top of page

Where do Israel-Hamas ceasefire negotiations stand?

  • Writer: The San Juan Daily Star
    The San Juan Daily Star
  • Jul 8
  • 4 min read

Displaced Palestinians at a tent camp in Gaza City on June 2, 2025. Hamas wants a guarantee that peave negotiations will lead to a permanent end to the Gaza war. (Saher Alghorra/The New York Times)
Displaced Palestinians at a tent camp in Gaza City on June 2, 2025. Hamas wants a guarantee that peave negotiations will lead to a permanent end to the Gaza war. (Saher Alghorra/The New York Times)

By Adam Rasgon, Natan Odenheimer and Aaron Boxerman


Officials from Israel and Hamas were holding talks to end the war in the Gaza Strip for the second consecutive day Monday in Doha, Qatar, as President Donald Trump and Arab mediators intensified their efforts to broker a ceasefire.


Israel and Hamas appeared to be closer to a truce than in recent weeks, but they were still wrangling over the terms of a deal that would see the release of hostages held in Gaza. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel is also set to meet Trump in Washington on Monday.


During previous talks, Israelis and Palestinians have seen their hopes for an agreement rise only be dashed days later, with Israel and Hamas blaming each other for obstructing progress.


“There are still disputes between the two sides,” said Jehad Harb, an analyst on Palestinian affairs based in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. “But if they have the will, they can conclude an agreement.”


Hamas, which has a new leader in Gaza after Israel killed several predecessors, has insisted that any deal must pave a path to a complete and lasting cessation of hostilities. Netanyahu has insisted that Israel would agree to that only if Hamas’ military wing and government are dismantled.


Here is where things stand in the talks based on conversations with a Hamas official, an Israeli official and a person briefed on the negotiations, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive details.


A dispute over aid distribution


Hamas has demanded that the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the controversial, Israeli-backed aid group, stop operating in the enclave. Israel has insisted that the group continue to hand out food.


Since the foundation began operations in May, scores of hungry and desperate Palestinians have been killed or wounded on their way to collect parcels of food from its distribution sites.


Hamas wants U.N. agencies and international organizations to facilitate the distribution of relief supplies. Israeli officials have suggested the United Nations should play a role alongside the foundation, saying that the foundation was needed to allow for the delivery of aid without Hamas benefiting. They say that under the U.N.-run system, Hamas took control of much of the food and other aid reaching the territory, keeping some for its own people, selling some on the black market and restricting supplies for ordinary Gaza residents.


Hamas has denied allegations that it has stolen aid and has said it tries to crack down on looting. Some Palestinians from Gaza say they have seen Hamas operatives taking aid.


The United Nations and other international aid organizations have criticized the new system, saying the amount of aid being delivered falls far short of what is needed and forces people to walk for miles in dangerous conditions for a chance to find food. The agencies have accused Israel of turning aid into a weapon.


Withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza


Hamas wants Israeli troops to withdraw from most of Gaza during the initial phase of a ceasefire. Israel, however, has said it wants to carry out a more modest retreat and maintain control of a large section of southern Gaza.


During a previous ceasefire this year, the Israeli military withdrew from parts of Gaza but did not leave the territory altogether.


Assurances on permanently ending the war


Hamas has requested assurances that Israel will maintain the ceasefire until a comprehensive deal to end the war is agreed. Officials for the group have expressed concern that Israel could restart the war after it secures the freedom of some of the remaining hostages in Gaza.


Israel has resisted language in an agreement that would not allow it to return to fighting under any circumstance.


On Wednesday, Netanyahu suggested that the war was not on the verge of ending. “There won’t be Hamas,” he said. “We will free our hostages, and we will defeat Hamas.”


Hostage-prisoner swaps


Israel and Hamas are believed to have agreed that 10 living hostages and the remains of 18 others should be freed during the first 60 days of a ceasefire, but they have not reached a consensus on how many Palestinian prisoners should be released during the same period. Up to 20 hostages are still thought to be alive.


Hamas has previously said it wants Israel to free the most prominent Palestinians being held, including Marwan Barghouti, a prominent political leader who is serving several life sentences after being convicted of involvement in the killing of Israelis decades ago.


It is not clear if Israel will agree to release the most high-profile prisoners.


Hamas’ new leader


The militant group’s decision on a ceasefire will largely hinge on Izz al-Din al-Haddad, its new de facto leader in Gaza. Al-Haddad took over the military wing in Gaza after Israeli forces killed Mohammed Sinwar, according to a senior Middle Eastern intelligence official and three Israeli defense officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive details.


Al-Haddad, who is in his mid-50s, helped plan the Hamas-led attack on Oct. 7, 2023, the officials said.


He is believed to have said in recent weeks that he will either achieve an “honorable deal” to end the war with Israel or else the war will become “a war of liberation or a war of martyrdom,” the Middle Eastern intelligence official said.


Al-Haddad views the history of Chechen resistance against Russian rule in the 1990s as an example that Hamas in Gaza should follow, the Middle Eastern intelligence official added. For years, Chechen fighters battled with Russian troops in a war that left the region in ruins.

1 Comment


Alex Alexeeev
Alex Alexeeev
Jul 08

Мой главный критерий — насколько просто и быстро проходят выплаты. За последние месяцы пару раз сталкивался с долгими ожиданиями на других платформах, но на Пинко всё иначе. Последний вывод был оформлен вечером, деньги пришли уже утром, без дополнительных запросов и подтверждений. Приятно, что на сайте регулярно обновляются акции: на этой неделе, например, была промо-рассылка с бесплатными вращениями для активных пользователей. Личный опыт с pincolucky.com показал, что здесь реально ценят постоянных клиентов и не затягивают с выплатами или бонусами. Если нужна стабильная и честная площадка — могу смело советовать.

Like

Looking for more information?
Get in touch with us today.

Postal Address:

PO Box 6537 Caguas, PR 00726

Phone:

Phone:

logo

© 2025 The San Juan Daily Star - Puerto Rico

Privacy Policies

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
bottom of page