Hamas says Biden shows ‘blind bias’ toward Israel in cease-fire talks
The
militant group said it’s not “backing away” from a deal, in contrast to
the president’s remarks at the Democratic National Convention.
A
protester holds U.S. flags during a demonstration calling for a
cease-fire and hostage deal outside a news event held by Secretary of
State Antony Blinken on Monday in Tel Aviv. (Amir Levy/Getty Images)
Updated August 20, 2024 The Washington Post
TEL AVIV — Hamas directly criticized President Joe Biden on Tuesday, saying his comments that the militant group is “backing away” from a cease-fire deal in the Gaza Strip caused “great astonishment and disapproval” and demonstrated “blind bias” toward Israel.
The
unusually direct comments cast doubt on the prospects of a near-term
agreement, which the Biden administration said last week it hoped to
conclude in the coming days. The criticism also came as the Israeli
military recovered the bodies of six more hostages
from southern Gaza, and as the enclave’s civil defense force said at
least 12 people were killed in a strike on a school in Gaza City. Israel accused Hamas militants of using the school as a “command and control center.”
The
row between Hamas and Biden comes as U.S. Secretary of State Antony
Blinken shuttled between Israel, Egypt and Qatar on Tuesday on a mission
to pressure all sides to conclude a deal. The proposal sponsored by the
United States includes a six-week cease-fire, the release of scores of
Israeli hostages and Palestinian detainees, and the withdrawal of
Israeli forces from major population centers in Gaza.
Palestinians
inspect a school sheltering displaced people after it was hit by an
Israeli strike Tuesday in Gaza City. (Dawoud Abu Alkas/Reuters)
The
framework, which the United States says is a compromise that
incorporates both Israeli and Hamas interests, was provided to Hamas and
Israel last week. On Monday, Blinken emerged from a three-hour meeting
with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu saying that the Israeli leader
had accepted the framework but that core aspects of implementation still
needed to be negotiated.
“Israel accepts the bridging proposal. It’s now incumbent upon Hamas to do the same,” Blinken told reporters in Tel Aviv.
Biden
followed those remarks by telling reporters at the Democratic National
Convention in Chicago that “Israel says they can work it out,” but
“Hamas is now backing away.”
The
Hamas statement says that the group agreed to an earlier cease-fire
framework that was consistent with both Biden’s remarks on a deal and a
U.N. Security Council resolution, but that the deal changed after Israel
placed new demands and Washington accepted them.
“Biden
and Blinken’s statements are misleading claims and do not reflect the
true position of the movement, which is keen to reach a cessation of
aggression,” Hamas said. “We reaffirm our commitment to what we agreed
upon with the mediators on July 2nd.”
Although
both U.S. mediating partners, Qatar and Egypt, signed onto the latest
“bridging proposal,” they largely view it as an American creation that
they will try their best to convince Hamas to accept.
One
former Egyptian official familiar with the discussions said the United
States no longer appears to be “bridging” anything and was simply
adopting “Israel’s demands.”
“I
am no longer hopeful about what is happening,” the official, who spoke
on the condition of anonymity to discuss the closed-door negotiations,
said of the prospects of reaching a deal.
During
Blinken’s meeting Tuesday with Abdel Fatah El-Sisi, the Egyptian
president said Cairo would not accept the presence of Israeli forces
along the Egypt-Gaza border.
Blinken meets Monday with Israeli President Isaac Herzog. (Kevin Mohatt/AFP/Getty Images)
While
the disconnect between Hamas and the United States raises doubts about a
deal, there are also significant discrepancies between U.S. and Israeli
negotiators, according to diplomats who, like others in this story,
spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive situation.
When
Blinken announced that Israel had accepted the proposal, Israeli,
Qatari and Egyptian officials privately expressed surprise and
confusion. Israel has not yet agreed on how to implement some of the
deal’s most critical components, including which Palestinian prisoners
will be released, how to vet Palestinians returning to their homes in
northern Gaza, and the status of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), both
at the Rafah crossing in the south and along the Israeli-built Netzarim
Corridor that carves the territory in two.
Among
the most stubborn sticking points for the Israelis is forging an
agreement on the removal of Israeli troops from the Philadelphi Corridor
that runs the length of Gaza’s border with Egypt. Netanyahu has
insisted on a lasting military presence, Hamas demands a full
withdrawal, and U.S. negotiators are trying to find a middle ground that
allows for a reduced presence of Israeli soldiers until a long-term
Arab security force can be stood up, said officials familiar with the
negotiations.
Publicly,
Netanyahu has not denied that he agreed with the U.S. proposal, but he
has also insisted he will never back down on the issue of the
Philadelphi Corridor, a narrow buffer zone Israel and Egypt established
to prevent weapons smuggling into Gaza from the Sinai Peninsula.
“The
prime minister insisted that Israel remain in the Philadelphi Corridor
in order to prevent terrorists from rearming,” Netanyahu’s spokesman
David Mencer said Tuesday. “We’re conducting these negotiations with a
firm eye on the vital security interests of Israel, as opposed to those
who advised us just to give in.”
U.S.
officials also said Netanyahu’s public comments that Israel will not
withdraw from the Philadelphi Corridor were patently unhelpful to the
negotiations. “Maximalist statements like this are not constructive to
getting a cease-fire deal across the finish line,” said a senior
administration official briefing reporters.
In
response to the confusion surrounding the U.S. position, Blinken told
reporters in Qatar late Tuesday that the United States does not support
the long-term occupation of Gaza. He also said that the U.S. proposal
includes clear schedules and locations for IDF “withdrawal” from the
territory.
But
the issue of the Philadelphi Corridor has been so difficult to resolve
that some suspect Netanyahu may have raised it to forestall a deal,
which is strongly opposed by his right-wing cabinet.
“The
Philadelphi Corridor issue isn’t a made-up issue, though the prime
minister is making it harder to resolve than it needs to be,” said Aaron
David Miller, a Middle East expert who has advised multiple Republican
and Democratic administrations. “Stopping smuggling of weapons from
Sinai into Gaza is critically important for preventing a Hamas
resurgence.
“For
Egypt, it’s a sovereignty issue and an economic one, since the
smuggling trade is a lucrative one,” he said. “The IDF is prepared to
implement any decision reached by the government, which suggests the
issue is Netanyahu’s politics, not Israeli security.”
Retired
Maj. Gen. Israel Ziv, who served as the head of the IDF’s operations
division, said Israeli negotiators generally have only a “partial
mandate” to agree to a humanitarian cease-fire deal that would halt the
fighting, allow most Palestinians to return to their homes and secure
the release of more than 100 hostages still held in Gaza, dozens of whom
the Israeli government has assessed are still alive.
Ziv said that the talks, taking place alongside U.S. and international efforts to prevent a war between Israel, Hezbollah and Iran,
have enabled Netanyahu to “kind of launder in the Philadelphi Corridor
issue, understanding that the U.S. and the other players see
de-escalation as their top interest.”
Netanyahu
has shifted the focus of the negotiations toward convincing Egypt to
allow Israel to control the border area, in exchange for the potential
involvement of the Palestinian Authority as supervisors of the crossing.
“The
deal now depends on Egypt, and on the U.S. to get Egypt on board,” Ziv
said. “Which means there is a high probability that there will be an
understanding on the principles of the deal by the weekend, though we
may still see, at least, another round of negotiations.”
High-ranking
Israeli military figures for months have expressed willingness to show
flexibility on security concerns needed to finalize a deal.
Last
week, IDF Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi said that along the Philadelphi
Corridor, the military was “preparing options for whatever the political
echelon decides,” including the withdrawal of troops from the border
region.
“If
they decide that we remain in Philadelphi, we will do so with a strong
presence. If they decide that we will monitor from afar and carry out
raids whenever indications arise, we will know how to do that,” Halevi
said.
Mahfouz reported from Cairo. Lior Soroka in Tel Aviv contributed to this report.