The palpable sense of relief following the announcement that Israel has established humanitarian corridors to facilitate the flow of aid to Gaza will be short-lived so long as Hamas terrorists do everything in their power to block efforts to implement a lasting ceasefire.
Amidst the welter of controversy surrounding the Gaza crisis, one central fact seems to have been completely overlooked in the rush to blame the miserable plight of Palestinian civilians on Israel.
It was Hamas, not Israel, that was ultimately responsible for the collapse of the Trump administration’s latest efforts to arrange a lasting ceasefire in the enclave.
It is hopefully a point US President Donald Trump makes abundantly clear to Sir Keir Starmer when the two leaders meet in Scotland.
Downing Street says Starmer will use the meeting to press Trump to do more to end the war in Gaza, a move that is no doubt prompted by the mounting pressure the Prime Minister is under from naive and ill-informed Labour backbenchers to recognise a Palestinian state.
Hopefully, the American president will provide Starmer with a reality check on the challenges facing anyone seeking to bring peace to Gaza, the most prominent being the absolute insistence of Hamas’s terrorist leadership that it must remain in control of the enclave for any lasting cessation of hostilities to occur.
Allowing Hamas to retain any vestige of influence in Gaza is, understandably, anathema to Israel after the horrors it suffered during the October 7 attacks in 2023, which resulted in the cold-blooded massacre of 1,200 people – including women and children – at the hands of deranged Islamist fanatics.
No sane government in the world would allow such an organisation to remain intact after the trauma its citizens have suffered. It is for this reason that, since the start of the conflict, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has refused to waver from his insistence that, for there to be lasting peace in Gaza, Hamas’s terrorist infrastructure – including the political leaders who helped to mastermind the October 7 attacks – must be completely eradicated from the enclave before any serious consideration can be given to peace.
Netanyahu has stuck to this bottom line through numerous iterations of US-sponsored ceasefire talks, starting with the Biden administration and continuing through to the current attempts by Trump to end hostilities and free the remaining Israeli hostages still held captive by Hamas terrorists.
At the same time Hamas has been equally insistent in demanding the right to remain in Gaza, claiming that it represents the enclave’s legitimate government, even though it clings to power by torturing and murdering any Palestinians who are brave or foolhardy enough to voice their opposition to the terrorist organisation’s brutal regime.
The Trump administration’s deepening frustration with the negotiating tactics of Hamas, together with its backers in Qatar and Iran, was clearly evident in comments made by Steve Witkoff, Trump’s Special Envoy to the Middle East, after he withdrew from last week’s ceasefire talks in Qatar claiming that they had collapsed because Hamas was behaving in a “selfish way.”
“While the mediators have made a great effort, Hamas does not appear to be coordinated or acting in good faith. We will now consider alternative options to bring the hostages home and try to create a more stable environment for the people of Gaza,” Witkoff said in a statement issued when he abandoned the talks.
For the fundamental truth of the Gaza tragedy, one that the legions of anti-Israel protesters across the globe wilfully ignore, is that Hamas does not want peace.
The architects of this Islamist death cult seek martyrdom, and now that it has run out of fighters to sacrifice in its increasingly futile war against Israel’s superior military might, Hamas is using Palestinian civilians effectively as human shields in its quest to survive the conflict.
It has done this by trying to seize control of vital aid supplies and establishing a black market whereby only known Hamas sympathisers are provided with the basic necessities for life. As for the rest, they are left starve, thereby providing the UN’s sprawling network of aid agencies, which have an undistinguished history of collaborating with Hamas, with the ammunition they need to accuse Israel of genocide.
In such circumstances it is almost obscene that prominent Western leaders such as French President Emmanuel Macron should seek to save their conscience by making grandstanding declarations about their intention to recognise a Palestinian state, even though a significant proportion of this supposed entity happens to be run by Islamist fanatics.
Trump, by contrast, has a far more realistic take on Hamas’s mindset, one it is hoped the president will share forcefully with Starmer if our prime minister is to be prevented from following Macron’s morally bankrupt gesture.
As Trump commented after the collapse of the latest Doha ceasefire talks, “Hamas didn’t really want to make a deal. I think they want to die, and it’s very, very bad.”
The palpable sense of relief following the announcement that Israel has established humanitarian corridors to facilitate the flow of aid to Gaza will be short-lived so long as Hamas terrorists do everything in their power to block efforts to implement a lasting ceasefire.
Amidst the welter of controversy surrounding the Gaza crisis, one central fact seems to have been completely overlooked in the rush to blame the miserable plight of Palestinian civilians on Israel.
It was Hamas, not Israel, that was ultimately responsible for the collapse of the Trump administration’s latest efforts to arrange a lasting ceasefire in the enclave.
It is hopefully a point US President Donald Trump makes abundantly clear to Sir Keir Starmer when the two leaders meet in Scotland.
Downing Street says Starmer will use the meeting to press Trump to do more to end the war in Gaza, a move that is no doubt prompted by the mounting pressure the Prime Minister is under from naive and ill-informed Labour backbenchers to recognise a Palestinian state.
Hopefully, the American president will provide Starmer with a reality check on the challenges facing anyone seeking to bring peace to Gaza, the most prominent being the absolute insistence of Hamas’s terrorist leadership that it must remain in control of the enclave for any lasting cessation of hostilities to occur.
Allowing Hamas to retain any vestige of influence in Gaza is, understandably, anathema to Israel after the horrors it suffered during the October 7 attacks in 2023, which resulted in the cold-blooded massacre of 1,200 people – including women and children – at the hands of deranged Islamist fanatics.
No sane government in the world would allow such an organisation to remain intact after the trauma its citizens have suffered. It is for this reason that, since the start of the conflict, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has refused to waver from his insistence that, for there to be lasting peace in Gaza, Hamas’s terrorist infrastructure – including the political leaders who helped to mastermind the October 7 attacks – must be completely eradicated from the enclave before any serious consideration can be given to peace.
Netanyahu has stuck to this bottom line through numerous iterations of US-sponsored ceasefire talks, starting with the Biden administration and continuing through to the current attempts by Trump to end hostilities and free the remaining Israeli hostages still held captive by Hamas terrorists.
At the same time Hamas has been equally insistent in demanding the right to remain in Gaza, claiming that it represents the enclave’s legitimate government, even though it clings to power by torturing and murdering any Palestinians who are brave or foolhardy enough to voice their opposition to the terrorist organisation’s brutal regime.
The Trump administration’s deepening frustration with the negotiating tactics of Hamas, together with its backers in Qatar and Iran, was clearly evident in comments made by Steve Witkoff, Trump’s Special Envoy to the Middle East, after he withdrew from last week’s ceasefire talks in Qatar claiming that they had collapsed because Hamas was behaving in a “selfish way.”
“While the mediators have made a great effort, Hamas does not appear to be coordinated or acting in good faith. We will now consider alternative options to bring the hostages home and try to create a more stable environment for the people of Gaza,” Witkoff said in a statement issued when he abandoned the talks.
For the fundamental truth of the Gaza tragedy, one that the legions of anti-Israel protesters across the globe wilfully ignore, is that Hamas does not want peace.
The architects of this Islamist death cult seek martyrdom, and now that it has run out of fighters to sacrifice in its increasingly futile war against Israel’s superior military might, Hamas is using Palestinian civilians effectively as human shields in its quest to survive the conflict.
It has done this by trying to seize control of vital aid supplies and establishing a black market whereby only known Hamas sympathisers are provided with the basic necessities for life. As for the rest, they are left starve, thereby providing the UN’s sprawling network of aid agencies, which have an undistinguished history of collaborating with Hamas, with the ammunition they need to accuse Israel of genocide.
In such circumstances it is almost obscene that prominent Western leaders such as French President Emmanuel Macron should seek to save their conscience by making grandstanding declarations about their intention to recognise a Palestinian state, even though a significant proportion of this supposed entity happens to be run by Islamist fanatics.
Trump, by contrast, has a far more realistic take on Hamas’s mindset, one it is hoped the president will share forcefully with Starmer if our prime minister is to be prevented from following Macron’s morally bankrupt gesture.
As Trump commented after the collapse of the latest Doha ceasefire talks, “Hamas didn’t really want to make a deal. I think they want to die, and it’s very, very bad.”