Arab Officials Say Gaza Ceasefire Deal Won’t Happen Unless US Pressures Israel

Officials from the mediating countries, Qatar and Egypt, say Netanyahu has been the only obstacle to a deal

A hostage and ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas won’t happen unless the US puts pressure on Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, The Times of Israel reported on Wednesday.

The report cited unnamed Arab officials from Egypt and Qatar, the countries that have been mediating the talks between Israel and Hamas. They said Netanyahu is the main obstacle to an agreement.

One of the Arab officials said the US is the only party with enough leverage to get Netanyahu to agree to a deal since the US is Israel’s main weapons supplier. The official said the US could apply pressure by blaming Netanyahu publicly, but US officials have refused to do so even as it’s become clear the Israeli leader has been sabotaging the chances of a deal.

After President Biden unveiled a ceasefire proposal that was on the table at the end of May, the US said Hamas was the only obstacle to an agreement being reached even as Netanyahu publicly rejected a permanent ceasefire, which was part of the second phase of the deal.

Netanyahu’s comments made Hamas ask for a commitment to a permanent ceasefire and Israeli withdrawal up front. After Hamas conceded and agreed to vague enough language that wouldn’t commit Israel to a permanent ceasefire, Netanyahu added new demands, including indefinite Israeli control of the Gaza-Egypt border and a screening mechanism for Palestinians returning to north Gaza.

Israeli officials, including Mossad Director David Barnea, who has been leading negotiations, said Netanyahu’s demands would thwart a deal. But US officials still refuse to name Netanyahu as an obstacle to talks even after he assassinated Hamas’s political chief, Ismail Haniyeh, which has put the negotiations on hold.

White House National Security Advisor John Kirby said Wednesday that it was up to Yahya Sinwar, Hamas’s leader in Gaza, who was named as Haniyeh’s replacement, to agree to a deal. “And as the chief decision-maker, [Sinwar] needs to decide now to take this deal, to get a ceasefire in place, to get some of those hostages home, and to get us all an opportunity to get more humanitarian assistance in.  He needs to accept the deal,” Kirby said.

When asked if Netanyahu was refusing to sign a deal, Kirby dodged the question. “I’ll say it again: There’s a proposal that is on the table.  It’s a good proposal.  It’ll get us a six-week ceasefire, or get us the most at — the most vulnerable hostages out,” he said.

Earlier this week, Israeli media reported that the US is willing to give Israel a guarantee that it could restart the genocidal war in Gaza after the first phase of any hostage deal.

Author: Dave DeCamp

Dave DeCamp is the news editor of Antiwar.com, follow him on Twitter @decampdave.