The implementation of a Gaza ceasefire agreement is going better than expected and the truce can hold, US Vice-President JD Vance has said during a visit to Israel. Vance also warned that if Hamas does not co-operate, it will be obliterated, while refusing to give a deadline for when the Palestinian group must disarm - a part of US proposals yet to be agreed. US President Donald Trump, who brokered the ceasefire deal earlier this month, said America's great allies in the Middle East would be ready to go into Gaza with a heavy force and 'straighten out Hamas' if Hamas continues to act badly. Vance's visits come after a flare-up of violence on Sunday that threatened to derail the 12-day-old truce. Israel said a Hamas attack killed two soldiers, triggering Israeli air strikes which killed dozens of Palestinians. Trump wrote on social media that there is still hope that Hamas will do what is right, adding: If they do not, an end to Hamas will be FAST, FURIOUS, & BRUTAL! Vance is expected to push Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to start negotiations on long-term issues for a permanent end to the war with Hamas during his visit. The vice-president praised Israel for being remarkably helpful in moving towards the deal's main goals, but said that a lot of hard work remained ahead to secure further steps.
The two special US envoys who helped negotiate the ceasefire deal, Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, appeared alongside Vance at a news briefing in southern Israel. Witkoff and Kushner held talks with Netanyahu after arriving in Israel on Monday. Trump is said to have dispatched his deputy and envoys to Israel to keep up the momentum and push for the start of talks on the second critical phase of his 20-point Gaza peace plan. It would involve setting up an interim government in the Palestinian territory, deploying an international stabilisation force, the withdrawal of Israeli troops, and the disarmament of Hamas. Israel has previously said it would not join such talks until Hamas has returned all the deceased hostages it has been holding.
Vance, Witkoff and Kushner are also attempting to ensure the ceasefire deal, which is based on the first phase of the peace plan, does not collapse first. Netanyahu told the Israeli parliament on Monday that he would discuss security challenges and political opportunities with Vance during his visit. He also said Israeli forces had dropped 153 tonnes of bombs on Gaza in response to what he called a blatant breach of the ceasefire by Hamas on Sunday. One of our hands holds a weapon, the other hand is stretched out for peace, he said. You make peace with the strong, not the weak. Today Israel is stronger than ever before.
The Israeli military blamed Hamas for an anti-tank missile attack on Sunday that killed two Israeli soldiers in southern Gaza and then carried out dozens of strikes across the territory which hospitals said killed at least 45 Palestinians. Afterward, the Israeli military said it was resuming enforcement of the ceasefire, while Hamas said it remained committed to the agreement. However, four Palestinians were reportedly killed by Israeli fire east of Gaza City on Monday. The Israeli military said its troops fired towards terrorists who crossed the so-called Yellow Line, which demarcates the area still occupied by Israeli forces.
Hamas's chief negotiator Khalil al-Hayya, who is in Cairo, meanwhile insisted that his group and other Palestinian factions were committed to the ceasefire deal and determined to fully implement it until the end. What we heard from the mediators and the US president reassures us that the war in Gaza is over, he told Egypt's Al-Qahera News TV. Hayya also said Hamas was serious about handing over the bodies of all the deceased hostages still in Gaza despite facing what he described as extreme difficulty in its efforts to recover them under rubble because of a lack of specialist equipment.
Overnight, Israeli authorities confirmed that Hamas had handed over the body of another deceased Israeli hostage to the Red Cross in Gaza. The remains were identified as those of Tal Haimi, 41, who the Israeli military said was killed in Kibbutz Nir Yitzhak during the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October, which triggered the war. That means 13 of the 28 hostages' bodies held in Gaza when the ceasefire took effect on 10 October have so far been returned. Twenty living Israeli hostages were also released last week in exchange for almost 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees in Israeli jails. There has been anger in Israel that Hamas has not yet returned all the dead hostages, with the Israeli prime minister's office saying that the group was required to uphold its commitments.
Meanwhile, the UN's World Food Programme stressed that sustaining the ceasefire was vital to delivering life-saving humanitarian aid to the territory. Since the ceasefire took effect, 530 WFP lorries have crossed into Gaza with more than 6,700 tonnes of food. This was enough to feed almost 500,000 people for two weeks. However, she said the agency could not reach its daily target of 2,000 tonnes of supplies because not all the crossings into the territory were open. Only two crossings - Kerem Shalom and Kissufim - were functional with neither of them located in the north, where the food situation remained extremely dire. Some specialised nutritional supplements for children and pregnant women have been distributed in the north via the south, but no large-scale deliveries have been possible. Ms Atefa said that in the south of the territory, where people were now able to access food safely and with dignity, there had been no looting of WFP supplies. But she added that many people were often eating just a small portion of their supplies and rationing the rest because they were highly anxious about the future and feared that deliveries could be blocked again.
Israel, which controls the entry of aid into Gaza, temporarily halted deliveries in response to Sunday's violence. Deliveries resumed on Monday following heavy international pressure. Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to the 7 October 2023 attack, in which Hamas-led gunmen killed about 1,200 people and took 251 others as hostages. At least 68,216 have been killed in Israeli attacks in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.
The two special US envoys who helped negotiate the ceasefire deal, Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, appeared alongside Vance at a news briefing in southern Israel. Witkoff and Kushner held talks with Netanyahu after arriving in Israel on Monday. Trump is said to have dispatched his deputy and envoys to Israel to keep up the momentum and push for the start of talks on the second critical phase of his 20-point Gaza peace plan. It would involve setting up an interim government in the Palestinian territory, deploying an international stabilisation force, the withdrawal of Israeli troops, and the disarmament of Hamas. Israel has previously said it would not join such talks until Hamas has returned all the deceased hostages it has been holding.
Vance, Witkoff and Kushner are also attempting to ensure the ceasefire deal, which is based on the first phase of the peace plan, does not collapse first. Netanyahu told the Israeli parliament on Monday that he would discuss security challenges and political opportunities with Vance during his visit. He also said Israeli forces had dropped 153 tonnes of bombs on Gaza in response to what he called a blatant breach of the ceasefire by Hamas on Sunday. One of our hands holds a weapon, the other hand is stretched out for peace, he said. You make peace with the strong, not the weak. Today Israel is stronger than ever before.
The Israeli military blamed Hamas for an anti-tank missile attack on Sunday that killed two Israeli soldiers in southern Gaza and then carried out dozens of strikes across the territory which hospitals said killed at least 45 Palestinians. Afterward, the Israeli military said it was resuming enforcement of the ceasefire, while Hamas said it remained committed to the agreement. However, four Palestinians were reportedly killed by Israeli fire east of Gaza City on Monday. The Israeli military said its troops fired towards terrorists who crossed the so-called Yellow Line, which demarcates the area still occupied by Israeli forces.
Hamas's chief negotiator Khalil al-Hayya, who is in Cairo, meanwhile insisted that his group and other Palestinian factions were committed to the ceasefire deal and determined to fully implement it until the end. What we heard from the mediators and the US president reassures us that the war in Gaza is over, he told Egypt's Al-Qahera News TV. Hayya also said Hamas was serious about handing over the bodies of all the deceased hostages still in Gaza despite facing what he described as extreme difficulty in its efforts to recover them under rubble because of a lack of specialist equipment.
Overnight, Israeli authorities confirmed that Hamas had handed over the body of another deceased Israeli hostage to the Red Cross in Gaza. The remains were identified as those of Tal Haimi, 41, who the Israeli military said was killed in Kibbutz Nir Yitzhak during the Hamas-led attack on southern Israel on 7 October, which triggered the war. That means 13 of the 28 hostages' bodies held in Gaza when the ceasefire took effect on 10 October have so far been returned. Twenty living Israeli hostages were also released last week in exchange for almost 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees in Israeli jails. There has been anger in Israel that Hamas has not yet returned all the dead hostages, with the Israeli prime minister's office saying that the group was required to uphold its commitments.
Meanwhile, the UN's World Food Programme stressed that sustaining the ceasefire was vital to delivering life-saving humanitarian aid to the territory. Since the ceasefire took effect, 530 WFP lorries have crossed into Gaza with more than 6,700 tonnes of food. This was enough to feed almost 500,000 people for two weeks. However, she said the agency could not reach its daily target of 2,000 tonnes of supplies because not all the crossings into the territory were open. Only two crossings - Kerem Shalom and Kissufim - were functional with neither of them located in the north, where the food situation remained extremely dire. Some specialised nutritional supplements for children and pregnant women have been distributed in the north via the south, but no large-scale deliveries have been possible. Ms Atefa said that in the south of the territory, where people were now able to access food safely and with dignity, there had been no looting of WFP supplies. But she added that many people were often eating just a small portion of their supplies and rationing the rest because they were highly anxious about the future and feared that deliveries could be blocked again.
Israel, which controls the entry of aid into Gaza, temporarily halted deliveries in response to Sunday's violence. Deliveries resumed on Monday following heavy international pressure. Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to the 7 October 2023 attack, in which Hamas-led gunmen killed about 1,200 people and took 251 others as hostages. At least 68,216 have been killed in Israeli attacks in Gaza since then, according to the territory's Hamas-run health ministry.