US Vice President Harris Meets With Israel’s Gantz Amid Calls for ‘Immediate Cease-Fire’ In Gaza

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U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris met with Israeli War Cabinet member Benny Gantz at the White House on Monday, pushing to implement a six-week cease-fire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza and free more hostages held by the militants.

Heading into the meeting, Harris told reporters she would discuss with Gantz ways to get more humanitarian aid into Gaza to help famished Palestinians. The U.S. has said that Israel has signed off on the parameters of the cease-fire, but details have yet to be worked out in Cairo negotiations with Hamas.

“I will tell you that it is important that we all understand that we’re in a window of time right now where we can actually get a hostage deal done,” the vice president said. “We all want this conflict to end as soon as possible and how it does matters.”

Harris on Sunday called for an “immediate cease-fire,” but appeared to be referring to the planned six-week halt in fighting that has yet to be finalized.

She said it is the same position held by her boss, President Joe Biden. “The president and I have been aligned and consistent from the very beginning,” she said.

A White House official said the talks are expected to focus on Palestinian civilian casualties, securing the temporary cease-fire and the release of more of the 100 or so remaining hostages held by Hamas, as well as increasing aid into the enclave.

“The vice president will express her concern over the safety of as many as 1.5 million people in Rafah,” the official said, adding that Israel has a “right to defend itself in the face of continued Hamas terrorist threats.”

Gantz said ahead of time he would be meeting with Harris, as well as White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan and Republican and Democratic members of Congress.

Harris used a speech Sunday to issue her cease-fire call, one of the strongest appeals yet from the Biden administration to halt the war.

“Given the immense scale of suffering in Gaza, there must be an immediate cease-fire,” Harris said to loud applause at a gathering to commemorate a major civil rights anniversary in Selma, Alabama.

Harris also told the crowd that the “threat that Hamas poses to the people of Israel must be eliminated.”

The administration has been working with Egypt and Qatar to mediate a six-week pause in the fighting to get the remaining hostages held by Hamas out and to get scaled-up aid into Gaza, where the U.N. has warned that famine is looming.

Speaking at the Edmund Pettus Bridge, where 59 years ago state troopers beat U.S. civil rights marchers in what is known as Bloody Sunday, Harris said people in Gaza are starving.

“The conditions are inhumane, and our common humanity compels us to act,” she said. “The Israeli government must do more to significantly increase the flow of aid. No excuses.”

On Saturday, a joint operation by the U.S. and Jordanian Air Forces air dropped 38,000 meals along Gaza’s coastline. A senior U.S. official said air drops will be part of a “sustained effort” with international partners to scale up humanitarian assistance into Gaza.

Humanitarians use air drops as a method of last resort, because they are expensive, complex operations and cannot deliver the volume of aid that a truck could.

“By no means do we think 38,000 meals is enough,” Pentagon deputy press secretary Sabrina Singh told reporters Monday. “It’s not going to solve it.”

Singh said the U.S. believes most of the assistance went to Palestinians. but she added, “We can’t guarantee that there wasn’t someone from Hamas that was there that was able to get some of the aid.”

‘Powder keg’

U.N. human rights chief Volker Türk said Monday it is “imperative” to do everything possible to avoid a wider war, as he cited cross-border fighting between Israeli forces and Hezbollah militants in southern Lebanon.

“I am deeply concerned that in this powder keg, any spark could lead to a much broader conflagration,” Türk told the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva. “This would have implications for every country in the Middle East and many beyond it.”

Türk said the conflict in Gaza has “already generated dangerous spillover in neighboring countries.”

He also highlighted attacks by Yemen’s Houthi militants on ships in the Red Sea, which the Houthis have said are in solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza.

Türk said the Houthi attacks have disrupted maritime trade and increased the prices of goods, which are having a significant impact on developing nations.

“There is a serious risk of the conflict extending to Yemen itself, with potentially severe harm to Yemen’s people, already suffering from the humanitarian crisis generated by a decade of war,” Türk told the council.

Cease-fire talks

A delegation from Hamas was in Cairo on Sunday to discuss a possible weeks-long cease-fire in the nearly five-month war with Israel. But Israeli media reported that Israeli mediators boycotted the talks after Hamas rejected its demand for a full list of names of hostages who are still alive.

The Biden administration said it hopes to have a cease-fire deal by the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which begins around March 10.

An agreement would bring about the first extended pause in the fighting since a week-long truce in late November. Under proposed terms, dozens of the remaining 100 or so hostages held by Hamas would be freed in exchange for the release of hundreds of Palestinians held by Israel.

A U.S. official told reporters, “The path to a cease-fire right now literally at this hour is straightforward. And there’s a deal on the table. There’s a framework deal.”

Israel has vowed to end the threat of another Hamas assault like the October 7 terror attack on the Jewish state that killed 1,200 people according to Israeli tallies. Israel’s counteroffensive since then has killed more than 30,500 people in Gaza, about 70% of them women and children, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

If a truce is agreed, it would enable scaled up humanitarian aid into Gaza, where the situation is growing more desperate by the day. The health ministry says at least 16 children have died of malnutrition in recent days as “famine spreads” in the north.

VOA

The VOA is the Voice of America

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