Israel-Hamas cease-fire, hostage release deal reached Agreement

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  1. Readmikenow profile image96
    Readmikenowposted 6 days ago

    This is called the "TRUMP" Affect.  It would no have happened if biden was still in office or harris had become president.  This is because Donald Trump made strong statements to Hamas and they know he's serious.

    Israel and Hamas have agreed to a cease-fire deal that also ensures the release of hostages, Fox News has confirmed.

    "A Gaza ceasefire and hostage release deal was reached following the Qatari Prime Minister's meeting with Hamas negotiators, and separately Israeli negotiators in his office," a source briefed on the matter told Fox News.

    Separately, a senior Hamas official confirmed to Fox News that a deal was reached. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office has yet to confirm the deal.

    The deal, brokered by Qatari negotiators and facilitated by Egyptian intermediaries, also saw significant involvement from the United States. Both the outgoing Biden administration and the incoming Trump administration applied strategic pressure to finalize the agreement, despite concerns about Hamas rearming and internal tensions within Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition.

    Sources told Fox News Digital that a weekend meeting between Netanyahu and President-elect Trump's incoming Middle East envoy, Steve Witkoff, led to the breakthrough. Witkoff’s assurances reportedly convinced Netanyahu to accept the deal, despite threats from a right-wing party to withdraw from the coalition if it passed.

    The agreement calls for the release of three hostages on the first day, followed by weekly batches. Women, children, and men over 50 will be prioritized initially, with younger men in humanitarian cases included later. Updates on hostages’ statuses will alternate between announcements of survivors and confirmation of those who did not survive captivity.

    The operation’s execution relies on extensive coordination among the IDF, Shin Bet, Israeli Police, the Ministry of Health, the International Red Cross, and Egyptian authorities. Over 42 days, 33 Israeli hostages are expected to be released. Early stages will focus on civilian women, children and female soldiers, followed by elderly men. The final hostage in this group is scheduled for release on the 42nd day.

    1. Willowarbor profile image59
      Willowarborposted 6 days agoin reply to this

      No, Trump does not get credit here.  The Biden administration along with negotiators from Qatar have been working on this for over a year.  Trump's recent blather is meaningless.

      It would no have happened if biden was still in office or harris had become president.

      Biden is still in office.

      1. Readmikenow profile image96
        Readmikenowposted 6 days agoin reply to this

        biden is a senseless babbling idiot.  He is lucky if he knows what day it is or if he is president.

        It was president-elect Donald J. Trump who said, "If the hostages aren't released by the time I take office all hell will break loose in the middle east."

        Then and only then did a deal come out and not before.  biden, the senseless babbling idiot president has been president since it happened and has failed at every attempt to bring peace.

        To say biden had anything to do with this is laughable.

        1. Willowarbor profile image59
          Willowarborposted 6 days agoin reply to this

          LOL in case you haven't noticed all hell has been broken loose in that region for quite some time.... The negotiators who brokered this deal deserve the credit.  A deal that has been in the works for over a year.

          1. Readmikenow profile image96
            Readmikenowposted 6 days agoin reply to this

            A deal that only happened when President Donald Trump began threatening Hamas directly. Those who have followed this understand that the military restraints place on Israel by Biden would be removed by President Donald Trump. It would have turned real ugly.

            1. Willowarbor profile image59
              Willowarborposted 6 days agoin reply to this

              Biden has not placed any military restraints on Israel.

              1. Readmikenow profile image96
                Readmikenowposted 5 days agoin reply to this

                You might want to rethink that one.

                They placed military restraints on Israel as well as Ukraine.

                Biden like to tell others what they can do with the weapon systems they provide.

                1. Willowarbor profile image59
                  Willowarborposted 5 days agoin reply to this

                  Of course you have some proof to back that up?

                  1. Readmikenow profile image96
                    Readmikenowposted 5 days agoin reply to this

                    Here is one article of many on how the United States tries to control how the weapons they provide are used in combat.  If you want to find out more you should read some of the publications from Israel.  Ukraine, there are MANY articles about how the biden administration wouldn't let them fire weapons at military targets inside russia.  How ridiculous. 

                    "What’s paused
                    The Biden administration in late April decided to pause a shipment of 3,500 “dumb” — aka, unguided — munitions that officials expected Israel to use in Rafah: 1,800 of those were 2,000-pound bombs and 1,700 of those were 500-pound bombs. U.S. officials were particularly concerned about the 2,000-pound bombs and the impact the massive weapon would have in a dense urban setting.

                    he bombs were approved by Congress in 2021. They had been licensed by the administration, manufactured, and ready to be shipped when the order came down to pause the movement.

                    But that’s not the whole story. Those munitions are typically attached to a guidance kit, which converts them into “smart” weapons — including the Joint Direct Attack Munition — that are guided precisely to their targets.

                    A senior U.S. official stressed that there are no tail kits in the shipment that’s on hold, and that Israel does not always outfit its unguided munitions with precision-guided tail kits. The official, and others interviewed for this story, were granted anonymity to speak about sensitive conversations.

                    What’s under review
                    Separately, the official said that the State Department is reviewing multiple other direct commercial sales — those between U.S. industry and a foreign partner, which require an administration-approved export license — including JDAM tail kits. None of these sales involves “imminent” transfers, the official said. In other words, none would be used in the immediate Rafah operation.

                    The JDAMs case that’s under review involves 6,500 kits. It came up for license in December 2023, and the administration has been sitting on it ever since, according to a congressional aide and a U.S. official.

                    There are other potential foreign military sales to Israel that are moving through the State Department’s approval process. Those sales are between the U.S. government and a foreign government and typically involve a more complex and lengthy process. It’s not unusual for the administration to take its time approving these types of weapons, which include engines for the F-35 fighter jet, tank rounds, mortar rounds and medium tactical vehicles.

                    Once approved by the administration and Congress, these weapons will likely take months or even years before they are produced and delivered.

                    https://www.politico.com/news/2024/05/1 … y-00158210

      2. Sharlee01 profile image86
        Sharlee01posted 6 days agoin reply to this

        How the Biden and Trump teams worked together to get the Gaza ceasefire and hostages deal done---
        Published 5:49 PM EST, Wed January 15, 2025

        https://www.cnn.com/2025/01/15/politics … index.html

        1. Miebakagh57 profile image72
          Miebakagh57posted 5 days agoin reply to this

          The link is a good study. Having wound my way through the story, I came to the conclusion that both Trump and Biden achieved much in the deal.                                     But for the fact that Israel's Prime Minister thank an in-coming president first, than a siting president.  That give credit to Trump.

    2. Miebakagh57 profile image72
      Miebakagh57posted 6 days agoin reply to this

      The cease-fire is a godly move. Peaceabce are the men involved

  2. abwilliams profile image68
    abwilliamsposted 6 days ago

    Yep. Trump's name is all over this. Reminiscent of '81 when Carter was out, Reagan was in and our hostages were finally returned!

    There are negotiations to exchange prisoners for hostages, but how many hostages have been murdered already?! :°(

  3. Sharlee01 profile image86
    Sharlee01posted 6 days ago

    CNN article ---"When Qatar’s prime minister emerged Wednesday to declare — at long last — that a ceasefire-for-hostage deal had been struck in Gaza, representatives for two American administrations were on hand in Doha to bask in the victory.

    The cooperation between the two was “almost unprecedented,” a senior Biden administration official said after the deal was clinched, made possible by a rare intersection of interests between bitter rivals who both saw an opening following Trump’s victory.

    Brett McGurk, the longtime Middle East negotiator for President Joe Biden, had been planted in the Qatari capital for weeks in the hopes of a final agreement. He was joined in recent days by President-elect Donald Trump’s Middle East envoy, Steve Witkoff, for the final push.

    At points, McGurk and Witkoff divvied up meetings across the Middle East to push the deal across the line, including critical talks between Witkoff and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last week that McGurk joined by phone. If McGurk was focused primarily on the parameters of the deal, Witkoff was on hand to emphasize Trump’s desire to see a deal finished by Inauguration Day.

    After the agreement was announced, both the incoming and outgoing president took full credit, a sign the poisonous relationship between them endures.

    Ultimately, however, the deal enables both Biden and Trump to claim victory. It notches a final bit of positive news for a president who is poised to leave office with the lowest approval rating of his term. And it bolsters the bonafides of a president-elect who vowed “all hell would break out” in Gaza if the hostages were not released before his second inauguration.

    The reality of who is responsible for the deal is complex. Biden administration officials say momentum toward a deal began before the election, after a separate ceasefire was struck between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon. The contours of the final agreement with Hamas map closely with a proposal Biden first unveiled in May, but was unable to complete.

    Speaking at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate earlier this month, Witkoff said Biden’s team was the “tip of the spear” in the talks.

    “No one has pride of authorship. We are totally outcome oriented. Let’s get them home,” Witkoff, a former real estate investor, said then.

    Still, after the deal was struck, even Biden officials acknowledged the deadline of Trump’s entry into office was a motivating factor in finally finding success after months of failure. And Trump, who was monitoring developments from Florida, was quick to declare the agreement was only made possible by his win.

    “This EPIC ceasefire agreement could have only happened as a result of our Historic Victory in November,” he wrote on social media.

    Biden was more circumspect.

    “It’s a very good afternoon,” Biden said Wednesday from the White House Cross Hall, steps from where members of the incoming Trump team were meeting with their Biden administration counterparts in the West Wing to discuss national security matters.

    The president, who has decades of high-level foreign policy experience, described the talks that led to the ceasefire deal as “one of the toughest negotiations I’ve ever experienced.” He said his team had been “speaking as one” with Trump officials.

    But asked as he was stepping away from the podium who deserves credit for Wednesday’s deal – himself or Trump – the president flashed his annoyance:

    “Is that a joke?” he said before walking away.

    Months of talks starting, stopping
    By the final stretch of the 2024 presidential campaign, few inside the White House believed a hostage deal could be achieved before the results of the election were known.

    American and European officials saw Netanyahu as biding his time, waiting to see which US president he’d be dealing with going forward – and keeping his options open for any outcome.

    Hours of angry phone calls between the White House and Netanyahu’s office had yielded little progress, and even the death of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar did not immediately shake loose a deal.

    Trump’s victory – widely seen inside the White House as Netanyahu’s preferred result – was hardly the outcome any Biden’s aides were hoping for. In their loss, though, some saw a fresh opportunity.

    So during a post-election meeting with Trump in front of a roaring Oval Office fire, Biden had a request for the man who’d be replacing him in a few months: Work with the administration’s team to get the hostages out of Gaza.

    In conversations between the incoming and outgoing national security teams, Biden’s aides made clear that whatever acrimony existed between the two men – and despite their friendly chat in the Oval Office, they remained bitterly opposed – the issue of the hostages was a place they must work together.

    ”We’re prepared to work with the incoming team in common cause on a bipartisan basis to do everything in our collective American power to secure the release of the hostages, both living and deceased,” Biden’s national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the week after the November election.

    A mutually beneficial agreement
    In their fireside conversation, Biden and Trump came to an agreement that the hostage matter could and should be resolved before the hand-off of power on January 20, according to people who heard about the meeting afterward.

    The timing suited both men.

    Trump’s advisers have long felt that any agreement struck after his victory, but prior to him taking office, would enable him to take credit for it. It would also take the issue off his plate as he begins a second presidency squarely focused on fulfilling his campaign pledges on immigration, tariffs and dismantling Biden-era regulations.

    For Biden, having finally secured the hostage deal he’s spent more than a quarter of his presidency trying to cement would validate time and energy – and political capital – lost to the cause.

    And so, with both men’s blessing, the two opposing sides set to work on a final, last-week push to achieve what had for so long seemed impossible.

    Late nights and final demands
    A critical sticking point that had emerged over the past several months was Hamas’ refusal to acknowledge how many hostages it was still holding, or to identify which hostages it would release as part of the first phase of the deal, according to the senior administration official.

    American officials made clear to Hamas through its intermediaries that no agreement could be realized without a full list of hostages that would be released as part of the deal.

    The pressure appeared to work. By late December, Hamas had agreed to provide the list, accelerating talks to reach the final-stage negotiations toward a deal.

    McGurk remained in the Middle East working toward completing the complex agreement, including finalizing details on the sequencing of how and when prisoners would be released.

    Holed up inside a building in Doha, negotiators from the US, Israel, Qatar and Egypt, along with Hamas officials, talked until 3 a.m. as the sides attempted to finalize what had been a frustratingly elusive deal to end the conflict.

    Hamas raised a number of last minute demands during the final negotiations. But the American and Israeli sides held firm as they pushed Hamas to agree.

    Implementation of the deal could begin as early as Sunday, an official said.

    As the reality of the deal sank in, Netanyahu got on the phone with his American counterparts. His first call was to Trump, to thank him and arrange a meeting in Washington. Next, he called Biden and “thanked him as well,” according to a statement from the prime minister’s office."

  4. Readmikenow profile image96
    Readmikenowposted 5 days ago

    IDF general credits Trump threat as 'big change' in securing cease-fire after Hamas rejected same deal in May

    IDF Reserve Brig. Gen. Amir Avivi says Hamas did not want to wait and see what 'hell' means

    IDF Reserve Brig. Gen. Amir Avivi says "two things" changed regarding the Israel-Hamas cease-fire agreement after fifteen months of conflict in the Middle East.

    "This deal has been on the table since May last year and Hamas opposed it completely. Why? There was no real pressure on Hamas," Avivi told "Your World" on Wednesday. "Israel wanted to stop some of the humanitarian aid, especially some of the gasoline, but the administration wouldn't let us do that. So Israel has no major leverage on them."

    "What's changed is two things," Avivi told Fox News. "One, Israel defeated Hezbollah and Hezbollah cannot support Hamas anymore. Also, Syria fell. Iran is weaker. But the big change is President Trump's threat."

    "Once President Trump threatened them, that if they don't release hostages, there will be hell… I think they understand that if they don't get a deal now, the chances of getting a good deal for them will be very, very low, if at all. And therefore, they made their own assessment, and they are inclined to do the deal, thinking that they'll maximize what they can get now and not wait to see what 'hell' means," Avivi stated.

    On Wednesday, President Biden's White House National Security communications adviser John Kirby recognized President-elect Donald Trump's incoming Middle East special envoy Steve Witkoff as a key figure in brokering the deal.

    President-elect Donald Trump warned Hamas on Jan. 7 that "all hell will break out" if hostages are not returned by his inauguration.

    1. Willowarbor profile image59
      Willowarborposted 5 days agoin reply to this

      Where does this information come from?

    2. Miebakagh57 profile image72
      Miebakagh57posted 5 days agoin reply to this

      God bless president Donald J. Trump. He is a changed person.

  5. Readmikenow profile image96
    Readmikenowposted 5 days ago

    Arab officials say Trump's team did more for hostage deal in a single meeting than Biden admin did in a year
    Conversation between Netanyahu and envoy Steve Witkoff 'shifted everything into motion'

    Even Biden administration officials are admitting that it took President-elect Donald Trump wading into Israel-Hamas negotiations to close the deal and force a hostage release and cease-fire after 15 months of war, reported the New York Post.

    Multiple insiders and officials in both Israel and the U.S. told The Post that it was Trump's impending inauguration – combined with the efforts of his Middle East special envoy, Steve Witkoff, who finally solved a problem which had proved intractable for President Biden and his team.

    Get the hottest, most important news stories on the Internet – delivered FREE to your inbox as soon as they break! Take just 30 seconds and sign up for WND's Email News Alerts!

    A source with Trump's transition team described the conversation last weekend between longtime Trump pal Witkoff and Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as "straightforward, no phony platitudes and very direct."

    "We've made it very clear to the Israelis, and I want the people of Israel to hear me on this – if they need to go back in, we're with them. If Hamas doesn't live up to the terms of this agreement, we are with them," the Republican representative from Florida's 6th District, whom President-elect Donald Trump tapped for the NSA role in November, told Fox News anchor Bret Baier.

    https://www.wnd.com/2025/01/arab-offici … in-a-year/

    1. Miebakagh57 profile image72
      Miebakagh57posted 4 days agoin reply to this

      Yes, it's 'real' Donald J.Trump!                                     A month or a week would even carry the credits to Trump.

    2. DrMark1961 profile image99
      DrMark1961posted 4 days agoin reply to this

      I think you need to give Biden more credit for this.
      After all, if he had not displayed his dementia in the debates, and then dropped out of the race and inserted his unqualified DEI candidate Kamala in the Democratic slot, Trump may not have won all of the swing states and been elected on such an overwhelming margin.
      The US could have been suffering another 4 years under a democratic president if it were not for Bidens dementia. The swamp that is Washington would have continued to support the war.
      Give the guy some credit here!

      1. Readmikenow profile image96
        Readmikenowposted 4 days agoin reply to this

        You make a very valid point!

      2. Sharlee01 profile image86
        Sharlee01posted 4 days agoin reply to this

        I agree. Just imagine if his handlers had kept him from debating. They knew his condition and still made the wrong decision. If they had chosen to keep him out of the debates and hidden him away, we might be looking at an entirely different election outcome. The Democrats seemed to have all their ducks in a row—the media, the DOJ, and public sentiment—but now, they might not see power for decades. They must be kicking themselves for how it played out. Then again, their tactics often backfire. If Trump performs well, the Democrats could be in serious trouble.

        1. DrMark1961 profile image99
          DrMark1961posted 4 days agoin reply to this

          I keep seeing DEI Kamala sitting for one of her rare interviews telling us all how Brandon was still doing a fine job, the MSM telling us how Joe was still lucid and doing a great job, and how all the talk shows except for Gutfeld making jokes about Trump and not even mentioning Bidens mental capacity.

          1. Sharlee01 profile image86
            Sharlee01posted 4 days agoin reply to this

            I completely agree with your comment. It's deeply inappropriate and irresponsible for so many to hide Biden's cognitive decline while insisting that he is performing well in his role. The selective coverage by the media and the avoidance of the topic on most talk shows show a clear bias, leaving many Americans in the dark about the reality of the situation.

            Biden's page in history will indeed be unique and profoundly sad to read. It will likely reflect not just the challenges he faced, but also how those around him prioritized protecting an agenda over being honest with the public about his fitness to serve. This will stand as a cautionary tale about the consequences of putting politics over transparency and accountability.

            The disparity in how Biden and Trump are treated in the media underscores the troubling lack of balance. While Trump is relentlessly scrutinized and mocked, Biden's evident struggles are ignored or spun in a way that misleads the public. It's an unfortunate example of how narrative control can impact public perception, leaving many unaware of the full scope of the leadership challenges at hand.

            1. Miebakagh57 profile image72
              Miebakagh57posted 4 days agoin reply to this

              It's the public media that has to be blame for all the nonsenses.

              1. Sharlee01 profile image86
                Sharlee01posted 3 days agoin reply to this

                Yes agree

        2. Miebakagh57 profile image72
          Miebakagh57posted 4 days agoin reply to this

          I wisqh President Trump well.

  6. Miebakagh57 profile image72
    Miebakagh57posted 4 days ago

    Truely, biden deserves the credit of initiating the peace and (cease-fire) talks. But as for the final push, it's 'real' Donald Trump, or Captain America.

    1. Sharlee01 profile image86
      Sharlee01posted 4 days agoin reply to this

      I see your point and agree that there’s a stark contrast in how Biden and Trump approach such critical issues. While Biden may deserve some credit for initiating peace talks, his handling often lacks the decisive strength required to ensure results that prioritize American interests and security. His approach ---'don't, don't. don't was pretty silly.
      Biden appeared hesitant and overly reliant on diplomacy without enough leverage to back it up.

      Trump, on the other hand, demonstrated a willingness to use the full might of the U.S. to protect American citizens and interests, particularly when it came to hostage situations. His "peace through strength" strategy often brought swift results, showcasing a leadership style that emphasized action and accountability on the global stage.

      The comparison highlights the importance of strong, decisive leadership in moments of crisis. It’s not just about starting the process but ensuring it concludes with the best possible outcome for Americans.

      1. Miebakagh57 profile image72
        Miebakagh57posted 3 days agoin reply to this

        Shar, I agree with you in to to.

 
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