| diplomaticbriefing Dec 2 | Last week, as world leaders feted Qatar for brokering a truce between Israel and Hamas, its negotiators secretly doubled down on their mediation efforts, fearful the ceasefire would collapse before it even started. Working through the night, Qatari officials helped clinch the vital final details of a truce that ultimately lasted for seven days before hostilities resumed on Friday, permitting the release of dozens of hostages held in Gaza in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners, and the flow of humanitarian aid into the shattered coastal strip. Qatar said on Friday it was working with both sides to repair the deal. Reuters has pieced together the most detailed account to date of how Qatar's mediators in Doha bridged the divide between Israel and Hamas on Nov. 22. It offers a glimpse of Qatar's muscular approach in talks between what one official involved in the negotiations called "two parties that have zero level of confidence in each other." When the original truce agreement was unveiled last week, there were real fears it would never get off the ground, one of Qatar's lead negotiators, career diplomat Abdullah Al Sulaiti, said. "I thought we were going to lose it and that the agreement wouldn't fly," he said in an interview. The deal covering the truce and accompanying prisoner and hostage exchanges had been loosely worded. (https://neuters.de/world/middle-east/how-qatar-swayed-israel-hamas-make-truce-work-2023-11-30/) The tiny Gulf state's negotiators knew Israel and Hamas had yet to agree on when, or how, the ceasefire and the swap would begin, according to sources in Qatar, the Palestinian Territories and Egypt familiar with the high-stakes talks. | | | | | You can also reply to this email to leave a comment. | | | | |
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