海角大神

Gaza cease-fire: Did it help that US was taking a diplomatic breather?

The 72-hour humanitarian cease-fire in Gaza, announced jointly by Kerry in India and the UN's Ban Ki-moon, had some in the Middle East thinking the US breather was a good idea.

|
Lucas Jackson/Ap
US Secretary of State John Kerry announces a 72-hour humanitarian cease-fire beginning Friday between Israel and Hamas, in New Delhi, India, Friday. During the 72-hour cease-fire there will be negotiations on a more durable truce in the 24-day-old Gaza war, the United States and United Nations announced.

Are the chances of Israel and Hamas reaching a durable cease-fire in their devastating war better without the United States in the thick of it?

A week after Secretary of State John Kerry鈥檚 fruitless foray into shuttle diplomacy, the announcement late Thursday of a 72-hour humanitarian cease-fire had some in the Middle East thinking so.

In a statement issued jointly by Secretary Kerry, on a trip to India, and United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, the UN said it received 鈥渁ssurances鈥 from 鈥渁ll parties鈥 that they would observe a three-day cease-fire beginning Friday morning.

The statement said that during the cease-fire 鈥渢he forces on the ground will remain in place鈥 鈥 meaning Israeli forces in Gaza would remain, a key Israeli demand for accepting a cease-fire. As soon as a calm in the fighting takes hold, Israeli and Palestinian negotiators are to go to Cairo for talks aimed at a longer-term agreement to end the fighting.

Egypt, which from the beginning of the conflict suggested regional players were up to handling this one, emerges as a key broker in the cease-fire arrangements. Egypt continued its diplomatic efforts Thursday, hosting Israeli officials to discuss cease-fire ideas.

Before Thursday鈥檚 cease-fire announcement, some regional experts warned that the diplomatic vacuum left by the US absence could encourage hardliners on both sides to seize the opportunity to impose their positions. Instead of a cease-fire, they said, Israel could opt to reoccupy the Gaza Strip, Hamas would continue to hone its guerrilla warfare, and already high casualties would likely soar on both sides.

Those concerns have not evaporated as a result of the 72-hour humanitarian ceasefire, and pressure to return to fighting could easily resume.

Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman is calling for the Israeli military to be authorized to 鈥済o all the way鈥 to reoccupy Gaza and wipe out Hamas鈥檚 fighters and local leadership. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is said to be resisting that option, although earlier Thursday he vowed to destroy all of the Hamas-built tunnels leading into Israel 鈥渨ith or without a cease-fire.鈥

Also on Thursday the Israeli government called up 16,000 reservists 鈥 a move that fueled speculation that the ground war was indeed about to be widened. Israeli military officials said, however, that the reservists would relieve an equal number of soldiers already fighting.

In the meantime, the US appeared to be taking something of a diplomatic breather, even as Kerry, in New Delhi for a long-scheduled US-India 鈥渟trategic dialogue,鈥 was a co-announcer of the cease-fire.

Kerry, who had been skewered by the Israeli media and some US critics for an earlier cease-fire proposal deemed weak on disarming Hamas, sounded ever-so-slightly relieved at being out of the Middle East snake pit, though not very confident that real progress would be made.

鈥淚 think everybody would feel better if there was a bona fide effort to try鈥 to get to a cease-fire and negotiations on the issues underlying the conflict, he said before the cease-fire announcement, but added that there was 鈥渘o promise鈥 of a quick end to the fighting ending its fourth week.

The US this week authorized replenishment of Israel鈥檚 supply of grenades and mortar rounds depleted in its Gaza offensive, while Congress is pushing to add hundreds of millions of dollars to funding for Iron Dome, the antimissile missile system credited with knocking most of Hamas鈥檚 rockets heading toward Israeli cities out of the sky.

At the same time the White House issued a stinging rebuke of Israel Thursday for its shelling the day before of a UN-run school-turned-shelter for thousands of Palestinians, calling the action 鈥渢otally indefensible.鈥

White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the US 鈥渋s asking the Israelis 鈥 in fact urging the Israelis 鈥 to do more to live up to the standards that they have set for their own military operations to protect the lives of innocent civilians.鈥

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Gaza cease-fire: Did it help that US was taking a diplomatic breather?
Read this article in
/USA/Foreign-Policy/2014/0731/Gaza-cease-fire-Did-it-help-that-US-was-taking-a-diplomatic-breather
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe