What have the main obstacles been to a ceasefire deal in Gaza and the release of Israel’s hostages?


After a midnight “breakthrough” in negotiations, mediator Qatar reportedly gave both Israel and Hamas a draft on Monday of a ceasefire agreement to end the war in Gaza, the Reuters news agency reported, citing an official familiar with the talks.

The official told Reuters the talks were attended by the heads of Israel’s Shin Bet and Mossad spy agencies, the man who will become the U.S. envoy when President-elect Trump takes office next week, Steve Witkoff, and Qatar’s prime minister. Reuters also reported that officials from the Biden administration were believed to have participated.

“The next 24 hours will be pivotal to reaching the deal,” the official told Reuters.

“We are not there yet but there is a potential for real progress,” an official close to the talks told CBS News.

What has been happening with the Israel-Hamas ceasefire talks?

Israel and Hamas have been holding indirect talks for more than a year aimed at ending the war in Gaza and returning scores of militant-held hostages in exchange for Palestinians imprisoned by Israel.

On Sunday, President Biden spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over the phone about the ongoing negotiations. The White House said the two leaders discussed the deal based on the arrangement outlined by Mr. Biden last year. The Biden administration has been pushing for a deal before Trump’s inauguration on Jan. 20.

But despite intense mediation by the United States, Qatar and Egypt, the talks have repeatedly stalled over several key issues including the details of the exchange, whether the ceasefire would be permanent and the withdrawal of Israeli forces.

As each side has accused the other of backtracking, the war has ground on.

Dozens of Palestinians have been killed each day in Israeli strikes, and most of Gaza’s 2.3 million people are huddled in squalid tent camps, their neighborhoods in ruins. Humanitarian groups struggle to deliver desperately needed aid, and experts have warned of famine.

In Israel, families of the hostages have held weekly rallies demanding a deal for their release, fearing their loved ones will die in the harsh conditions of their captivity the longer the fighting drags on.

What have the main points of contention been in coming up with a ceasefire deal?

Hamas and other groups are still holding around 100 hostages captured in the Oct. 7, 2023 attack on southern Israel that ignited the war, in which militants killed about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted around 250. The Israeli military has declared a third of the hostages dead but suspects that the true number could be around half.

Hamas is demanding the release of a large number of Palestinian prisoners, including senior militants convicted of orchestrating attacks that killed civilians. Israel is reluctant to free such prisoners, especially since one of the masterminds of the 2023 attack, the slain Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar, was a former prisoner released in such a deal.

The two sides have exchanged lists of names, with Israel demanding more information about which hostages are alive to ensure they come out first. Hamas says it needs at least a brief truce to determine the status of the hostages because they are being held by various groups in scattered, secret locations.

The emerging deal calls for a multiphase plan. In the first stage, Hamas would release the most vulnerable hostages and Israeli forces would pull back from some areas, allowing some Palestinians to return to their homes and a surge of humanitarian aid.

In the second step – which would be negotiated during the first – the rest of the living hostages would be released in exchange for a lasting ceasefire and the withdrawal of Israeli forces.

Hamas has said it won’t release the remaining hostages without assurances that the war will end. Israel’s offensive has killed more than 46,000 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to local health authorities, who don’t say how many of the dead were militants.

Hamas likely fears that Israel will resume its offensive – and step up its intensity – once the hostages are out and the militants no longer have their most valuable bargaining chip.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to do just that. He says Israel won’t end the war until it has destroyed Hamas’ military and governing abilities and ensured that the Palestinian militant group no longer poses a threat.

The lack of trust goes both ways: Israelis fear that Hamas will drag out negotiations over the second phase, extending the ceasefire indefinitely while the hostages languish.

Talks have almost collapsed over disagreements

The talks nearly collapsed last summer when Netanyahu said Israel would maintain a lasting presence in the Philadelphi corridor, a strip of land along the Gaza-Egypt border.

Israel says Hamas has long smuggled weapons into Gaza through tunnels beneath the corridor and that it must control the area to prevent Hamas from rebuilding. Egypt, a key mediator, says it blocked the tunnels years ago and is opposed to any Israeli presence on the Gaza side of its border.

Israel has also demanded a mechanism for inspecting people returning to their homes in northern Gaza, from which around a million people fled following Israeli evacuation orders at the start of the war. Their return is a key Hamas demand, the details of which are still being worked out.

Israel says people returning to the north should be searched for weapons. That would probably require an Israeli presence in what’s known as the Netzarim corridor, a strip of closed roads and military installations stretching from the border to the sea just south of Gaza City.

The Palestinians are opposed to any permanent Israeli occupation, though Hamas has reportedly shown flexibility on the timetable of the Israeli withdrawal.

Israel says Hamas can never again rule Gaza but has yet to endorse a realistic plan for an   alternative government. With no internal rivals, Hamas has been able to quickly regroup after Israeli operations, even in the hardest-hit areas, and still controls much of the territory.

The Biden administration has long pushed for a grand bargain in which a reformed Palestinian Authority would govern postwar Gaza with the support of Arab and Muslim countries, including Saudi Arabia, which would also take the historic step of forging ties with Israel.

But Arab and Muslim leaders say they will only sign onto such plans if they include a pathway to a Palestinian state in the occupied West Bank, Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem and Gaza, territories Israel captured in the 1967 Mideast war.

Israel’s government is opposed to Palestinian statehood and has ruled out any role for the Palestinian Authority in Gaza. Netanyahu says Israel will maintain open-ended security control while delegating governance to politically independent Palestinians. But none appear to have volunteered, and Hamas has threatened anyone who cooperates with Israel in running the territory.

Hamas has said, however, that it’s willing to relinquish control of Gaza to other Palestinians. Late last year, it agreed to an Egyptian-brokered plan for a group of independents to govern the territory under the auspices of the Palestinian Authority, which has yet to accept the proposal.

Hamas has also demanded the lifting of a blockade imposed by Israel and Egypt after it seized power in 2007, which experts say is needed for Gaza to be rebuilt.

The lifting of the blockade, however, would allow Hamas to claim a major victory and to eventually rebuild its military capabilities. That’s another nonstarter for Israel.


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