Jeremy Scahill, Sharif Abdel Kouddous, and Abubaker Abed are LIVE NOW as they 
discuss the "ceasefire" agreement and the bloody attacks that have followed


 LIVE NOW: Israeli forces kill more than 80 Palestinians in the past 24 hours

Israel plays a cynical game. It makes phased agreements with the Palestinians 
that ensure it immediately gets what it wants. It then violates every 
subsequent phase and reignites its military assault.

The Ceasefire Charade - The Chris Hedges Report


Israel, going back decades, has played a duplicitous game. It signs a deal with 
the Palestinians that is to be implemented in phases. The first phase gives 
Israel what it wants — in this case the release of the Israeli hostages in Gaza 
— but Israel habitually fails to implement subsequent phases that would lead to 
a just and equitable peace. It eventually provokes the Palestinians with 
indiscriminate armed assaults to retaliate, defines a Palestinian response as a 
provocation and abrogates the ceasefire deal to reignite the slaughter.

If this latest three-phase ceasefire deal is ratified — and there is no 
certainty that it will be by Israel — it will, I expect, be little more than a 
presidential inauguration bombing pause. Israel has no intention of halting its 
merry-go-round of death.

The Israeli cabinet has delayed a vote on the ceasefire proposal while it 
continues to pound Gaza. At least 81 Palestinians have been killed in the last 
24 hours.

The morning after a ceasefire agreement was announced, Israeli Prime Minister 
Benjamin Netanyahu accused Hamas of reneging on part of the deal “in an effort 
to extort last minute concessions.” He warned that his cabinet will not meet 
“until the mediators notify Israel that Hamas has accepted all elements of the 
agreement.”

Hamas dismissed Netanyahu’s claims and repeated their commitment to the 
ceasefire as agreed with the mediators.

The deal includes three phases. The first phase, lasting 42 days, will see a 
cessation of hostilities. Hamas will release some Israeli hostages – 33 
Israelis who were captured on Oct. 7, 2023, including all of the remaining five 
women, those aged above 50, and those with illnesses – in exchange for up to 
1,000 Palestinians imprisoned by Israel.

The Israeli army will pull back from the populated areas of the Gaza Strip on 
the first day of the ceasefire. On the 7th day, displaced Palestinians will be 
permitted to return to northern Gaza. Israel will allow 600 aid trucks with 
food and medical supplies to enter Gaza daily.

The second phase, which begins on the 16th day of the ceasefire, will see the 
release of the remaining Israeli hostages. Israel will complete its withdrawal 
from Gaza during the second phase, maintaining a presence in some parts of the 
Philadelphi corridor, which stretches along the eight-mile border between Gaza 
and Egypt. It will surrender its control of the Rafah border crossing into 
Egypt.

The third phase will see negotiations for a permanent end of the war.

But it is Netanyahu’s office that appears to have already reneged on the 
agreement. It released a statement rejecting Israeli troop withdrawal from the 
Philadelphi Corridor during the first 42-day phase of the ceasefire. “In 
practical terms, Israel will remain in the Philadelphi Corridor until further 
notice," while claiming the Palestinians are attempting to violate the 
agreement. Palestinians throughout the numerous ceasefire negotiations have 
demanded Israeli troops withdraw from Gaza. Egypt has condemned the seizure of 
its border crossings by Israel.

The deep fissures between Israel and Hamas, even if the Israelis finally accept 
the agreement, threaten to implode it. Hamas is seeking a permanent ceasefire. 
But Israeli policy is unequivocal about its “right” to re-engage militarily. 
There is no consensus about who will govern Gaza. Israel has made it clear the 
continuance of Hamas in power is unacceptable. There is no mention of the 
status of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in 
the Near East (UNRWA), the U.N. agency that Israel has outlawed and that 
provides the bulk of the humanitarian aid given to the Palestinians, 95 percent 
of whom have been displaced. There is no agreement on the reconstruction of 
Gaza, which lies in rubble. And, of course, there is no route in the agreement 
to an independent and sovereign Palestinian state.

Israeli mendacity and manipulation is pitifully predictable.

The Camp David Accords, signed in 1979 by Egyptian president Anwar Sadat and 
Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin, without the participation of the 
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), normalized diplomatic relations 
between Israel and Egypt. But the subsequent phases, which included a promise 
by Israel to resolve the Palestinian question along with Jordan and Egypt, 
permit Palestinian self-governance in the West Bank and Gaza within five years, 
and end the building of Israeli colonies in the West Bank, including East 
Jerusalem, were never honored.

Or take the 1993 Oslo Accords. The agreement, signed in 1993, which saw the PLO 
recognize Israel’s right to exist and Israel recognize the PLO as the 
legitimate representatives of the Palestinian people, and Oslo II, signed in 
1995, which detailed the process towards peace and a Palestinian state, was 
stillborn. It stipulated that any discussion of illegal Jewish “settlements” 
was to be delayed until “final’ status talks, by which time Israeli military 
withdrawals from the occupied West Bank were to have been completed. Governing 
authority was to be transferred from Israel to the supposedly temporary 
Palestinian Authority. The West Bank was carved up into Areas A, B and C. The 
Palestinian Authority has limited authority in Areas A and B. Israel controls 
all of Area C, over 60 percent of the West Bank.

The right of Palestinian refugees to return to the historic lands seized from 
them in 1948 when Israel was created — a right enshrined in international law — 
was given up by the PLO leader Yasser Arafat, instantly alienating many 
Palestinians, especially those in Gaza where 75 percent are refugees or the 
descendants of refugees. Edward Said called the Oslo agreement “an instrument 
of Palestinian surrender, a Palestinian Versailles” and lambasted Arafat as 
“the Pétain of the Palestinians.”

The scheduled Israeli military withdrawals under Oslo never took place. There 
was no provision in the interim agreement to end Jewish colonization, only a 
prohibition of “unilateral steps.” There were around 250,000 Jewish colonists 
in the West Bank at the time of the Oslo agreement. They have increased to at 
least 700,000. No final treaty was ever concluded.

The journalist Robert Fisk called Oslo “a sham, a lie, a trick to entangle 
Arafat and the PLO into abandonment of all that they had sought and struggled 
for over a quarter of a century, a method of creating false hope in order to 
emasculate the aspiration of statehood.”
Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin, who signed the Oslo agreement, was 
assassinated on Nov. 4, 1995 following a rally in support of the agreement, by 
Yigal Amir, a far-right Jewish law student. Itamar Ben-Gvir, now Israel’s 
National Security Minister, was one of many rightwing politicians who issued 
threats against Rabin. Rabin’s widow, Leah, blamed Netanyahu and his supporters 
— who distributed leaflets at political rallies depicting Rabin in a Nazi 
uniform — for her husband’s murder.

Israel has carried out a series of murderous assaults on Gaza ever since, 
cynically calling the bombardment “mowing the lawn.” These attacks, which leave 
scores of dead and wounded and further degrade Gaza’s fragile infrastructure, 
have names such as Operation Rainbow (2004), Operation Days of Penitence 
(2004), Operation Summer Rains (2006), Operation Autumn Clouds (2006) and 
Operation Hot Winter (2008).

Israel violated the June 2008 ceasefire agreement with Hamas, brokered by 
Egypt, by launching a border raid that killed six Hamas members. The raid 
provoked, as Israel intended, a retaliatory strike by Hamas, which fired crude 
rockets and mortar shells into Israel. The Hamas barrage provided the pretext 
for a massive Israeli attack. Israel, as it always does, justified its military 
strike on the right to defend itself.

Operation Cast Lead (2008-2009), which saw Israel carry out a ground and aerial 
assault over 22 days, with the Israeli air force dropping over 1,000 tons of 
explosives on Gaza, killed 1,385 — according to the Israeli human rights group 
B’Tselem — of whom at least 762 were civilians, including 300 children. Four 
Israelis were killed over the same period by Hamas rockets and nine Israeli 
soldiers died in Gaza, four of whom were victims of “friendly fire.” The 
Israeli newspaper Haaretz would later report that “Operation Cast Lead” had 
been prepared over the previous six months.

Israeli historian Avi Shlaim, who served in the Israeli military, wrote that:


the brutality of Israel’s soldiers is fully matched by the mendacity of its 
spokesman…their propaganda is a pack of lies…It was not Hamas but the IDF that 
broke the ceasefire. It did so by a raid into Gaza on 4 November that killed 
six Hamas men. Israel’s objective is not just the defense of its population, 
but the eventual overthrow of the Hamas government in Gaza by turning the 
people against their rulers.


These series of attacks on Gaza were followed by Israeli assaults in November 
2012, known as Operation Pillar of Defense and in July and August 2014 in 
Operation Protective Edge, a seven week campaign that left 2,251 Palestinians 
dead, along with 73 Israelis, including 67 soldiers.

These assaults by the Israeli military were followed in 2018 by largely 
peaceful protests by Palestinians, known as The Great March of Return, along 
Gaza’s fenced-in barrier. Over 266 Palestinians were gunned down by Israeli 
soldiers and 30,000 more were injured. In May 2021, Israel killed over 256 
Palestinians in Gaza following attacks by Israeli police on Palestinian 
worshippers at the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound in Jerusalem. Further attacks on 
worshippers at Al-Aqsa mosque took place in April 2023.

And then the breaching of the security barriers on Oct. 7, 2023 that enclose 
Gaza, where Palestinians had languished under a blockade for over 16 years in 
an open air prison. The attacks by Palestinian gunmen left some 1,200 Israeli 
dead — including hundreds killed by Israel itself — and gave Israel the excuse 
it had long sought to lay waste to Gaza, in its Swords of Iron War.

This horrific saga is not over. Israel’s goals remain unchanged – the erasure 
of Palestinians from their land. This proposed ceasefire is one more cynical 
chapter. There are many ways it can and, I suspect, will fall apart.

But let us pray, at least for the moment, that the mass slaughter will stop.

 Chris Hedges


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