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American Mideast envoy Steve Witkoff said Tuesday that Israel and Hamas have made progress in their ongoing talks in Doha, resolving three of the four remaining issues blocking a potential ceasefire and hostage release deal. However a Palestinian official says there was no progress.

“Hopefully we will reach an agreement by the end of the week,” Witkoff told reporters following remarks by former U.S. President Donald Trump.

Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu also addressed the state of negotiations after meeting with U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson. Netanyahu confirmed that he expects to speak with Trump about Gaza, noting the delicate nature of the talks.

“We need both sides to agree,” the prime minister said. “I hope we will pass the finish line. The less I speak about this publicly the better.”

The developments come amid a fresh round of “proximity talks” in Doha, in which mediators shuttle between delegations without direct face-to-face meetings between Israeli and Hamas officials. According to a source involved in the negotiations, disagreements persist regarding the terms of an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza as part of the proposed 60-day truce. Hamas reportedly rejected Israel’s previous map of planned redeployments, prompting Israeli negotiators to prepare a revised version for submission on Wednesday.

“The issue will take more time to finalize,” the source told The Times of Israel, declining to offer further details.

Despite optimism from U.S. officials, Saudi outlet Asharq News reported that the fifth round of talks concluded without a breakthrough. Citing unnamed sources, the outlet described the process as stagnant.

A senior Palestinian official accused the Israeli delegation of refusing to negotiate in earnest. “The Israeli negotiations team is limiting itself to listening rather than negotiating,” the official said, alleging that the team is “consulting on every issue with officials back in Israel.”

The official went further, charging that the Israeli delegation lacks decision-making authority and that the entire approach “is a continuation of the stalling policy of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to obstruct any potential agreement.”

The negotiations come as international pressure mounts for a ceasefire and the release of hostages still held in Gaza, amid ongoing IDF operations and continued Hamas rocket fire.