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Hamas’ lead negotiator is dead. How can Gaza cease-fire talks continue?

Repercussions from the assassination of Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh, for which all fingers were pointed at Israel, reverberated Thursday, throwing into doubt when and how diplomats could end the war in Gaza. Israel has not yet commented on the assassination early Wednesday in Tehran, which heightened the risk of all-out war between Israel and Iran and its proxies.

The tough question facing mediators and observers: How can talks continue if one side kills the main negotiator for the other side?

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

The search for a Gaza cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas has been long and difficult, with only fleeting glimmers of hope. Now a pivotal figure has been assassinated, and trust has been shattered.

Mr. Haniyeh, who was buried in a state funeral in Tehran Thursday, was viewed by Israel as a terrorist and a planner of the Oct. 7 attack that triggered the war in Gaza.

Yet to Palestinian rivals, Middle East governments, and many European diplomats, he was a pragmatic moderate within Hamas, a figure with whom they could negotiate and prod the movement’s more hard-line factions.

An Arab diplomat tells the Monitor that relations between Arab mediators and Israel have been “severely strained” by the killing, hurting communications. Adds the diplomat: The assassination “shattered the trust between Hamas and the mediators and between the mediators and Israel.”

Repercussions from the assassination of Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh, for which all fingers were pointed at Israel, reverberated Thursday, throwing into doubt when and how diplomats could end the war in Gaza.  

Israel has not yet commented on or accepted responsibility for the assassination early Wednesday in Tehran, which heightened the risk of all-out war between Israel and Iran and its proxies. It said Thursday it had killed Hamas military chief Mohammed Deif in a July airstrike in Gaza.

The tough question facing mediators and observers: How can talks continue if one side kills the main negotiator for the other side?

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

The search for a Gaza cease-fire deal between Israel and Hamas has been long and difficult, with only fleeting glimmers of hope. Now a pivotal figure has been assassinated, and trust has been shattered.

Mr. Haniyeh, who was buried in a state funeral in Tehran Thursday, was viewed by Israel as a terrorist and a planner of the Oct. 7 attack that killed some 1,200 people and took about 250 hostage.

He was also the subject of an arrest warrant request, along with other Hamas and Israeli officials, submitted by the International Criminal Court prosecutor.

Yet to Palestinian rivals, Middle East governments, and many European diplomats, Hamas’ politiburo chief was a pragmatic moderate within Hamas, a figure with whom they could negotiate and prod the movement’s more hard-line factions.

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