U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken met
with Israeli leaders on Wednesday as part of his Middle East tour to
Israel, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, his seventh trip to the Jewish state
since the current Hamas war broke out on Oct. 7.
Blinken met with Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu at the Prime Minister’s Office in Jerusalem, where they
“discussed ongoing efforts to reach an immediate ceasefire in Gaza as
part of a hostage deal and emphasized that it is Hamas that is standing
in the way of a ceasefire,” according to an official statement from the
U.S. State Department.
“Secretary Blinken reaffirmed the U.S.
commitment to Israel’s security,” the statement continued. “He also
discussed the need to avoid further expansion of the conflict and
updated the prime minister on ongoing efforts to ensure a lasting,
sustainable peace in the region.”
Without delving into details, the statement also read that Blinken “reiterated the United States’ clear position on Rafah.”
Secretary
of State Antony Blinken meets with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in
Jerusalem, May 1, 2024.
Netanyahu, according to reports in the Hebrew media, pushed back on America’s position, insisting that a Rafah operation will move forward, and that Israel will not agree to a “permanent ceasefire” before Hamas is destroyed in Gaza.
The Israel Defense Forces plans to
establish a humanitarian safe zone in the central Gaza Strip as part of
preparations for the evacuation of noncombatants from the southernmost
city of Rafah.
The new safe zone will be located south of
Wadi Gaza and north of the central camps—Nuseirat and Bureij—near the
east-west Netzarim Corridor the IDF recently created to split the Strip
into two parts, Army Radio reported on Wednesday.
The evacuation preparations come ahead of
an expected IDF offensive in Rafah, Hamas’s last terror bastion where
four of its last six battalions are entrenched, consisting of several
thousand fighters. Jerusalem says that conquering the city on the
Egyptian border is essential to winning the war.
However, there is intense international
opposition to a full-scale offensive, including from the United States,
with Blinken saying in Riyadh on Monday that “we have not yet seen a
plan that gives us confidence that civilians can be effectively
protected.”
Israel Defense Forces activity in the Gaza Strip, April 23, 2024.
Hostages the priority
Earlier on Wednesday, Blinken met with
President Isaac Herzog in Tel Aviv. Blinken and Herzog discussed the
ongoing negotiations to bring about the release of the Israeli hostages
still held in Gaza, in exchange for a pause in fighting and the release
of Palestinian terrorists held in Israeli prisons.
“Even in these very difficult times we are
determined to get a ceasefire that brings the hostages home—and to get
it now,” said Blinken.
“And the only reason that wouldn’t be achieved is because of Hamas,” he added.
Herzog thanked Blinken “for the strong
support and the more clarity in what you’ve said regarding the
initiation of this terrible situation, the war that was waged upon us,
the atrocities, as well as the plight of the hostages.
“I think there should be a unanimous
decision of the international community that freeing the hostages is the
utmost priority,” Herzog continued.
U.S.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken (left) meets with Israeli President
Isaac Herzog in Tel Aviv, May 1, 2024.
Israel’s Settlements and National Missions Minister Orit Strook on
Wednesday harshly criticized the terms of a hostage deal being
negotiated with Hamas in Cairo, calling the Israeli proposal “trash” and
saying that a government that approves such an agreement “has no right
to exist.”
Strook, a member of Netanyahu’s coalition from the Religious Zionist Party, spoke during an interview with Army Radio.
“Soldiers left everything behind and went
out to fight for goals that the government defined, and we are throwing
it in the trash now to save 22 people, or 33 people, or I don’t know how
many,” she said.
“The government went to war with a clear
decision on the goals of the war, which were determined by it and are …
in a written document: dismantling and destroying all the capabilities
of Hamas in Gaza—military, governmental and economic; creating
conditions for the return of the abducted; and the removal of any threat
from Gaza towards Israel over time. This deal turns its back on all
three of these goals, including the goal of creating conditions for the
return of the abductees,” Strook continued.
In return for the release of a “small
number” of hostages, she said, under the deal Israel will be giving up
all its leverage to free the rest.
As for the rest, “These people will be left behind, and we will have nothing to pay for them,” she said.
Herzog, in his meeting with Blinken, also
highlighted reports that the ICC will soon issue arrest warrants for
Israeli leaders such as Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant,
saying, “Trying to use the International Criminal Court against Israel,
which is fighting terror, is a clear and present danger to democracies
and to free peace-loving nations who pursue the norms of international
law, and I call upon all our allies and friends to object and reject any
such efforts.”
Netanyahu said on Tuesday that if the
International Criminal Court in The Hague issues arrest warrants for
Israeli political and military leaders over the war against Hamas in the
Gaza Strip, it would constitute an “unprecedented antisemitic hate
crime.
“The possibility that they will issue
arrest warrants for war crimes against IDF commanders and government
leaders is a scandal of historical magnitude,” he said.
“Eighty years after the Holocaust, the
international bodies established with the goal of preventing another
Holocaust are considering denying the Jewish state its right to defend
itself,” he continued.
Netanyahu noted that this marks the first
time that a democratic country committed to international law is
defending itself from accusations of war crimes while at the same time
facing existential threats.
“If this does happen, it will be an
indelible stain on humanity. It would be an unprecedented antisemitic
hate crime that would add fuel to the antisemitic incitement that is
already raging in the world,” he said.
“Israel expects the leaders of the free
world to come out strongly against this scandalous step, a step that
will harm the self-defense not only of the State of Israel, but of all
democracies,” Netanyahu said.
Yair Lapid
Blinken also met with opposition leader
Yair Lapid, the latter tweeting afterwards that they “discussed the
international efforts to promote a hostage deal.”
Notably, Lapid reiterated his willingness
to join a government coalition to ensure a hostage agreement is approved
if Netanyahu’s current partners threaten to dissolve the government
over a deal. “If necessary I will make sure he has a majority in the
government,” Lapid wrote.
The secretary of state was also set to
meet with War Cabinet Minister Benny Gantz later on Wednesday at Kibbutz
Yad Mordechai, 1 km. north of northern Gaza, followed by a trip to
Ashdod Port to inspect aid deliveries destined for Palestinian civilians
in the Strip.
He was also scheduled to hold a sit-down
meeting in Tel Aviv with families of American-Israeli hostages and visit
Kibbutz Be’eri, which was one of the hardest hit Israeli communities
during Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack.
1 comment:
They need to destroy Hamas or Hamas will continue to try to destroy them.
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