Inside the White House scramble to broker a deal in Gaza

We’re sorry, this feature is currently unavailable. We’re working to restore it. Please try again later.

Advertisement

Inside the White House scramble to broker a deal in Gaza

By Peter Baker

Washington: Over the course of a few hours, the news from the Middle East came into the White House Situation Room fast and furious.

Israel orders 100,000 civilians out of Rafah in prelude to invasion. Hamas “accepts” ceasefire deal, potentially precluding invasion. Israel conducts strikes against Rafah, possibly opening invasion.

The war-is-on-off-on-again developments left White House officials scrambling to track what was happening and what it all meant. At the end of the day, they came to believe, each of the moves signalled less than originally met the eye, but reflected efforts to gain leverage at the negotiating table with a clear resolution not yet in sight.

Smoke rises following an Israeli airstrike on buildings near the separating wall between Egypt and Rafah.

Smoke rises following an Israeli airstrike on buildings near the separating wall between Egypt and Rafah.Credit: AP

In fact, Hamas did not “accept” a ceasefire deal so much as make a counteroffer to the proposal on the table previously blessed by the United States and Israel – a counteroffer that was not itself deemed acceptable but a sign of progress. At the same time, Israel’s strikes in Rafah evidently were not the start of the long-threatened major operation but targeted retaliation for Hamas rocket attacks that killed four Israeli soldiers over the weekend – and along with the warning to civilians, a way to increase pressure on Hamas negotiators.

The flurry of actions underscored how fluid the situation in the region is as US President Joe Biden and his team try to broker a deal that they hope will ultimately end the war that has devastated Gaza, killed tens of thousands of combatants and civilians, inflamed the region and provoked unrest on US college campuses. Over the past few days, the talks went from high hopes that a deal was close, to a fresh impasse that seemed to leave them on the verge of collapse, to a renewed initiative by Hamas to get them back on track.

“Biden is continuing all efforts to thread multiple needles at once,” said Mara Rudman, a former deputy Middle East special envoy under President Barack Obama who is now at the University of Virginia’s Miller Centre. The president is still warning Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel that a “Rafah ground invasion is a terrible idea,” she said, while also “pressuring Hamas in every way possible to get hostages out and more humanitarian aid in.”

Loading

Biden called Netanyahu on Tuesday (AEST) to fill him in on the US assessment of where the ceasefire talks stand and to again press the Israeli leader to hold off any full-fledged attack on Rafah. The president also hosted lunch at the White House with King Abdullah II of Jordan who, like other Arab leaders, is eager to bring the war to an end.

The past two weeks have been as intense and suspenseful diplomatically as any since Hamas mounted a major terrorist attack on Israel on October 7, killing an estimated 1200 people and taking more than 200 hostages. After months of stalemated talks, Israel came back on April 26 with a proposal that US officials believed changed the dynamics and offered a serious chance for agreement.

Advertisement

Under the first phase of the proposal, Israel would halt the war for 42 days and release hundreds of Palestinians held in its prisons while Hamas would release 33 hostages, specifically women, older men, and the sick and wounded.

The number 33 was an increase from 18 proposed by Hamas but lower than the 40 originally demanded by Israel, in large part because Israeli officials came to understand that there were not more than 33 hostages who met the criteria, according to people informed about the discussions who insisted on anonymity to describe sensitive talks. Indeed, Hamas revealed to the Israelis on Tuesday (AEST) that the 33 would include the remains of hostages who have died as well as those still living.

In addition, Israel would pull its forces out of populated areas of Gaza and permit residents to return to the northern part of the enclave once conditions were met; to that end, the ceasefire would enable a large increase in the flow of humanitarian aid. In trying to call Hamas’ bluff, the people informed on the talks said, the Israelis virtually cut and pasted some of the language from a Hamas proposal in March and put it into theirs.

During the six-week ceasefire, the two sides would then work out plans for a second phase, which would involve another 42-day halt to hostilities and the release of more hostages. In this phase, the hostages to be released would include Israeli soldiers, a category of captives that Hamas has always been more resistant to giving up. To get over that hurdle, the Israelis agreed to release a larger ratio of Palestinian prisoners for each hostage returned home.

The Israeli concessions left US, Egyptian and Qatari intermediaries optimistic that an agreement could be reached. But a week went by without a clear response from Hamas, in part perhaps because of the challenges of communicating with Yahya Sinwar, the Hamas military leader believed to be hiding in the tunnels of Gaza.

When negotiators arrived in Cairo last week, the Israelis did not send a delegation, which was interpreted by some critics of Netanyahu as a snub. But Israeli and US officials denied that, saying that no Israeli delegation was needed at that stage because Israel had made its proposal and was waiting for a Hamas response.

Hamas’ response over the weekend frustrated the intermediaries because it rejected some of the very language that it had previously proposed and that had been adopted by the Israelis, according to the people briefed on the talks. The US side declared the new Hamas position unacceptable, and suggested that if Hamas did not really want a deal, perhaps the negotiations were done. But Hamas indicated that it was not trying to torpedo the talks and would come back with a new version.

That was the counteroffer that Hamas forwarded on Tuesday. The Israelis and Americans did not find it acceptable, but believed that it left room for further negotiations. Talks are expected to resume in Cairo at a technical level, probably on Wednesday, to go through the details. This time, Israel has agreed to send a delegation to go over the Hamas counteroffer.

Khaled Elgindy, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute and former adviser to Palestinian leaders during past peace negotiations, said he remained sceptical that Netanyahu actually wanted a ceasefire deal because of his own domestic politics.

Loading

“I don’t believe moves on or in Rafah, including evacuation orders, are just a negotiating tactic,” he said. “Netanyahu needs the Rafah operation to remain in power and to appease the fanatics in his coalition.” He added, “Bottom line, Netanyahu has little to gain from a ceasefire deal and a lot to lose.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Get a note directly from our foreign correspondents on what’s making headlines around the world. Sign up for the weekly What in the World newsletter here.

Most Viewed in World

Loading