U.S. and
Israeli Officials Float Idea of ‘All or Nothing’ Gaza Deal
The
apparent shift in tone comes as cease-fire negotiations have hit a wall and
pressure is mounting on Israel over the hunger crisis in Gaza. But Israel and
Hamas remain far apart on the terms of any deal.
By Isabel
Kershner and Aaron Boxerman
Reporting
from Jerusalem
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/03/world/middleeast/israel-gaza-hamas-ceasefire.html
Aug. 3,
2025
Updated
11:50 a.m. ET
For
months, the Israeli government had focused on negotiating a two-phased deal for
a 60-day cease-fire in Gaza and the release of some hostages, leaving
discussions about a permanent end to the war for a later stage.
With the
talks now at an impasse, American and Israeli officials appear to be sharply
changing their tone by signaling that they will push for a comprehensive deal.
But Israel and Hamas remain far apart, and analysts said this new approach
would also face steep challenges.
The
shift, at least in rhetoric, comes as the Israeli government faces rising
domestic pressure to secure the release of hostages still held in Gaza. Israel
believes that about 20 are still alive and that the bodies of 30 others remain
in the enclave. Videos released over the weekend showed two living captives
looking emaciated and frail, shocking many Israelis and sparking fear among the
hostages’ families.
The
Israeli government has also come under mounting international criticism over
the mass hunger that has spread through Gaza’s population of about two million
people after Israel imposed strict restrictions in recent months on the entry
of aid.
Israel
has continued launching military strikes on Gaza, even as it has facilitated
the entry of more aid into Gaza in recent days. The Palestine Red Crescent
Society said on Sunday that Israeli artillery had hits its offices in Khan
Younis, killing one of the aid group’s staffers and injuring others. The
Israeli military did not immediately comment.
Steve
Witkoff, the Trump administration’s special envoy to the Middle East, who is
visiting the region, met with families of Israeli hostages on Saturday and told
them that President Trump now wants to see all the living hostages released at
once.
“No
piecemeal deals, that doesn’t work,” he said, according to an audio recording
of part of the meeting published by the Ynet Hebrew news site.
“Now we
think that we have to shift this negotiation to ‘all or nothing’ — everybody
comes home,” he said. “We have a plan around it,” he added, without
elaborating. A participant in the meeting confirmed that Mr. Witkoff made such
remarks.
Israel
and Hamas do not negotiate directly. Instead, negotiations for a cease-fire
between the two sides have run through intermediaries: the United States, Qatar
and Egypt.
Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel and Mr. Trump are said to be working on a
new proposal that would involve presenting Hamas with an ultimatum, according
to reports in the Israeli news media that were confirmed on Sunday by a person
familiar with the matter. The White House was not immediately available for
comment.
Under the
terms of the ultimatum, Hamas would have to release the remaining hostages in
exchange for Palestinian prisoners and agree to terms to end the war that
include the group’s disarmament. Otherwise, the Israeli military would continue
its campaign.
Mahmoud
Mardawi, a Hamas official, said the Palestinian armed group had yet to receive
a formal Israeli proposal for a comprehensive deal from Arab mediators. He said
that while Hamas supported such an agreement in principle, it would not disarm
— which has long been a core Israeli condition.
“This has
been our demand from the beginning: an end to the war, the release of
prisoners, and day-after arrangements in the Gaza Strip — a clear and
comprehensive deal,” Mr. Mardawi said in a phone interview.
The
prospects of any rapid advancement toward such a deal appear dim.
Hamas has
consistently rejected Israel’s terms for ending the war throughout the
negotiations. On Saturday, the group said in a statement that it would not
disarm unless a Palestinian state was established, despite a call from Arab
states last week for the group to do so.
The
Israeli government opposes Palestinian statehood. On Sunday, Itamar Ben-Gvir,
the Israeli national security minister, visited the Al Aqsa Mosque compound,
which Jews revere as the Temple Mount, long a tinderbox for Israeli-Palestinian
tensions.
“It’s
important to convey from this place that we should immediately conquer Gaza,
exercise our sovereignty there, and eliminate every last Hamas member,” Mr.
Ben-Gvir said from the site, in a video shared by his office.
Many
Israelis say they support a comprehensive deal to return all the hostages and
end the war. But many are skeptical that such a deal can be achieved under the
conditions set by the hard-line Israeli government, which has vowed to continue
fighting until Hamas surrenders or is destroyed.
Given the
firm positions of both sides, an Israeli and American push for a comprehensive
deal may not bring an agreement closer, according to analysts.
“Hamas is
essentially saying to Israel: ‘If you want the 20 living hostages out, give us
a full victory,’” said Ehud Yaari, an Israel-based fellow of the Washington
Institute for Near East Policy, an independent research group.
Hamas’s
terms are far beyond what Mr. Netanyahu would accept, Mr. Yaari said. But, he
added, the prime minister “has to keep convincing the Israeli public and his
own voters that he is doing everything he can, and he has to reassure the
families of the hostages.”
Efrat
Machikawa, a relative of a released hostage, said that reports attributed to
anonymous Israeli officials about there being a comprehensive deal on the table
were “empty slogans.”
“The
preconditions set by Israel are unrealistic and unworkable,” she said, speaking
at a rally on Saturday in Tel Aviv.
Mr.
Mardawi, the Hamas official, said that Hamas saw little reason to negotiate
with Israel given the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza. “What is the point
of talks when people are dying of starvation?” he said.
The
hunger crisis worsened after Israel’s government imposed severe restrictions on
aid entering the territory. Israel has accused aid agencies of mismanaging
supplies and Hamas of diverting aid. But some Israeli military officials said
the military never found proof that Hamas had systematically stolen aid from
the United Nations, the biggest supplier of emergency assistance to Gaza for
most of the war.
More than
60,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since the war began, including
thousands of children, according to the Gaza health ministry, which does not
distinguish between civilians and combatants.
The
Hamas-led attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, which ignited the war, killed about
1,200 people, according to the Israeli government, and about 250 people were
taken captive to Gaza. More than 100 hostages were freed during previous
cease-fires and Israeli forces operating in the enclave have retrieved the
bodies of some others.
Ruby
Chen, the father of the American-Israeli soldier Itay Chen, who was abducted by
Hamas, attended the meeting on Saturday with Mr. Witkoff. Mr. Chen’s son is now
presumed dead by the Israeli authorities.
He said
Mr. Witkoff had discussed the need for a comprehensive deal, rather than a
partial deal. “After six months, they’ve now come to the understanding that
it’s not possible to execute it,” said Mr. Chen. “We lost six months on this.”
Lia
Lapidot contributed reporting.
Isabel
Kershner, a Times correspondent in Jerusalem, has been reporting on Israeli and
Palestinian affairs since 1990.
Aaron
Boxerman is a Times reporter covering Israel and Gaza. He is based in
Jerusalem.


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