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Release of Hamas Hostages Has Gotten Closer, Biden Aide Says

An agreement for Hamas to release hostages taken during its Oct. 7 attack on Israel may be the closest yet and would require a multiday pause the fighting in Gaza, US Deputy National Security Advisor Jon Finer said.

“March for Israel” rally on the National Mall in Washington on Nov. 14.
“March for Israel” rally on the National Mall in Washington on Nov. 14.

A deal for Hamas to release hostages taken during its Oct. 7 attack on Israel may be the closest yet and would require a multiday pause in the fighting in Gaza, US Deputy National Security Advisor Jon Finer said.

“We are closer than we have been in quite some time, maybe closer than we have been since the beginning of this process to getting this deal done,” Finer said Sunday in an interview with NBC’s . Negotiations “have clearly reached a very sensitive stage” after “significant progress” in recent days and hours, he said on ABC’s .  

“We think it is possible, but it’s not done yet,” Finer told NBC. A prisoner exchange involving Israel is among the topics being discussed, he said.

President Joe Biden has backed Israel in opposing a cease-fire with Hamas, which rules Gaza and has been designated a terrorist group by the US and the European Union. In contrast, a pause lasting multiple days would be necessary to allow hostages to be safely moved out of the battlefield, Finer said.

“March for Israel” rally on the National Mall in Washington on Nov. 14.Photographer: Al Drago/Bloomberg
“March for Israel” rally on the National Mall in Washington on Nov. 14.Photographer: Al Drago/Bloomberg

“We’re talking about pausing the fighting for a few days so we can get the hostages out,” Michael Herzog, Israel’s ambassador to the US, told ABC. While Israel’s military operation to dismantle Hamas won’t stop, “we are willing to go for a pause for a significant number of hostages if we have a deal,” he said.

Read more: Biden Sets Out View of Gaza’s Postwar Order, Warns on Settlers

A pause would have the added benefit of allowing stepped-up humanitarian aid to Gaza residents, Finer said on NBC.

“Having a deal that causes a pause in the fighting would make it easier to get more in faster,” he said.

With Israel potentially expanding combat operations into southern Gaza, the US’s position remains that the Israeli military has a right to pursue Hamas’s leadership while urging Israel to avoid civilian casualties, Finer said. 

“There is a real concern because hundreds of thousands of residents of Gaza have fled now from the north to the south at Israel’s request,” Finer said in an interview to air on CBS’s . 

“We think that their operation should not go forward until those people, those additional civilians, have been accounted for in their military planning,” he said. “So we will be conveying that directly to them and have been directly conveying that to them.”

Read more: US Says Release of Hostages Would Open Door to More Gaza Aid

Qatar has been mediating in hostage talks with Hamas, which the US and the European Union have designated a terrorist organization.

West Bank Settlers

A spokeswoman for the White House’s National Security Council said late Saturday there was no deal yet after the Washington Post reported that Israel and Hamas had arrived at a tentative, US-brokered hostage agreement.

Finer said the administration is fleshing out Biden’s warning on Saturday that “extremist” settlers who attack Palestinians in the West Bank risk being banned from obtaining US visas.

“We’re moving in that direction, and we’ll have more to say about that, I’m sure, in the coming days,” Finer said on CBS.

--With assistance from Ian Fisher, Victoria Cavaliere and Alicia Diaz.

(Updates with Finer comments on progress in second paragraph, violent settlers in final two paragraphs.)

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