Israel

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During a meeting in Paris on Friday, released Israeli hostage Agam Berger told French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot that trying to end the war with Hamas through diplomacy is not a viable solution.

“They don’t want [to live] ‘together.’ All of these diplomatic solutions… it’s not going to work because it’s us or them,” Berger said in Hebrew, referring to Hamas, in a clip broadcast by Kan.

Berger, 20, was abducted by Hamas on October 7, 2023, from her post in the IDF’s surveillance unit at the Nahal Oz base. She was freed on January 30, 2025, as part of a ceasefire agreement and hostage swap.

“If it were possible not to choose war, we wouldn’t choose it. But the moment that there is a war for the existence of our country — that’s what we’re going to do,” she stated.

After the meeting, Barrot posted on X in French, saying he had met “with the families of the hostages and Agam Berger,” who was “held in captivity for 473 days in inhumane conditions.”

“All the hostages must be freed. Now. Hamas must be disarmed and excluded from Gaza’s political future,” Barrot wrote.

The meeting, held at France’s Foreign Ministry in Paris, was also attended by relatives of 20 of the 58 hostages who remain in captivity. These included family members of Elkana Bohbot, Bar Kuperstein, Guy Gilboa-Dalal, Matan Angrest, Uriel Baruch, Yosef-Haim Ohana, Tamir Adar, Segev Kalfon, Jonathan Samerano, Idan Shtivi, and Guy Illouz, as stated by the French Embassy in Israel.

According to a summary released by the embassy, “Minister Barrot heard the delegation’s plea for help and support in order to secure the release of hostages still being held in Gaza.”

Barrot reaffirmed that Hamas is a violent terrorist group that must be fought against, disarmed, and removed from any future political process in Gaza. He added that France had imposed sanctions on Hamas and its members and is committed to helping shape a long-term political solution that excludes the organization.

The meeting came during a time of increased friction between Israel and France. France has repeatedly urged Israel to end its military operations in Gaza and to ease restrictions on humanitarian aid entering the territory.

French President Emmanuel Macron, together with UK Labour leader Keir Starmer and Canadian politician Mark Carney, issued a joint statement on Monday criticizing Israel’s management of the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. The statement demanded an immediate halt to military operations and greater access for aid, warning of “further concrete actions in response” if Israel fails to comply.

The leaders described Israel’s decision to permit a limited flow of aid into Gaza as “wholly inadequate” and claimed that Israel’s failure to address the needs of Gazan civilians “is unacceptable and risks breaching International Humanitarian Law.”

Last month, Macron announced that France would recognize a Palestinian state within months — a move Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu condemned as a “huge prize for terror.”