Hamas, not Israel, is the party refusing a ceasefire
Slate reports:
Amid all the calls for an Israeli cease-fire in the war with Gaza, a few key facts are getting short shrift. Israel has put forth a cease-fire plan. It was negotiated along with U.S., Egyptian, Qatari, and Saudi diplomats. Its terms are quite favorable to Hamas. And Hamas is the party that’s rejecting it.
The plan, which has been on the table for two weeks, calls for a 40-day cease-fire. During this period, all military activity by Israel and Hamas will stop. Israel will suspend aerial surveillance over Gaza for eight hours of each day. Hamas will free 40 hostages—one a day. They will include women, children under 19, people over 50, and ill hostages. In exchange, Israel will free 400 Palestinian prisoners—a 10-to-1 ratio.
A 10:1 prisoner ratio and a 40 day cease-fire.
Meanwhile, the six-week cease-fire plan seems as if it has something to offer for all sides. Diplomats from neighboring Arab states have been pushing Hamas to take the deal. The Wall Street Journal recently reported that Qatari officials have threatened to expel Hamas’ political leaders—who have been living in cushy houses and condos in the small, oil-rich nation—if they don’t accept the cease-fire, though no action has yet been taken.
So Israel, US, all the Arab states think it is a fair ceasefire. But Hamas won’t agree.
A senior Hamas leader openly said, in an interview with Russian TV two weeks into the war, that protecting civilians was the United Nations’ responsibility, not his. They don’t care about the lives or well-being of ordinary Gazans. As long as he and other Hamas leaders survive, down in their tunnels or wherever they happen to be, they’re willing to hang on.
Lovely people.