Israel announced Thursday that it intends to step up efforts to compel Hamas to return the bodies of 19 hostages still held in Gaza. Reports indicated that a specialized task force has already entered the Strip to assist in locating and recovering the remains.
A senior Israeli official told Channel 12 that despite Hamas’s claims to have already returned all the bodies it could find, “there is a double-digit number of hostages that it can return.” Meanwhile, Channel 13 reported that an international recovery team, acting on intelligence provided by Israel, entered Gaza within the last day to begin its search operations.
Since accepting the first phase of President Donald Trump’s Gaza peace initiative, Hamas has handed over the bodies of nine hostages. The initial stage of the plan, finalized on Monday, also saw the release of the last 20 living captives still being held by terror groups in Gaza.
Under the ceasefire agreement, signed in Egypt on October 9, Hamas was obligated to free “all Israeli hostages, living and deceased,” within 72 hours of Israel’s partial troop withdrawal on October 10. The agreement, however, acknowledged that the recovery of some remains could take longer than the set deadline.
On Thursday night, Hamas claimed it could not return additional bodies without access to heavy machinery to remove debris, a statement that clashed with Israel’s position. An Israeli official told The Times of Israel that Jerusalem believes Hamas has the ability to return most of the 28 deceased hostages’ bodies within the timeframe originally established. The Wall Street Journal added that Israel has informed mediators Hamas knows the location of at least six more bodies. A senior official reiterated to Channel 12 that “there is a double-digit number of hostages that [Hamas] can return.”
Security officials, according to Channel 12, recommended that Israel consider restricting the entry of construction materials into Gaza or delaying the reopening of the Rafah Crossing for civilian movement until Hamas fulfills its obligations.
At the same time, Egypt conveyed a firm warning to Hamas to comply with the ceasefire terms, while reportedly urging Israel to avoid imposing additional punitive measures for the time being.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu convened his advisers on Thursday to deliberate on possible actions to pressure Hamas further. Gal Hirsch, Israel’s coordinator for hostage affairs, informed the families of the deceased that the government intends to increase its pressure campaign but withheld specific details.
Israel has characterized Hamas’s limited cooperation on returning bodies as “a fundamental breach of the agreement.” The United States, however, has taken a more measured tone. “We will pursue the return of the bodies of the deceased until they all come home. And I’m confident they will all come home,” said White House envoy Steve Witkoff at a U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum event on Thursday marking the second anniversary of Hamas’s October 7, 2023, massacre that ignited the Gaza conflict.
Hamas issued a statement overnight asserting that recovering the remaining bodies will take time, alleging they are trapped under collapsed buildings or buried in tunnels destroyed during Israeli airstrikes.
Israel has countered that while some remains may indeed be inaccessible, Hamas is deliberately withholding others that it could easily hand over.
With differences emerging between Jerusalem and Washington over how to handle the impasse, Netanyahu spoke by phone with President Trump on Thursday night. According to Yisrael Hayom, Netanyahu updated Trump on Israel’s intended actions regarding Hamas’s refusal to return the bodies, and Trump voiced his full support.
A video aired overnight by Qatar’s Al-Jazeera showed what appeared to be Hamas members searching through the wreckage in Khan Younis, using bulldozers and other machinery to clear debris in their search for hostages’ remains.
Channel 13 later reported that a multinational team from the United States, Turkey, Egypt, and Qatar is already operating in Gaza to assist in locating the remaining bodies. Qatar has supplied “engineering equipment” to aid the mission, the network said.
Channel 12 noted that Israel has shared precise coordinates pinpointing sites believed to contain the hostages’ remains. A Turkish Defense Ministry official confirmed that “there is already a team of 81 AFAD staff there,” referring to Turkey’s disaster response agency, adding that “one team will be in charge of seeking and finding the bodies.”
{Matzav.com}