JERUSALEM — Israeli negotiators, offering a hint of hope for negotiations over a cease-fire in the Gaza Strip, have reduced the number of hostages they want Hamas to release during the first phase of a truce, three Israeli officials said Monday.
For weeks, cease-fire talks have been at a standstill. Now, with the new proposal in hand, a mid-ranking delegation from Israel was planning to fly to Cairo on Tuesday to resume them — but only if Hamas agrees to attend, according to two of the officials. They spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive issue.
Hamas did not respond to a request for comment about whether it would send representatives to Cairo. A senior Hamas official said on social media Monday that the group was studying a new Israeli proposal.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who was meeting in Saudi Arabia on Monday with Arab diplomats, said the onus was now on Hamas.
“Hamas has before it a proposal that is extraordinarily generous on the part of Israel,” Blinken said at an economic forum in Riyadh. “And at the moment, the only thing standing between the people of Gaza and a cease-fire is Hamas.”
Speaking at the same forum, British Foreign Minister David Cameron said the offer included a sustained 40-day cease-fire and the release of potentially thousands of Palestinians imprisoned in Israel in exchange for the hostages being held by Hamas.
Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry said he was “hopeful” about the latest cease-fire offer, though he did not say what it involved or who had made it.
Seeking to increase the pressure on Hamas leaders to accept the cease-fire deal, President Joe Biden planned to speak on Monday with the leaders of Egypt and Qatar.
But other serious obstacles may remain, among them Hamas’ demand for a permanent cease-fire and Israel’s insistence on pursuing its goal of rooting out the militants, including in their last bastion in the southern city of Rafah.
And there was also concern that cease-fire talks might be disrupted if the International Criminal Court issues arrest warrants for senior Israeli government officials on charges related to the conflict with Hamas, as Israeli and foreign officials believe is in the works. The warrants may also name Hamas officials.
Hamas and its allies captured roughly 240 Israelis and foreigners in the deadly Oct. 7 attack that set off the war. During a weeklong cease-fire in November, Hamas released 105 captives in exchange for 240 Palestinians being held in Israeli prisons.
In recent months, Israel has been demanding that Hamas release at least 40 more hostages — women, older people and those who are seriously ill — to secure a new truce. Now it is prepared to settle for only 33, the Israeli officials said.
The shift was prompted partly by the fact that Israel now believes that some of the 40 have died in captivity, according to one of the officials.
Even as expectations rose that Hamas and Israeli negotiators might be edging closer to their first truce since the November cease-fire, their fighters were pressing on.
In Gaza, Israeli airstrikes flattened concrete buildings overnight, according to news agencies, which published video on Monday of rows of body bags. The Reuters news agency said the strikes had killed 20 people.
The Israeli military issued a statement Monday saying that its “fighter jets struck terror targets where terrorists were operating within a civilian area in southern Gaza.”
More than 1 million Palestinians have crowded into shelters and tents in Rafah to seek safety from Israel’s military offensive.
One survivor, carrying a baby she said had been pulled from the rubble, told a Reuters video journalist that the child appeared to be uninjured, but that her parents had been killed.
“Look at us with some compassion, with some humanity,” said the woman, Umm Fayez Abu Taha. “This is all we ask for. We’re not asking for much: Just end the war, nothing more.”
In northern Israel, a salvo of Hamas rockets came over the border from Lebanon. The Qassam Brigades, Hamas’ military wing, said in a statement that it had targeted an Israeli military position in Kiryat Shmona, the largest city in Israel’s far north, with a “concentrated rocket barrage.”
Though Hamas is based in Gaza, many of its leaders are living in exile in Lebanon, where the group has a sizable presence.
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