Israel’s opposition leader urges Netanyahu to
accept ceasefire proposal
Israeli PM says his country’s conditions for ending
conflict have not changed after US president presented ceasefire plan
Bethan
McKernan in Tel Aviv
Sat 1 Jun
2024 17.55 CEST
Benjamin
Netanyahu has reiterated that Hamas must be completely destroyed before Israel
will agree to end its war in Gaza, casting doubt on Joe Biden’s announcement of
a new Israeli-led ceasefire proposal.
The Israeli
prime minister made a rare statement on Saturday, during the Jewish Shabbat, in
which he said: “Israel’s conditions for ending the war have not changed: the
destruction of Hamas’s military and governing capabilities, the freeing of all
hostages and ensuring that Gaza no longer poses a threat to Israel.
“The notion
that Israel will agree to a permanent ceasefire before these conditions are
fulfilled is a non-starter,” he added.
The
comments come after Biden’s dramatic late-night announcement on Friday, in
which he urged Hamas to accept what he said was a new three-phrase roadmap
towards a permanent ceasefire in the nine-month-old war, tabled by Israel.
Hamas
issued a statement on Friday saying it received the proposals “positively”,
after reiterating its position only a day before that it would not engage in
negotiations while Israeli military operations are continuing in the Gaza
Strip.
Biden’s
announcement was welcomed by world leaders despite the seeming Israeli
hesitation. The UN secretary general, António Guterres, called on “all parties
to seize this opportunity for a ceasefire, release of all hostages, guaranteed
unhindered humanitarian access and ultimately a durable peace in the Middle
East”.
The UK
foreign secretary, David Cameron, urged Hamas to accept the proposal. “As we’ve
long argued, a stop in the fighting can be turned into a permanent peace if we
are all prepared to take the right steps. Let’s seize this moment and bring
this conflict to an end,” he said.
The German
foreign minister, Annalena Baerbock, said the Israeli offer “provides a glimpse
of hope and a possible path out of the war’s deadlock” and the EU chief, Ursula
von der Leyen, welcomed a “balanced and realistic” approach to end the
bloodshed.
But despite
Biden’s description of the peace deal as an Israeli proposal, there was
uncertainty about whether Netanyahu’s government fully supported the plan. The
US president’s speech – his most pointed call to date for the war to end –
appeared to be designed to pressure Israel as much as Hamas.
Because of
Shabbat, when many people are offline, there was little immediate reaction to
Biden’s speech in Israel, or to Netanyahu’s comments. The Israeli opposition
leader, Yair Lapid, urged Netanyahu to agree to a hostage and ceasefire deal,
saying his centrist Yesh Atid party would support it even if rightwing factions
in the governing coalition rebelled – meaning a deal would be likely to pass in
parliament.
“The
government of Israel cannot ignore President Biden’s consequential speech.
There is a deal on the table and it should be made,” he said.
Biden’s
unexpected announcement comes two weeks after Netanyahu rejected a new proposal
and reportedly told the Israeli delegation they “did not know how to
negotiate”.
Around the
same time, the US national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, reportedly came
away from a visit to the region saying he did not believe Netanyahu could or
would commit to a long-term peace process.
It also
comes in the wake of what Israeli hostage families said was an “aggressive”
meeting on Thursday with the country’s national security adviser, Tzachi
Hanegbi, who told them the government was not willing to sacrifice its war aims
to bring all of the hostages home.
“We know
that the government has done an awful lot to delay reaching a deal, and that
has cost the lives of many people who survived in captivity for weeks and weeks
and months and months,” said Sharone Lifschitz, whose mother, Yocheved, was
freed in November. Her father, Oded, is still in Gaza.
Any
concessions to Palestinians are completely unpalatable for the prime minister’s
far-right coalition partners, who have vowed to collapse his coalition
government if such moves are made. Netanyahu sees remaining in office as his
best chance of beating corruption charges, which he denies.
However,
the Israeli leader is also facing growing pressure from his military and
intelligence chiefs, as well as the centrist members of his war cabinet, to
outline a plan for administering and rebuilding Gaza when the war ends. Benny
Gantz, a major rival who joined Netanyahu’s emergency unity government after 7
October, has said he will resign if the prime minister does not commit to a
“day after” plan by a deadline of 8 June.
The new
roadmap does not significantly differ from previous proposals, although the New
York Times reported that Israel had made significant concessions during talks
held in Paris last week between the CIA director, Bill Burns, and the Mossad
head, David Barnea, on how many hostages would be released initially.
A first
phase would consist of a six-week-long and extendable ceasefire in which Hamas
would release “a number of hostages” including women, and elderly and wounded
people, in return for an Israeli withdrawal from populated parts of Gaza and
the freeing of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners.
In the
second phase, also of six weeks, all remaining hostages would be released,
Israel would completely withdraw from Gaza, and both parties would commit to a
lasting truce. In the third, major reconstruction in the decimated strip would
begin.
About 1,200
people, mostly civilians, were killed in Hamas’s assault on 7 October, with a
further 250 taken hostage, and about 36,000 people have been killed by Israel
in the ensuing war in Gaza, according to the Palestinian health ministry, which
does not differentiate between civilian and combatant deaths.
A hostage
and prisoner release deal in November collapsed after a week, and ceasefire
negotiations since then have repeatedly foundered.
Israeli
ground forces continued to push into the centre of the southern Gaza city of
Rafah on Saturday, in an operation that has displaced about 1 million people.
Israel’s
decision last month to send ground troops into Rafah, the main gateway
connecting Gaza to the outside world, led to the collapse of the last round of
ceasefire talks designed to avert the assault. It has also
significantly disrupted aid deliveries.

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