Blinken meets Egyptian president in Gaza truce push
El Alamein, Egypt – AFP
Top US diplomat Antony Blinken met Egypt’s president Tuesday for talks about a Gaza cease-fire after saying Israel had accepted a US “bridging proposal” for a deal.
The Palestinian resistance group said it was “keen to reach a cease-fire” agreement but protested US modifications in the latest proposal, accusing Israel of “setting new conditions”.
Blinken, on his ninth visit to the Middle East in more than 10 months of the Israel’s war on Gaza, flew from Israel to the Egyptian Mediterranean city of El Alamein, where he met with President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and other officials.
“The time has come to end the ongoing war,” Sisi told Blinken, according to an Egyptian statement, warning of the consequences of “the conflict expanding regionally”.
Both Egypt and Qatar are working alongside the United States to broker a truce, which diplomats say would help avert a wider conflagration in the Middle East that could draw in Iran and Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty, after meeting with Blinken, “expressed his hope that the coming round of negotiations sees a genuine Israeli political will to end the war”, an official statement said.
More truce talks are expected in Egypt this week.
From El Alamein, Blinken was to head to a meeting with Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani in Doha, where cease-fire mediators held talks last week with Israeli negotiators.
Hamas had called on the mediators to implement a framework set out by US President Joe Biden in late May, rather than hold more negotiations.
Hamas said on Sunday that the US proposal which Washington put forward after two days of meetings in Doha “responds to Netanyahu’s conditions”.
And on Monday, responding to comments by Biden that it was “backing away” from a deal, Hamas said the “misleading claims… do not reflect the true position of the movement, which is keen to reach a cease-fire”.
One of the main sticking points has been Hamas’s long-standing demand for a “complete” withdrawal of Israeli troops from all parts of Gaza, which Israel has repeatedly rejected.
Blinken said Monday he had “a very constructive meeting” with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who “confirmed to me that Israel accepts the bridging proposal”.
– Gaza school hit –
Fears of a regional escalation have mounted since Hezbollah and Iran vowed to respond after an attack last month, blamed on Israel, killed Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh in Tehran, shortly after an Israeli strike on Beirut killed a top Hezbollah commander.
Blinken said on Monday that there was “a real sense of urgency here, across the region” to end the war.
Israel has continued its attacks in Gaza throughout the truce talks.
An Israeli strike hit a school in Gaza City where the civil defence agency said at least 12 Palestinians were killed and the Israeli military said a Hamas command centre was based.
Thousands of displaced Palestinians had sought refuge in the facility, civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal said.
AFP photos showed the Mustafa Hafiz school partly reduced to rubble, with Palestinians fleeing after the strike.
In recent weeks across Gaza, Israel has struck numerous schools that it claimed were being used by Hamas. The Palestinian group has rejected such claims.