Rafah: Israel battled and bombarded Hamas in the Gaza Strip on Sunday as mediators called on both sides to agree to a truce and hostage release deal outlined by US President Joe Biden.
Since Biden spoke at the White House on Friday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has insisted Israel will pursue the war raging since October 7 until it has destroyed Hamas and freed the captives.
Netanyahu, a hawkish political veteran leading a fragile right-wing coalition government, is under intense domestic pressure from two sides.
Protesters supporting the hostages, who rallied again in their tens of thousands in Tel Aviv on Saturday, are urging him to strike a truce deal -- but right-wing extremist allies are threatening to bring down the government if he does.
Opposition leader Yair Lapid has offered Netanyahu a lifeline by vowing to support the government if it strikes a deal to pause the war that has raged for almost eight months.
For now, fighting again rocked Gaza overnight and Sunday, with the military reporting more air strikes and ground combat, and Palestinian officials reporting yet more deaths.
Across Gaza, the military said it had struck “30 terror targets, including military infrastructure, weapons storage facilities and armed terrorist cells that posed a threat to IDF (army) ground troops”.
Netanyahu said on Saturday that “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”.
Palestinian militant group Hamas, meanwhile, said it “views positively” what Biden on Friday described as the Israeli plan.
Mediators the United States, Qatar and Egypt on Saturday said they “call on both Hamas and Israel to finalise the agreement embodying the principles outlined by President Joe Biden”.
Biden said on Friday that Israel’s three-stage offer would begin with a six-week initial phase that
would see Israeli forces withdraw from all populated areas of the Gaza Strip.
It would see the “release of a number of hostages” in exchange for “hundreds of Palestinian prisoners” held in Israeli jails.
Israel and the Palestinians would then negotiate for a lasting ceasefire, with the truce to continue so long as talks are ongoing, Biden said.
“It’s time for this war to end, for the day after to begin,” he said.
Netanyahu took issue with Biden’s presentation, insisting that according to the “exact outline proposed by Israel” the transition
from one stage to the next was “conditional” and crafted to allow it to maintain its war aims.
Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, leaders of the two extreme-right parties in parliament,
quickly warned they would leave the government if it endorsed the truce proposal.
Ben Gvir said on X his party would “dissolve the government”, while Smotrich said: “We demand the continuation of the war until Hamas is destroyed and all hostages return.”
Smotrich said he also opposed the return of displaced Gazans to the territory’s north and the “wholesale release of terrorists” in a prisoner swap.
Lapid, a centrist former premier, however, said that the government “cannot ignore Biden’s important speech” and should accept
the proposed deal, vowing to back Netanyahu if his far-right coalition partners quit
over it.