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  • The New York Times

    Cease-Fire Talks Stall as Anger Flares Over Israel’s Incursion Into Rafah

    By Julian E. Barnes, Vivian Yee, Aaron Boxerman and Adam Rasgon,

    2024-05-09
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4IIrfc_0svRq5Ud00
    William Burns, director of the CIA, testifies during a Senate Select Committee on Intelligence hearing on worldwide threats on Capitol Hill in Washington, Monday, March 11, 2024. (Kent Nishimura/The New York Times)

    High-level hostage negotiations in Cairo were put on hold Thursday, according to officials briefed on the negotiations and Egyptian state media, with one official saying that anger had flared among participants over Israel’s incursion into the city of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip.

    The pause is a setback given that some people watching the negotiations closely had seen signs that an agreement might be in reach this week. Still, one official briefed on the talks said that negotiators did not believe Hamas or Israel were leaving the negotiations permanently and were interpreting the suspension as a temporary pause rather than a derailment.

    William J. Burns, the CIA director and top American negotiator, and other senior officials departed Cairo, according to multiple officials. The officials all spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss diplomatic negotiations.

    Burns, who has been involved in daylong negotiating sessions, had extended his trip, moving between Egypt and Israel on Wednesday to meet with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel in an effort to persuade Israel not to dismiss Hamas’ most recent cease-fire counterproposal and to continue negotiating over it.

    While midlevel Egyptian, Qatari and U.S. officials remain in Cairo for discussions, both Hamas and Israeli delegations left Thursday, Hamas and Israeli officials said. A senior Egyptian official told state-owned television that mediation efforts were still underway to bridge the difference between the most recent proposals by Israel and Hamas.

    U.S. officials said they believed that the differences between Hamas and Israel still could be resolved, at least enough to begin the first phase of hostage negotiations. One proposal called for Hamas to free hostages in return for a 42-day cease-fire and the release of a much larger number of Palestinian prisoners. That would be the first of three phases of reciprocal actions from each side.

    Egyptian and Hamas negotiators have been enraged by Israel’s military operations in Rafah. And the United States has argued that the military operation is threatening the hostage talks. The Biden administration announced it would withhold 3,500 bombs from Israel until it ended military operations in Rafah.

    On Monday, Israeli tanks and troops seized the border crossing in the Gaza city, shutting off the flow of aid from Egypt. U.S. officials had hoped the incursion was not the start of a larger ground invasion in Rafah, where hundreds of thousands of displaced civilians are crammed into tent cities and temporary shelters in the city.

    Israeli officials have reacted with defiance, saying the invasion is necessary to dismantle Hamas as a fighting force in Rafah.

    This article originally appeared in The New York Times .

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