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Hostages or Hamas? Cracks spread in Israeli unity over war aims.

On a recent cold Saturday night in Tel Aviv, in a main plaza renamed “Hostages Square,” Shira Albag, the mother of 18-year-old captive Liri, addressed a sea of tearful protesters holding placards with the faces of 136 Israelis still held in Gaza. “Only if we return all of our hostages home will we be able to feel a sense of victory,” she said. “The hourglass is running out.”

Nearly four months into Israel’s retaliatory offensive against Hamas, its twin goals – “destroying” the militant organization as the ruling power in Gaza, and releasing the hostages – have yet to be achieved. And for the first time since the start of the war, many in Israel have begun to question what victory would even look like.

Why We Wrote This

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From the outset, Israel’s twin war goals in Gaza of rescuing hostages and defeating Hamas have been hard to reconcile. As the United States and others try to mediate a new cease-fire/hostage deal with Hamas, do Israelis know what victory looks like?

Israeli intelligence even believes that Hamas leadership, located deep in tunnels below Gaza, is using the hostages as human shields, making elimination of the leadership and rescue of the hostages into incompatible military goals.

As the Israeli debate continues, Israel’s top two spy chiefs met with CIA Director Bill Burns and Egyptian and Qatari officials in Paris for weekend talks over a cease-fire deal that would see the release of the hostages.

A senior Israeli official described the talks as “constructive … but significant gaps remain.”

Mass demonstrations against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government rocked Israel for most of last year, before the outbreak of war.

They are now coming back, albeit smaller and quieter so far, demanding one thing: Secure the release of the remaining Israeli hostages seized by Hamas during its Oct. 7 rampage.

Immediately.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

From the outset, Israel’s twin war goals in Gaza of rescuing hostages and defeating Hamas have been hard to reconcile. As the United States and others try to mediate a new cease-fire/hostage deal with Hamas, do Israelis know what victory looks like?

On a recent cold Saturday night in Tel Aviv, in a main plaza renamed “Hostages Square,” Shira Albag, the mother of 18-year-old captive Liri, addressed a sea of numb and tearful protesters holding placards with the faces of those 136 Israelis still held in Gaza.

“Only if we return all of our hostages home will we be able to feel a sense of victory,” she said. “The hourglass is running out.”

“Now, now, now,” the crowd chanted, directing their anger at the government for not doing enough, and not willing to “pay any price” for the safe return of their loved ones.

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