Blinken Travels to Israel Amid Push for Gaza Cease-Fire

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Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu cautioned that the negotiations were “very complex,” as the secretary of state flew to Israel to try to clinch a deal.

Mr. Blinken gestures with his hands, while speaking in front of an American flag.
Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken speaking in Singapore last month. Mr. Blinken landed in Israel on Sunday and is scheduled to meet in Jerusalem with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday. Credit...Suhaimi Abdullah/Associated Press

Isabel Kershner

Aug. 18, 2024Updated 12:19 p.m. ET

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken arrived in Israel on Sunday to try to clinch a deal that could end the war in Gaza, even as the Middle East remained on edge amid the looming threat of wider regional conflict.

The visit, part of an intensive diplomatic campaign led by the Biden administration, comes days after Israel’s negotiating team held talks in Qatar with senior American officials, as well as Qatari and Egyptian representatives who are mediating between Israel and Hamas.

Those talks ended without a major breakthrough, but the White House said on Friday that the United States had put forward a “bridging proposal,” with Egyptian and Qatari support, aimed at closing the remaining gaps between the sides. It said that teams would continue to hash out details and that senior negotiators hoped to reconvene in Cairo before the end of this week to finalize an agreement.

While the Biden administration had suggested that the process was “now in the end game,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel cautioned on Sunday that the negotiations were “very complex” and called his approach to the talks one of give and take — “not give and give.”

“There are things we can be flexible about, and there are things we cannot be flexible about,” he said in remarks recorded at the beginning of his weekly cabinet meeting.

“We know very well how to distinguish between the two,” Mr. Netanyahu added, saying that he was insisting on certain principles that he considered vital for Israel’s security.


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