Rubio: Gaza Peace Impossible if Hamas Can Still Threaten Israel
Secretary of State Marco Rubio warned on Friday that the current ceasefire in Gaza cannot evolve into lasting stability if Hamas remains armed and capable of attacking Israel, saying any arrangement that leaves the terror group intact will eventually fall apart.
Rubio described the existing ceasefire as fragile and demanding constant oversight, with multiple governments needing to intervene regularly to prevent renewed violence. He said the situation on the ground shows how easily calm can be disrupted. “This is not easy; peace is [not] a verb; it’s not; it’s an action,” Rubio said. “It’s not a sentiment. Every single day will bring challenges. Every single day.”
Pointing to recent incidents, Rubio said Hamas continues to pose an active threat despite the pause in fighting. “We also have had instances, for example, over the last couple weeks where Hamas elements emerged from a tunnel, attached an explosive device to the side of a vehicle, and injured and almost killed Israeli soldiers,” he said. “We still have this threat. We still have and see every single day Hamas openly taking steps to strengthen themselves inside of those places in Gaza that they still control.”
Rubio said that reality underscores why disarmament must be central to any serious peace effort. “If Hamas is ever in a position to threaten or attack Israel, you’re not going to have peace,” Rubio said. He repeated the point during the State Department briefing, stressing that economic recovery is impossible under the shadow of renewed war. “If Hamas is ever in a position in the future that they can threaten or attack Israel, you’re not going to have peace, OK? You’re not going to convince anyone to invest money in Gaza if they believe another war is going to happen in two to three years.”
He urged observers and negotiators to focus less on slogans and more on concrete capabilities. “So, I would just ask everyone to focus on what are the kind of weaponries and capabilities that Hamas would need in order to threaten or attack Israel as a baseline for what disarmament needs to look like,” Rubio said.
Rubio said that without removing those capabilities, violence is bound to return. “Because you’re not going to have peace, if two years from now, Hamas is launching rockets or killing Israelis or carrying out, God forbid, another Oct. 7-type terrorist attack and so forth, you’re not going to have peace,” he said. “So, who is going to invest in a peace, who is going to invest in rebuilding a place, that’s going to get destroyed again in a future war? So that’s why disarmament is so critical.”
While declining to provide details of ongoing negotiations, Rubio said the exact scope of disarmament will be worked out by technical teams. Still, he made clear that partial measures will not suffice. “Everyone wants peace,” Rubio said. “No one wants a return to a war.”
{Matzav.com}
