Israel
Hamas Offers Long-Term Truce Up to 15 Years, Stops Short of Disarming
|By
Matis Glenn2 MIN READ
Published Apr. 20, 2025, 11:01 PM
Israel

Hamas terrorists are prepared to enter into a long-term truce with Israel, during which it would suspend all terrorist activity, including weapons development and tunnel construction, according to two officials who spoke with the Times of Israel on Sunday.
According to the officials, a senior Palestinian figure and a diplomat from one of the mediating Arab countries, Hamas is also open to giving up its governance of Gaza to an independent body of Palestinian technocrats, in step with an Egyptian proposal for the postwar administration of the territory.
To ensure the end of terror attacks against Israel, some Hamas leaders have shown openness to storing all of the group’s weapons in a guarded facility, the Arab diplomat reported.
The Palestinian official said Hamas is prepared to agree to a duration of five, 10, or even 15 years of a ceasefire.
This proposal marks a shift beyond Hamas’s previous stances, but it still does not meet Israel’s demand for complete disarmament and is therefore seen as unacceptable by Israeli leadership, according to the Times.
Under the proposal, all remaining Israeli hostages would be released in one stage in exchange for a specified but not reported number of Palestinian terrorism prisoners. Israel would have to withdraw from Gaza entirely and open border crossings to facilitate aid and the start of rebuilding efforts.
On Saturday night, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu reaffirmed his rejection of the proposal, stating that Israel would not agree to end the war and pull out of Gaza, even if it meant freeing the remaining 59 hostages. He stressed that such a move would leave Hamas in control of Gaza, a scenario he said he would not permit.
While some of Netanyahu’s rivals believe that rescuing the hostages should take precedence and that Hamas can be dealt with afterward, Netanyahu argued Saturday that this strategy is not realistic. He noted that Hamas is demanding “binding” international assurances that would stop Israel from taking military action once a full agreement is reached.
Israel resumed major military operations in Gaza on March 18.
Since then, Hamas has softened its stance on another temporary ceasefire, but the group still insists on assurances from mediators that Israel will negotiate terms for a lasting ceasefire — a condition Israel has not yet accepted, according to the Palestinian official and the Arab diplomat.
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