Trump asks the high fire in Gaza while the Israeli army orders more evacuations
/ News/ AP
Dozen killed in the last Israeli strikes in Gaza
President Trump begged Sunday for progress in high -fire conversations that would stop fighting in the 20 months conflict in Gaza. The call to an agreement occurred when the Israeli army ordered a new mass evacuation in northern Gaza in the midst of its growing attacks against the territory.
“Make the deal in Gaza. Get the hostages back!” Trump wrote early on his social media platform, Truth Social, among publications on a vote of the Senate on his bill of tax cuts and expenses.
Mr. Trump raised Expectations on Friday when he told journalists at the Oval office that there could be a high fire agreement within next week.
“We are working in Gaza and trying to take care of him.”

A main advisor to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Cabinet Minister Ron Dermer, traveled to Washington this week to talk about the fire, said an Israeli official.
The official said that plans were also being made for Netanyahu to travel to Washington in the coming weeks, a sign that there may be a movement in a new agreement. The official refused to discuss the visit approach and spoke with the condition of anonymity to discuss the plans that had not yet been completed.
Trump has repeatedly asked Israel and Hamas to end the war of almost two years in the Gaza Strip. Although a high eight -week fire reached just when Trump assumed the position in January, the attempts to take the parties to a new agreement have failed, hesitating for an important conflict point: if the war should end as part of any high fire agreement.
Mahmoud Merdawi, a Hamas official, accused Netanyahu of stopping the progress in an agreement, saying in comments on the Telegram messaging application that the Israeli leader insists on a temporary agreement that releases only 10 of the hostages.
Netanyahu spokesman, Omer Dostri, said: “Hamas was the only obstacle to ending the war”, without addressing Merdawi’s claim.

Hamas says he is willing to free all hostages in exchange for a complete withdrawal of Israeli troops and the end of the war. Israel rejects that offer, saying that it will be agreed to end the war if Hamas yields, disarms and enters exile, something that the group rejects.
The war in Gaza began on October 7, 2023, when Hamas terrorists attacked Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking approximately 250 hostages, approximately 50 of whom remain captive, with less than half that is believed to be alive.
The Ministry of Health of Gaza, led by Hamas, said Sunday, said 88 additional people for Israeli fire in the last 24 hours, which increased the death toll to 56,500 in more than 20 months of combat. The Ministry does not distinguish between militants and civilians in their position, but says that more than half of the dead are women and children.

The Israeli army ordered Sunday a massive evacuation of Palestinians in large stripes in northern Gaza. Colonel Avichay Adraee, a military spokesman, published the order on social networks. It includes multiple neighborhoods in the city of Gaza Este and Norte, as well as in the Babaliya refugee camp.
Trump hits Netyahu’s corruption trial
Gaza’s message was not the only position related to the Middle East by Mr. Trump this weekend. On Saturday night, he doubled his criticisms of legal procedures against Netanyahu, who is in trial for alleged corruption, describing him as “a political witch hunt, very similar to the hunting of witches that I was forced to endure.” It arrives a few days after the president intervened to support Netanyahu’s attack on Iran’s nuclear program, using SPECIAL US BUNKER BUSTER PUMPS.
In the publication about Truth Social, Trump said the trial interfered with the conversations about a high Gaza’s fire.
“(Netanyahu) is currently in the process of negotiating an agreement with Hamas, which will include recovering hostages. How is it possible that Israel’s prime minister is forced to sit in a room throughout the day, for nothing,” Trump wrote?
The publication echoed similar comments that Mr. Trump made last week when he requested that the trial be canceled. Legal experts say it is unusual for a nearby ally of a state to interfere so directly in the national affairs of another, especially when it refers to an ongoing judicial case.
The trial has been repeatedly postponed to Netanyahu, citing security and diplomatic developments. On Sunday, the court agreed to cancel two more days of Netanyahu testimony scheduled this week.
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