Israel is 'the closest it's been' to a Gaza hostage deal - minister
by PERKIN AMALARAJ · Mail OnlineIsrael's defence minister has claimed that negotiators have never been closer to agreeing to a deal with Hamas for the release of the hostages taken on October 7.
Israel Katz reportedly told members of the Israeli parliament's foreign affairs committee: 'We have not been this close to an agreement on the hostages since the previous deal.'
A source later told AFP that an Israeli technical team had arrived in Doha, Qatar, on Monday 'to discuss the ceasefire and hostage deal in Gaza'.
The source, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the talks, adding that meetings were 'between Israeli and Qatari working-level teams'.
According to his spokesman, Katz had told members of the Israeli parliament's foreign affairs committee: 'We have not been this close to an agreement on the hostages since the previous deal.'
A senior Hamas official based in Doha also said that the negotiations were progressing.
'A deal for exchanging prisoners and ceasefire between the resistance and the occupation has actually become closer than ever before, if (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu does not intentionally disrupt the agreement as he has done every time before,' the official said on condition of anonymity, as he was not authorised to speak publicly on the matter.
He said Hamas had informed the Egyptian and Qatari mediators of its readiness to stop the war.
'But Hamas stressed at the same time that it will not accept anything less than an agreement that leads to a complete and permanent cessation of the war, a full withdrawal from the entire Gaza Strip, including the Philadelphi and Netzarim axes, the return of the displaced, and a serious prisoner exchange deal.'
Since October 7, when Hamas terrorists killed around 1,200 people and kidnapped over 250, negotiations for a ceasefire deal in exchange for the hostages have developed at a snail's pace.
Though over 100 people were released in November 2023, little progress has since been made.
That release occurred as part of an exchange that secured the freedom of 240 Palestinians detained in Israeli prisons.
All mediation efforts, led by Egypt, the United States and Qatar, have since then failed to secure a new truce.
In September, Qatar had announced it was suspending its efforts, blaming both sides for a lack of willingness to reach an agreement.
However, since Donald Trump's victory in the US presidential election in early November, diplomatic efforts have resumed, now jointly mediated by Washington, Cairo, Doha and Ankara.
On Thursday, US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, during a visit to Israel, stated that he 'had the sense' that Netanyahu was ready for a deal to secure the release of hostages.
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On Monday, State Department spokesman Matthew Miller also said negotiations had been productive in recent days but that differences remained.
'We are pushing as hard as we know how to do at this point, and we believe we can get to a deal. But again it remains incumbent from Hamas and Israel... getting it over the line,' he told journalists.
'And I can't in good conscience tell you, stand here and tell you that that's going to happen, but it should happen.'
Late on Monday, Netanyahu's office said he had held a meeting with Adam Boehler, US president-elect Donald Trump's designated envoy for hostage affairs, who is on a visit to Israel.
Netanyahu also spoke with Trump over the weekend regarding Israel's efforts to secure the release of hostages.
Seven individuals with US citizenship remain captive in Gaza, with four confirmed dead, Israeli officials said.
MailOnline has contacted the Hostage Families Forum for comment.