Israel withdrew from the Haj Israel talks in Cairo, and Netanyahu vowed to occupy Gaza completely

Mondo International Updated on 2024-02-17

Israel announced its withdrawal from the Cairo-Israeli talks, and Netanyahu pledged to take full control of Gaza.

Israel withdrew from Cairo on 14 February for a six-week period of negotiations aimed at rescuing the hostages and guaranteeing a ceasefire agreement with Hamas. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said there would be no progress until Hamas stopped its "delusions" (i.e., a permanent truce).

After Netanyahu's first negotiations in the Egyptian capital, he published an article on his own ** that reads: "Cairo Israel has not received new proposals from Hamas to free our hostages. ”

Netanyahu "insists that Israel will never give in to Hamas's whimsical claims." A change in Hamas's attitude would make the talks smoother.

On Tuesday, Israeli representatives arrived in Cairo with CIA Director William Burns, as well as representatives from Egypt, Qatar and Hamas, to broker a six-week armistice to free 134 Hamas hostages held in Gaza from Palestine.

Netanyahu last week vetoed Hamas's earlier proposal to Israel, the United States and Qatar. U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Lincoln called Hamas's response "unrealistic," but there was room for more consultations.

Hamas is unwilling to end the war in Gaza or to free hundreds of Palestinian prisoners from Israeli prisons because of the serious threat they pose to the security of the Jewish people.

In his speech last week, Netanyahu warned that compromising with terrorist groups would only lead to another killing and a "major catastrophe" that the Israeli people could not afford.

On Wednesday, White House Defense Communications Assistant John Bryant held a preparatory meeting in Cairo. The talks, he said, were "constructive and moving on the right path." ”

Egypt has reportedly demanded that Hamas sign a platform with Israel within two weeks to prevent Israel from launching an attack on Rafah, the last base in Gaza, on the southernmost border.

Speaking with King Abdullah II of Jordan at the White House on Monday, Joe Biden said that the agreement currently being negotiated in Egypt will have six weeks of immediate and lasting peace, with the possibility of a more permanent ceasefire.

An Egyptian veteran and a Western diplomat confirmed to the United News Agency on the 28th that the six-week armistice talks are underway. Egypt said the summit would focus on "drafting the final draft" and promised to hold consultations on a permanent truce.

Netanyahu told American television that the elimination of Hamas is necessary to achieve Israel's military objectives.

Netanyahu has ordered the IDF to submit to the cabinet a concrete plan for evacuating the population and eliminating Hamas's military presence in Rafah. Mr. Netanyahu's office said on February 9 that Mr. Netanyahu insisted that the battle was "impossible" without seizing Jerusalem.

The current Israeli army's offensive is focused on Khan and Rafah in the south, especially in the port of Rafah, where nearly 1.4 million Gaza refugees are concentrated.

Since the 4th of February, the international aid route to Rafah has been effectively cut off (because the Israeli army has closed the Nizana checkpoint) and Israel is preparing for the removal of Khan Younis and the supply of "strong firepower" to Rafah, so that a war with Rafah is on the verge of breaking out.

The situation in the Middle East requires a key precondition, namely, that Israel's full military control of Gaza is an indispensable precondition.

From February 16 to 18 this year, in addition to Russia and Iran, a number of important international organizations will send an important delegation to the 2024 Munich Security Conference, of which the Gaza campaign is one of them.

Christian Christian, head of the Munich Security conference, said that while it is unlikely that Israeli and Palestinian representatives will sit together for negotiations, private conversations can be held outside the public spotlight.

The talks on the Israeli-Palestinian situation in "Munich Security" are by no means likely to produce any implementable results, but they will help to advance the Israeli-Kazakh talks and bring about some kind of consensus on humanitarian issues, but they will not change the final fact that Israel will take full-scale military action on Gaza. Prophecies based on knowledge of these facts will be more credible.

The author still agrees with last October's prediction of a major military strike in Gaza by May, after which the Israeli army in Gaza would enter a peaceful battle, while the remnants of Hamas would disperse to the rest of the Middle East, and Hamas would become a military and political organization with a solid foundation.

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