generally more sympathetic to Israeli policy. The security cabinet's plan specifically targeted Gaza City as part of five objectives: rescuing the hostages; establishing complete security control of the city; demilitarizing all of Gaza; disarming Hamas; and creating a civil administration that excludes both Hamas and the Palestinian Authority. Within Israel, the plan has sparked significant opposition and triggered large-scale protests.

Trump, 79, Forgets the Name of an Ocean
Trump, 79, Forgets the Name of an Ocean

Yahoo

time43 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump, 79, Forgets the Name of an Ocean

President Trump's senior moments have seen him confuse several land-based locations, but now his possible cognitive slide seems to have extended offshore. During a Tuesday morning interview on Fox and Friends, Trump discussed his meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and seemed to forget the name of the ocean that separates the U.S., Europe and Russia. Trump said that European leaders like Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron are 'consumed far more with [Ukraine] because they're right there.' 'You know we have an ocean that's separating us, right? A thing called... an ocean,' he said. 'A big, beautiful ocean. And, uh, they don't, they're right there. So it's a different kind of a thing for them.' Trump possibly appeared to be referring to the Atlantic, which separates the U.S. from Europe and the west of Russia. The U.S. is, however, also separated from Russia to the west by the Bering Sea. The coast of the mainland of Alaska, where Trump and Putin met last Friday, is separated by 55 miles of sea from the eastern coast of Russia. At the closest point of any land, Alaska's Little Diomede Island is separated from Russia's Big Diomede Island by 2.4 miles of open water—which turns to ice capable of bearing human weight in winter. Infamously, Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin said that 'you can actually see Russia from land here in Alaska' in 2008, providing fodder for a viral SNL spoof starring Tina Fey. Trump considered offering Palin a cabinet position in his first administration, but his knowledge of her home state seems to have grown fuzzier since 2016. At a press conference last week, Trump said twice that he was going to Russia, leaving Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt to explain why the president didn't seem to remember that his meeting with Putin was being held on American soil. On Tuesday, the Fox hosts allowed Trump to bulldoze through his lapse, as he continued to ramble about negotiations with Ukraine and how the war is Joe Biden's fault. 'It was always thought that Ukraine was sort of a buffer between Russia and the rest of Europe. And it was, it was a big wide buffer. Everything worked out well until Biden got involved,' he said. 'Biden gave them $100 billion right up front, I don't give them anything... since I've been there, we don't pay.' In fact, the Trump administration has largely kept the Biden administration's military aid to Ukraine intact, delivering $6.2 billion in weapons to the country in the first half of this year. After promising dozens of times during the 2024 campaign that he would end the war 'within 24 hours,' Trump has found it more difficult than expected to broker peace. 'I have ended six wars. I thought maybe this would be the easiest one, and it's not the easiest one,' he said on Monday. 'It's a tough one.' It could remain tough sledding for Trump if his geographic recall doesn't improve. The White House declined to answer 'stupid questions about oceans.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store