Friday Briefing: Hamas targets Tel Aviv
Good morning. Today, our Jerusalem bureau chief tells us what’s next for Gaza and we look at how Trump is trying to consolidate power. Plus, a home like no other in the Philippines.
Hamas targeted Tel Aviv with rocketsHamas fired its first barrage of rockets in months into Israeli territory yesterday as Israeli troops expanded ground operations across Gaza. After the collapse of a two-month cease-fire, the fighting now looks as if it is escalating back to full-scale war. Despite street protests in Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was expected to fire the head of Shin Bet, the domestic intelligence agency. For some insight on the situation, I reached out to Patrick Kingsley, our Jerusalem bureau chief. Patrick: We are back in a familiar standoff. Israel’s leadership wants both the safe return of Hamas’s hostages, as well as Hamas’s military defeat. But Hamas won’t hand over the hostages without Israel’s guaranteeing the group’s survival in Gaza. And Israel can’t defeat Hamas by force without harming many hostages. The cease-fire that collapsed this week was always likely to fall apart unless one of the sides softened its stance. But neither did. So Israel has returned to war in order to break Hamas’s resolve by force. And that leaves things roughly where they were before the cease-fire began in January: in a deadlock. Do the protests in Israel feel more impactful this time? For now, Netanyahu doesn’t seem swayed by the protesters calling for a new truce to save the hostages in Gaza. His biggest domestic priority is to pass a state budget by the end of the month. To do that, he needs the support of right-wing lawmakers, many of whom support the return to war and could abandon him if there’s another truce. Is President Trump’s Gaza plan still on the table? After proposing the expulsion of Gaza’s population in January, Trump has said that the idea was only a recommendation and that no Palestinians would be expelled. His aides also said that it was less a definitive plan of action than an attempt to provoke Arab leaders into suggesting a viable alternative. Several Arab leaders, led by Egypt, did later propose their own plan for postwar Gaza — in which the territory would be governed by an apolitical committee as part of a Palestinian state. But the plan was vague, didn’t explain how Hamas would cede power and was swiftly rejected by the Israeli government, which seeks to avoid discussion of Palestinian statehood.
Russia and Ukraine traded strikes as talks are plannedUkraine attacked an airfield deep inside Russia, officials said yesterday, as the U.S. worked to iron out a partial cease-fire. In Ukraine, Russian drones killed at least five people and injured 26 others, according to local authorities. The Kremlin said yesterday that preparations were underway for a new round of Russia-U.S. talks that would be held on Monday in Saudi Arabia. Ukraine will also send representatives there to meet with U.S. officials. A U.S. proposal: President Trump has floated the idea of controlling Ukraine’s nuclear power plants. What would it mean if the U.S. took them over? |