Resolving Gaza crisis is key to stop regional war: Hamas official
Israel's war on Palestine, now extending into Lebanon and risking escalation with Iran, requires a resolution of the crisis in Gaza, according to Hamas official Basem Naim, as diplomatic efforts stall.
Any solution to the rapidly expanding regional conflict that has spread to Lebanon and beyond hinges on a resolution of the original crisis in Gaza, a senior Hamas official has said.
With the war in Gaza now in its second year, fighting has flared in southern Lebanon, where Israeli troops are now facing Iranian-backed Hezbollah fighters on the ground, and risks escalating into a full-scale conflict with Iran.
Diplomatic efforts to halt the fighting have stalled and attention is now focused on an expected Israeli strike on Iran after Tehran launched its second missile attack on Israel more than two weeks ago.
"It is so complicated and intermingled, the two fronts, that it is not easy to reach a permanent ceasefire or permanent solution to this conflict without solving the original one, which is in Gaza," Basem Naim told Reuters in Istanbul on Wednesday.
The Gaza war erupted after Hamas-led resistance fighters attacked Israel on Oct 7, 2023, killing some 1,200 people and taking more than 250 hostages into the Palestinian enclave, according to Israeli tallies.
Israel in response, unleashed its indiscriminate attacks that killed more than 42,000 Palestinians, Gaza authorities and health officials say, turning much of the enclave into rubble and displacing most of its population.
'No calm' even with Lebanon ceasefire
Hezbollah, which fired its first barrage against Israel immediately after the October 7 attack in solidarity with Palestinians, has recently begun to talk about a possible ceasefire, but Naim said that would still leave the wider question unresolved.
"Even if they reach a ceasefire for Lebanon, there will be no calm in the region (because) they are not talking about solving all these questions related to Lebanon or Palestine," he said.
Qatari and Egyptian-brokered efforts to agree a halt to the fighting and a return of the Israeli hostages have gone nowhere, with both Israel and Hamas blaming each other for the deadlock.
Naim said the mediators were "disappointed" by the expansion of the conflict beyond Gaza's borders but again blamed Israel for the failure of the talks.
"We cannot simply start negotiating new conditions added by (Israeli Prime Minister) Benjamin Netanyahu," he said.
Naim said the latest Israeli offensive in northern Gaza amounted to a "very tight, suffocating siege" unlike others.
"It is much more brutal and aggressive (than previous operations). It is directly targeting the civilian residential houses and homes," he said.
There has been growing international alarm at the humanitarian situation facing Palestinians, with the United States urging Israel to ensure more aid gets through.
However, Naim said US calls for more aid were not consistent with its overall support for Israel.
"How can one understand that at the same time that the Americans are calling for more aid and humanitarian relief, they are sending billions and billions of dollars and ... explosive materials and weapons, and (using) their veto each time in the UN Security Council to block the international will," he said.