Israel
Report: Hostage Deal Talks Teeter on the Brink as Hamas Rejects Latest Offer
|By
Matis Glenn2 MIN READ
Published Jul. 12, 2025, 10:15 PM
Israel

Negotiations for a new hostage release deal between Israel and Hamas terrorists are reportedly nearing collapse, according to a BBC report Friday night. Citing Palestinian officials familiar with the discussions in Doha, Qatar, the outlet said the talks have stalled, with accusations that Israel dispatched a negotiating team without proper authority, allegedly as a delay tactic while Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu visited Washington.
The compromise proposal currently on the table reportedly includes the release of 10 live hostages and 18 murdered, in exchange for a 60-day ceasefire. During this period, both sides would engage in further discussions toward a permanent resolution. Before departing the U.S., Netanyahu voiced optimism, saying he hoped an agreement could be finalized “within days.”
Yet Palestinian officials say two core issues are blocking progress. The first is the dispute over how humanitarian aid is to be distributed within Gaza. Hamas insists that aid should be channeled exclusively through the United Nations and international agencies, while Israel maintains it must pass through the Gaza Humanitarian Fund, which is run in cooperation with the United States, to prevent aid from reaching the terrorists.
The second sticking point relates to Israel’s demand for a security buffer zone. Jerusalem is insisting on a 1-2 kilometer buffer along the border, including a specific demand for a 3-kilometer zone in the Rafah area; an idea Hamas firmly rejects.
Responding to the report, an Israeli political official asserted, “If Hamas had accepted the Qatari offer, it would have been possible to reach an agreement and enter into negotiations for 60 days on ending the war in accordance with Israel’s goals.” The source insisted that the Israeli delegation in Doha had full authority and was in direct contact with both Prime Minister Netanyahu and Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer.
The official went on to say that Hamas had refused to compromise, rejected the Qatari framework, and is engaging in a “war of ideas,” trying to manipulate both Gazan and Israeli public perception with misleading narratives.
Despite the impasse, negotiations in Doha are continuing through the weekend, with Qatar, Egypt, and the United States acting as mediators.
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