World

Benjamin Netanyahu says he’s moving ahead with Trump’s Gaza plan

Resuming the war could doom hostages

This week marks 500 days of the war. Netanyahu has signalled readiness to resume the fighting after the ceasefire’s current phase, though it could be a death sentence for the remaining hostages.

People sit by their destroyed homes following Israeli air strikes on Rafah on March 29.Credit: Getty Images

Rubio said peace becomes impossible as long as Hamas “stands as a force that can govern, or as a force that can administer or as a force that can threaten by use of violence”, adding, “It must be eradicated.”

Hamas reasserted control over Gaza when the ceasefire began last month despite suffering heavy losses.

Netanyahu has offered Hamas a chance to surrender and send top leaders into exile. Hamas has rejected that scenario and insists on Palestinian rule. Spokesman Abdul Latif al-Qanou told The Associated Press the group accepts a Palestinian unity government or a technocratic committee to run Gaza.

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Netanyahu instructed negotiators to leave for Cairo on Monday to discuss further implementation of the ceasefire’s first phase as issues over the delivery of shelter materials continue.

The Israeli military, meanwhile, said it carried out an airstrike on people who approached forces in southern Gaza. The Hamas-run Interior Ministry said Israel killed three of its police officers while they secured the entry of aid trucks near Rafah on the Egyptian border.

In an interview last week, Rubio indicated that Trump’s Gaza proposal was in part aimed at pressuring Arab states to make their own postwar plan that would be acceptable to Israel.

Rubio also appeared to suggest that Arab countries send troops to combat Hamas.

“If the Arab countries have a better plan, then that’s great,” Rubio said Thursday on the Clay and Buck Show.

But “Hamas has guns”, he added.

“Someone has to confront those guys. It’s not going to be American soldiers. And if the countries in the region can’t figure that piece out, then Israel is going to have to do it.”

Rubio wasn’t scheduled to meet Palestinians on his trip.

Arabs have limited options

For Arab leaders, facilitating the mass expulsion of Palestinians from Gaza or battling Palestinian militants on behalf of Israel are nightmare scenarios that would bring fierce domestic criticism and potentially destabilise an already volatile region.

Egypt hosts an Arab summit on February 27 and is working with other countries on a counterproposal that would allow for Gaza’s rebuilding without removing its population. Human rights groups say the expulsion of Palestinians would likely violate international law.

Egypt has warned that any mass influx of Palestinians from Gaza would undermine its nearly half-century peace treaty with Israel, a cornerstone of US influence in the region.

The UAE and Saudi Arabia also have rejected any mass displacement of Palestinians.

The UAE was the driving force behind the 2020 Abraham Accords in which four Arab states – Bahrain, the UAE, Morocco and Sudan – normalised relations with Israel during Trump’s previous term. Trump hopes to expand the accords to include Saudi Arabia, potentially offering closer US defence ties, but the kingdom has said it won’t normalise relations with Israel without a pathway to a Palestinian state.

Rubio won’t be visiting Egypt or Jordan, close US allies at peace with Israel that have also refused to accept any influx of Palestinian refugees. Trump has suggested he might slash aid if they don’t comply, which could devastate their economies. Rubio is also skipping Qatar.

Arab and Muslim countries have conditioned any support for postwar Gaza on a return to Palestinian governance with a pathway to statehood in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem, territories that Israel seized in the 1967 MidEast war.

Israel has ruled out a Palestinian state and any role in Gaza for the Western-backed Palestinian Authority, whose forces were driven out when Hamas seized power there in 2007.

AP

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