Israel reportedly waits for Hamas reply to new Gaza cease-fire plan
A Palestinian walks past the rubble of buildings destroyed in Israeli bombardments, in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, Palestine, April 30, 2024. (AFP Photo)


Israel is reportedly waiting for Hamas to respond to proposals for a cease-fire in Gaza and a return of Israeli hostages before sending a team to Cairo to continue talks, a person close to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday.

With U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken due to arrive in Tel Aviv on Tuesday evening following a visit to Riyadh to help broker a normalization deal between Saudi Arabia and Israel, pressure has been building for an agreement to stop the war as it nears the end of its seventh month.

Expectations that an agreement could be in sight have grown in recent days following a renewed push led by Egypt to revive stalled negotiations between Israel and Hamas.

But so far, there has been little sign of agreement on the most fundamental difference between the two sides, the Hamas demand that any deal must ensure a withdrawal of troops and a permanent end to the Israeli operation in Gaza.

"We can't tell our people the occupation will stay or the fight will resume after Israel regains its prisoners," said a Palestinian official from a group allied with Hamas. "Our people want this aggression to end."

For Netanyahu, any move is likely to be affected by divisions in his own Cabinet between ministers pressing to bring home at least some of the 133 Israeli hostages left in Gaza, and hardliners insisting on the long-promised assault on the southern city of Rafah.

An incursion into Rafah will happen "with a deal or without a deal," Netanyahu said on Tuesday, adding that ending the war before reaching its objectives was "out of the question."