30-11-2023
By SJA Jafri + Bureau Report
DOHA/ GAZA CITY/ JERUSALEM/ QUETTA: The Heads of the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Israel’s Mossad have met in Qatar to discuss the extension of a truce between Israel and Hamas as well as the captives being held by the Palestinian group in Gaza.
Both heads are firmed that the truce between Israel and Hamas will be extended permanently while the access of fuel, food and medical related accessories make easy for affected parties, sources told PMI.
CIA Director William Burns and David Barnea, head of the Mossad intelligence service, held talks with Qatar’s prime minister, Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani, on Tuesday, a day after Doha announced a two-day extension of an original four-day humanitarian pause in Gaza that had been due to expire.
“We have to read a little bit between the lines here: (The intelligence chiefs were) important in the last meeting, which was on November 9. We believe that was one of the stepping stones getting us to the initial four-day deal,” sources claimed.
“The fact that we’ve got intelligence chiefs sitting here with the Qatari prime minister, who is also the foreign minister, is interesting because they’ve got the intelligence picture but also I think it’s interesting partly because of who the US has got leading this effort,” he said, adding that Burns is “more experienced a negotiator than Antony Blinken”, the United States secretary of state.
Both Israel and Hamas have accused each other of violating the original truce. But they have continued to swap captives for prisoners. Hamas has released captives in its custody, with another 12 freed on Tuesday.
Majed al-Ansari, a spokesperson for Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said in a post on X that 30 Palestinian prisoners are set to be released.
On Monday, mediator Qatar said a humanitarian pause in fighting between Israel and Hamas would be extended by two days, hours before the initial four-day truce in Gaza was set to expire.
Qatar, the US and Egypt have engaged in intense negotiations to establish and prolong the truce in Gaza.
Over the course of the initial pause, Hamas released 69 captives, 51 Israelis and 18 people from other nations.
In exchange, 150 Palestinian prisoners, 117 children and 33 women held in Israeli prisons were released and more humanitarian aid allowed into Gaza.
The talks between the US and Israeli intelligence chiefs and Qatar were also attended by Egyptian officials.
“Is there a way that they can try and deal with the central problem here of keeping this (current truce) going while Israel at the same time wants to remove Hamas?” Bays asked.
“We don’t know anything from the information on the ground, but one possibility that some are suggesting is perhaps a deal could be done for the Hamas military leadership to be persuaded to go into exile in another country,” he said.