Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Wednesday that Israel must keep open-ended
control of Gaza’s border with Egypt, digging in on his stance on an issue that
has threatened to derail cease-fire efforts.
Netanyahu’s comments came as the United States is developing
a new proposal for a cease-fire and hostage release, hoping to break a long
deadlock and bring an end to the nearly 11-month-old war.
The question of Israeli control of the Philadelphi
corridor –- a narrow strip of land along Gaza’s
border with Egypt, seized by troops in May –- has become a central obstacle in
the talks. Hamas has demanded an eventual full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza in
the multi-phase truce deal.
Egypt, a mediator in the talks along with the U.S. and Qatar,
has also demanded a concrete timeline for Israeli troops to leave the
Philadelphi corridor. And on Wednesday, the United Arab Emirates, which
established formal ties with Israel in the 2020 Abraham Accords, also
criticized the Israeli stance.
Speaking to foreign journalists, Netanyahu repeated his
stance that Israel must maintain its hold on the border to prevent Hamas from
rearming by smuggling weapons into Gaza. He said it was a vital part of the war
goal of ensuring Hamas cannot repeat its Oct. 7 attack on Israel.
“Gaza must be
demilitarized, and this can only happen if the Philadelphi corridor remains
under firm control,” he said, claiming Israeli troops had discovered dozens of
tunnels under the border.
He said Israel would
only consider withdrawing from the corridor when presented with an alternative
force to police it.
“Bring me anyone who will actually show us … that they can
actually prevent the recurrence” of smuggling, he said. “I don’t see that
happening right now. And until that happens, we’re there.”
Families of remaining hostages have stepped up their demands
that he agree to a deal after Hamas killed six hostages last week as Israeli
troops appeared to be moving to rescue them. In angry public statements,
hostage families have accused Netanyahu of blocking a deal and potentially
sacrificing their loved ones’ lives for the sake of holding the border strip.
Hundreds of thousands of Israelis have
taken to the streets in recent days, calling for
a deal and saying time is running out to bring home the hostages alive.
Netanyahu pushed back against the pressure, saying his stance
was necessary to “ensure Hamas doesn’t pose a threat to Israel.”
“I can understand the torment of families,” he said. “But the
responsibility of leaders is not merely to share the sentiment, the emotion,
but also to exercise judgment.”
Asked by journalists for a timeline on ending the war, he
refused to give one. “How long can we do this? As long as it takes to achieve
this victory. And I think we’re getting a lot closer,” he said.
Netanyahu repeatedly insisted holding the border would also
pressure Hamas to release hostages. At one point, he erroneously claimed the
invasion of Rafah in May forced Hamas’ first release of hostages – which took
place months earlier in November under a weeklong ceasefire deal. He then said
the deal was “the result of our invasion, the military pressure we put on
them.”
The Palestinian news agency WAFA reported early Thursday that
an Israeli drone strike killed five men and wounded another in a car in Tubas
in the West Bank.
The Israeli military said in a statement that it carried out
“three targeted strikes on armed terrorists that posed a threat on the
soldiers,” without immediately elaborating. For more than a week, hundreds of
Israeli forces have been carrying out the
deadliest operation in the occupied West Bank
since the Israel-Hamas war began.