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Petah Tivka, Israel — A humanitarian pause in fighting between Israel and Hamas will be extended by two days, Qatar said Monday before the initial four-day truce in Gaza was set to expire.
“The State of Qatar announces that, as part of the ongoing mediation, an agreement has been reached to extend the humanitarian truce for an additional two days in the Gaza Strip,” Qatari foreign ministry spokesman Majed Al Ansari said on social media.
John Kirby, spokesperson for the National Security Council at the White House, also confirmed the two-day extension during a news briefing Monday, saying Hamas has agreed to release 20 additional hostages over the next two days. Kirby said they are working to further extend the cease-fire as well.
The announcement came after dozens of Israeli hostages and more than 100 Palestinian prisoners returned home over the weekend, including the first American to be released by Hamas in Gaza, 4-year-old Abigail Mor Edan. Another group of hostages was still expected to be released Monday, along with another group of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.
The pause in fighting was originally scheduled to end at 7 a.m. Tuesday morning local time, which is midnight Eastern, but Israel had said it was willing to extend the agreement by one extra day for every 10 additional hostages released by Hamas. A Hamas representative also said earlier Monday that the group wanted to extend the truce.
Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty
The extension will be welcome news for dozens of Israeli families still longing to get their loved ones back after Hamas’ bloody Oct. 7 terror rampage across southern Israel.
Israeli news outlets said Hamas had provided officials with a list of the 11 hostages it planned to release Monday. The group — long designated a terrorist organization by the U.S., Israel and many other nations — started freeing women, children and elderly hostages on Friday. The latest group handed back to Israeli authorities was 17 people released on Sunday, including 13 Israelis and four foreign nationals.
Four-year-old U.S.-Israeli dual national Abigail Mor Edan was among them. She was recovering in a hospital Monday after spending more than 50 days in captivity — including her fourth birthday on Friday.
Both of Abigail’s parents were killed in Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack, when gunmen stormed into her family’s small farming community. Abigail managed to run to a neighbor’s house but was kidnapped.
Batia Holin, a neighbor of Abigail’s family, told CBS News that her granddaughter and Abigail were best friends.
“We don’t know whether she knows her parents are gone,” Holin said Monday.
The temporary cease-fire agreed to by Israel and Hamas has held since early Friday morning. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visited troops in the Gaza Strip on Sunday, where Palestinians were taking stock of the destruction wreaked by his military’s relentless airstrikes and ground operations.
Israel has held up its end of the hostage deal, releasing 117 Palestinian prisoners so far, many of them teenagers. There were celebrations on the streets of the West Bank to welcome them home, where some people waved the green flag of Hamas.
FADEL SENNA/AFP/Getty
In Israel, nine-year-old Emily Hand, initially thought to have been killed, was among the child hostages returned to their parents over the weekend.
It was a joyous reunion also for Ohad Munder, who spotted his eager father waiting to greet him.
Shira Havron’s family got six of its members back on Saturday, including her aunt and three cousins.
“There’s no words, I think, invented to explain this feeling,” she told CBS News, calling it “such an uplifting moment and so emotional… It was a miracle.”
Yaffa Adar, 85, was among the first hostages released on Friday night. She was last seen being paraded through the streets of Gaza on a golf cart stolen from her kibbutz.
“They say a lot of jokes about the Jewish grandma… but there isn’t a tougher material in the world,” declared Yifat Zailer, who, like the rest of Israel, was glued to her television watching the hostage releases with excitement and relief over the weekend. But for her, like many others, there were mixed emotions.
“I’m really jealous,” she told CBS News.
Zailer was still waiting Monday for her cousin Shiri and Shiri’s two children, Ariel, 4, and 10-month-old Kfir, to be released. They were kidnapped by Hamas militants from Kibbutz Nir Oz.
“It’s torture,” she said of the way the hostages have been released in groups, without much prior notice of who will be next. She wasn’t optimistic that her youngest would be home very soon.
“It’s obvious they’re keeping the baby to the end,” Zailer told CBS News.
“Those little redhead babies became kind of a symbol,” she said, “and Hamas knows that. They can ask for a bigger price, they can ask for… whatever they want… They know how much we want that baby back.”

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A second group of 17 hostages who had been held captive in Gaza since being kidnapped by Hamas militants in the Oct. 7 terror attack on Israel were released late Saturday night after an hours-long delay as part of the short-term cease-fire agreement brokered by the U.S., Qatar and Egypt.
There were 13 Israelis and four Thai nationals released, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said in a statement. There were seven Israeli children ranging in age from 3 to 16, and six Israeli women ranging in age from 18 to 67 released, the office announced.
Among those freed was 9-year-old Emily Hand, an Israeli-Irish girl who was initially believed to have been killed by Hamas.
“Emily has come back to us! We can’t find the words to describe our emotions after 50 challenging and complicated days,” her family said in a statement to CBS News.
Their release came after an hours-long delay Saturday when Hamas accused Israel of not complying with the cease-fire’s terms.
One U.S. source told CBS News that the delay was over the pace of aid coming into Gaza.
“This is putting the deal in danger and we have spoken to mediators about that,” Osama Hamdan, a senior Hamas official said in Beirut, the Associated Press reported.
However, Majed Al-Ansari, a spokesperson for Qatar’s foreign ministry, said in a statement that “obstacles were overcome” with the help of Qatari and Egyptian mediators, and Hamas finally agreed to release the hostages.
Israeli Defense Forces confirmed the hostages had been freed in a statement Saturday night, saying that “after undergoing an initial medical assessment” the hostages “will continue to be accompanied by IDF soldiers as they make their way to Israeli hospitals, where they will be reunited with their families.”
In exchange, another 39 Palestinians — 33 children and six women — who were being jailed in Israel will also be released Saturday, Al-Ansari disclosed.
National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson told CBS News that President Biden spoke with Qatari leaders by phone several times Saturday in an effort to resolve the holdups.
A White House official described the president, who is spending Thanksgiving weekend with his family in Nantucket, Massachusetts, as playing a “central role” in the Gaza negotiations.
All this followed the release of an initial group of 24 Hamas-held hostages on Friday — the first day of the cease-fire — consisting of 13 Israelis, 10 Thai nationals and a Filipino citizen. The released Israelis ranged in age from 2 to 85 and included several mothers and four children, the Israeli government said. Four hostages, two Americans and two Israelis, were released by Hamas last month.
Israeli intelligence has been receiving a list of the names of the hostages who are expected to be released in each group prior to their handover. The families of those hostages released in Saturday’s second group were given early notification on Friday night, Netanyahu’s office said.
The cease-fire, which took effect Friday morning after frantic diplomatic efforts, calls for a pause in the fighting and the release of some 50 Hamas-held hostages, all women and children, over the course of four days. In exchange, 150 Palestinian women and children held in Israel would also be released.
Prior to Friday’s swap, Israel estimated that there were about 240 hostages still being held by Hamas. Officials did not indicate Saturday approximately how many are still being held captive.
The four-day cease-fire agreement allows for hundreds of aid trucks to enter the devastated Gaza Strip. The United Nations said that 200 trucks carrying humanitarian aid — including food, water and medical supplies — crossed into southern Gaza from Egypt via the Rafah crossing Friday in the hours after the cease-fire began. Four trucks of fuel and four tanks of cooking gas were also delivered into Gaza, the U.N said.
Egyptian and Israeli officials had said that about 200 aid trucks will enter Gaza daily during the ceasefire.
However, a U.S. source familiar with the cease-fire deal told CBS News Saturday that Hamas believed the number of aid trucks which came into Gaza on Friday and Saturday were below the agreed upon amount, which contributed to Saturday’s standoff. The final deal agreed to by both sides had been 200 trucks daily, which was lower than an earlier draft agreement that called for 300 trucks a day, the source said.
The source added that Hamas was also frustrated over the sequence in which Palestinian prisoners were being released. Those who had been longest held were supposed to be released first, according to the terms.
Meanwhile, three Americans are expected to be among the 50 slated to be freed as part of the deal. In total, up to 10 Americans remain unaccounted for since the Hamas attack.
On Friday, Mr. Biden said the U.S. did not know when the Americans held hostage will be released, or all of their conditions. Among them is 4-year-old Abigail Mor Edan, whose parents were gunned down by Hamas militants on Oct. 7. On Saturday morning, a senior Biden administration official said they did not expect the American hostages to be released today.
“We are early in the process that will see at least 50 women and children released during the first phase of the agreement,” the official said. “We are hopeful that will include three dual national women and children, who are American citizens. This will unfold over the coming days. We will not comment on individual cases as the process is underway.”
In keeping its end of the deal, Israel on Friday released a first group of 39 Palestinian prisoners — 24 women and 15 teen boys. Thousands gathered in the occupied West Bank village of Beitunia on Friday to greet them after they were freed from three Israeli prisons.
The Red Cross oversaw their transfer, first to the West Bank’s Ofer Prison, and then to Beitunia.
Israeli forces had gathered outside Ofer Prison ahead of the exchange, where some Palestinians threw stones at Israeli soldiers. CBS News cameras showed one Palestinian who was shot in the leg with a live round before being rushed into an ambulance.
Noman Abu Naeem told CBS News his 16-year-old son Ahmed was on the list of Palestinian prisoners due to be released Friday. Naeem said his son had been jailed for about a year after allegedly being arrested for joining a protest.
“Like anyone who was dying to see their son, we were thrilled,” he said of his reaction to learning of his son’s pending release.
Among the Israeli hostages released Friday was Doron Katz-Asher and her two daughters, ages 2 and 4. They had been kidnapped from kibbutz Nir Oz.
Israeli authorities previously said about a quarter of the Nir Oz’s residents, which is located about a mile-and-a-half from the Gaza border, were either massacred or taken hostage by Hamas militants on Oct 7.
“I just broke down in tears,” Dori Roberts, a cousin of Doron Katz-Asher, told CBS News Friday. “I had to walk away and let everything go. It was a very exciting moment.”
The hostages were bussed to Israel, where their first stop was a military base for a health assessment, and then onto helicopters bound for Israeli hospitals and their waiting families.
IDF Spokesperson, courtesy of the families
Mr. Biden said Friday he thought “the chances are real” for the temporary pause in the fighting to be extended, and that he remains in contact with the leaders of Qatar, Egypt and Israel “to make sure this stays on track and every aspect of the deal is implemented.”
An hour into the temporary truce Friday, CBS News cameras captured the moments that Israeli soldiers fatally shot at least two Palestinians in an effort to block them from returning to evacuated northern Gaza.
CBS News producer Marwan al-Ghoul reported that between 4,000 and 5,000 people had begun to journey north from the southern Gaza city of Khan Younis despite leaflets dropped by Israel Defense Forces warning them against it. They encountered a line of Israeli tanks at a crossover point in central Gaza when they were fired upon.
Majed Al-Ansari, a spokesperson for Qatar’s foreign ministry, stressed to reporters Thursday that while Qatar was serving as an intermediary between the two sides, it would be on Israel and Hamas to maintain the tenets of the cease-fire agreement.
More than 1,200 people, most of them civilians, were killed by Hamas militants during their Oct. 7 invasion of southern Israel, according to the Israeli military.
The Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry says almost 15,000 people have been killed in Gaza by Israel’s retaliatory ground incursion and airstrikes, and the United Nations estimates that 1.7 million of the territory’s roughly 2.3 million inhabitants have been displaced by the war.
— Margaret Brennan, Lilia Luciano, Imtiaz Tyab, Tucker Reals, Elias Lopez, Caitlin Yilek, Bo Erickson, Khaled Wassef and Holly Williams contributed to this report.

The expected release of a second group of hostages held by Hamas in exchange for Palestinian prisoners held by Israel was delayed for hours Saturday as the militant group accused Israel of not complying with the deal’s terms. The last-minute snag created a tense standoff on the second day of what was meant to be a four-day cease-fire.
Until Saturday afternoon, it still appeared everything was going according to plan. Aid trucks were entering Gaza, Hamas handed a list of more than a dozen hostages slated for release to mediators Qatar and Egypt, and Israel’s Prison Service prepared a list of dozens of Palestinian prisoners for release.
But by nightfall, as the hostages should have emerged from Gaza, Hamas announced that it was delaying the release over what it said were Israeli truce violations. The group alleged the aid deliveries permitted by Israel fell short of what was promised, and that not enough of the aid was reaching northern Gaza — the focus of Israel’s ground offensive and the main combat zone. Hamas also said not enough veteran prisoners were freed in the first swap on Friday.
“This is putting the deal in danger and we have spoken mediators about that,” Osama Hamdan, a senior Hamas official, said in Beirut.
CBS News reached out to the Israeli Defense Forces and the Israeli prime minister’s office for comment, but has not yet heard back.
While uncertainty around the details of the exchange remained, there was some optimism, too, amid scenes of joyous families reuniting on both sides. On the first day of the four-day cease-fire, Hamas released 24 of the roughly 240 hostages taken during its Oct. 7 attack on Israel that triggered the war, and Israel freed 39 Palestinians from prison. Those freed in Gaza were 13 Israelis, 10 Thais and a Filipino.
Earlier Saturday, Hamas officials provided conflicting reports on whether 13 or 14 hostages were set for release. With three Palestinian prisoners to be freed for each hostage under the deal, the corresponding number of freed Palestinian prisoners was to be 39 or 42.
Overall, Hamas is to release at least 50 Israeli hostages, and Israel 150 Palestinian prisoners, during the four-day truce — all woman and minors.
Israel has said the truce can be extended an extra day for every additional 10 hostages freed — something U.S. President Joe Biden said he hoped would occur.
Separately, a Qatari delegation arrived in Israel on Saturday to coordinate with parties on the ground and “ensure the deal continues to move smoothly,” according to a diplomat briefed on the visit. The diplomat spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss details with the media.
The start of the pause brought the first quiet for 2.3 million Palestinians reeling from relentless Israeli bombardment that has killed thousands, driven three-quarters of the population from their homes and leveled residential areas. Rocket fire from Gaza militants into Israel went silent.
War-weary Palestinians in northern Gaza, the focus of Israel’s ground offensive, returned to the streets, crunching over rubble between shattered buildings and at times digging through it with bare hands. At the Indonesian hospital in Jabaliya, besieged by the Israeli military earlier this month, bodies lay in the courtyard and outside the main gate.
For Emad Abu Hajer, a resident of the Jabaliya refugee camp in the Gaza City area, the pause meant he could again search through the remains of his home, which was flattened in an Israeli attack last week.
He found the bodies of a cousin and nephew, bring the death toll in the attack to 19. With his sister and two other relatives still missing, he resumed his digging Saturday.
“We want to find them and bury them in dignity,” he said.
The United Nations said the pause enabled it to scale up the delivery of food, water, and medicine to the largest volume since the resumption of aid convoys on Oct. 21. It was also able to deliver 129,000 liters (34,078 gallons) of fuel — just over 10% of the daily pre-war volume — as well as cooking gas, a first since the war began.
In the southern city of Khan Younis on Saturday, a long line of people with containers waited outside a filling station. Hossam Fayad lamented that the pause in fighting was only for four days.
“I wish it could be extended until people’s conditions improved,” he said.
For the first time in over a month, aid reached northern Gaza. The Palestinian Red Crescent said 61 trucks carrying food, water and medical supplies headed there on Saturday, the largest aid convoy to reach the area yet.
The U.N. said it and the Palestinian Red Crescent were also able to evacuate 40 patients and family members from a hospital in Gaza City, where much of the fighting has taken place, to a hospital in Khan Younis.
The relief brought by the cease-fire has been tempered, however. For Israelis, by the fact that not all hostages will be freed. For Palestinians, by the brevity of the pause.
At least two Palestinians were injured Saturday at a tense West Bank checkpoint where Israel was to free prisoners. Israeli security forces fired tear gas and rubber bullets at Palestinians gathered at Beitunia checkpoint. It was not clear how the two were injured.
In Tel Aviv, several thousand people packed a central square called “the square of the hostages,” awaiting news of the second release.
“Don’t forget the others because it’s getting harder, harder and harder. It’s heartbreaking,” said Neri Gershon, a Tel Aviv resident. Some families have accused Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government of not doing enough to bring hostages home.
The freed Israelis included nine women and four children ages 9 and under. They were taken to Israeli hospitals for observation and were declared to be in good condition.
Hours later, 24 Palestinian women and 15 teenage boys held in Israeli prisons in the occupied West Bank and east Jerusalem were freed. The teenagers had been jailed for minor offenses like throwing stones. The women included several convicted of trying to stab Israeli soldiers.
“It’s a happiness tainted with sorrow because our release from prison came at the cost of the lives of martyrs and the innocence of children,” said one released prisoner, Aseel Munir al-Titi.
According to the Palestinian Prisoners’ Club, an advocacy group, Israel is holding 7,200 Palestinians, including about 2,000 arrested since the start of the war.
The war erupted when several thousand Hamas militants stormed into southern Israel, killing some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and taking scores of hostages, including babies, women and older adults, as well as soldiers.
“We will return immediately at the end of the cease-fire to attacking in Gaza, operating in Gaza,” Herzi Halevi, Israeli chief of staff, told soldiers.
Israeli leaders have said they won’t stop until Hamas, which has controlled Gaza for the past 16 years, is crushed. Israeli officials have argued that only military pressure can bring the hostages home. But the government is under pressure from hostages’ families to prioritize the release of the remaining captives.
The Israeli offensive has killed more than 13,300 Palestinians, according to the Health Ministry in the Hamas-run Gaza government. Women and minors have consistently made up around two-thirds of the dead. The figure does not include updated numbers from hospitals in the north, where communications have broken down.

Jerusalem — Israel’s military continued pummeling the Gaza Strip on Thursday after a four-day cease-fire intended to see the militant group Hamas free dozens of Israeli hostages in exchange for the release of some 150 Palestinian prisoners was delayed at least until Friday. About 10 U.S. citizens remain unaccounted for after Hamas’ brutal Oct. 7 terror attack, and some of them are thought to be hostages, including 3-year-old Abigail Mor Edan.
With Israeli-American families such as Abigail’s hoping on Thanksgiving that their loved ones might soon be free, the government of Qatar — which helped broker the hostage deal — said the pause in fighting will begin on Friday at 7 a.m. local time (midnight EST), and the first batch of 13 hostages will be released at 4 p.m. — all of them women and children. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office confirmed to CBS News that it’s received a preliminary list of names.
Under the agreement reached in Qatar this week, at least 50 hostages, many of them children, will be released, in return for at least 150 Palestinian prisoners, and a four-day temporary cease-fire. Hundreds of trucks carrying desperately needed aid, including cooking oil and fuel, will cross into the Gaza Strip.
Hamas is incentivized to release more of the 236 captives Israel accuses it of seizing during its rampage across southern Israel, which saw the U.S.-designated terror group kill some 1,200 people. Every 10 additional hostages freed by Hamas will see Israel extend the temporary cease-fire by one day. More Palestinian prisoners would also be released if the deal is extended, at a ratio of three prisoners for every hostage handed over.
President Biden, who is spending Thanksgiving in Massachusetts, told reporters on Thursday that he is “not prepared to give you an update until it’s done.” He said he hoped he could say more on Friday.
In Israel, six weeks of anxious waiting could soon be over for some of the hostages’ families.
Hadas Calderon told CBS News that her life ended and her “family was broken” the moment Hamas gunmen stormed through their small farming community of Kibbutz Nir Oz on Oct. 7 and abducted her daughter Sahar, 16, and her son Erez, 12.
Asked what she thought her children have been through since that day, Calderon said: “Hell! Hell is what they’re going through… I just want them to come back and [to] heal them.”
As other American families prepared tables for Thanksgiving dinner, in central Tel Aviv, a dining table was set with a seat for every one of the 236 hostages that Israel says are being held in Gaza.
But with Israel’s military still carrying out regular airstrikes and ground operations in Gaza — all of which it says target the Palestinian territory’s longtime Hamas rulers or other extremist groups — and the death toll said to be over 13,000, besieged residents have told CBS News that a four-day pause in the fighting isn’t enough.
“We’ve lost thousands of people,” said one girl at a protest in Ramallah, the biggest city in the other Palestinian territory, the Israeli-occupied West Bank. “If the war continues, we’ll lose everyone.”
Ahmad Hasaballah/Getty
The demonstrators want to see an end to the war completely, and they want Israel to release all Palestinian prisoners. According to Palestinian prisoners’ rights groups, there are more than 200 Palestinian children in Israeli prisons, and around 75 women.
Dozens of people have been arrested over the past few weeks alone, bringing the total number of Palestinians currently held in Israeli jails to over 7,000 according to prisoner rights advocates.
“Ultimately, I want freedom and I want for liberation,” Palestinian journalist and activist Joharah Baker, who is based in Jerusalem, told CBS News. “Palestinians deserve to be free.”
Samaher Aouwad’s daughter Norhan is on Israel’s list of those who could be released from prison this week. She was arrested at the age of 15 for the attempted stabbing of an Israeli soldier. She has always denied the charge, but she’s spent nine years in prison for it.
“The Israeli occupation stole her childhood, and that’s what I feel sad about,” Aouwad told CBS News. “No one can replace her childhood.”
Israel has used the release of Palestinian prisoners for decades as leverage in its negotiations with various Palestinian leaders.
In 2011, Hamas agreed to free kidnapped Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit in exchange for the release of more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners.
Gershon Baskin, an Israeli hostage negotiator who helped secure that agreement, told CBS News the fact that the militants are getting just three prisoners in exchange for each hostage they release this time is an indication that Hamas is eager to hand back women, children and elderly hostages it’s holding.
Heidi Levine/The Washington Post/Getty
“They were a burden” on the Palestinian militant group, he said. “Once they have the soldiers and only the soldiers, they will then begin demanding what they really want, which is the release of all Palestinian prisoners in Israel.”
Hamas has yet to iterate such a demand, and while Israel has not provided a breakdown of how many of the hostages are civilians and how many are soldiers, the extremist group has never had the kind of leverage it does now.
In the meantime, with less than 24 hours until the expected pause in the fighting, Israel is continuing with its stated mission: To “destroy Hamas.”
Asked Thursday if Israeli forces were trying to avoid complicating the plan for a short cease-fire by reducing their aerial assault on densely-populated areas in Gaza, military spokesperson Lt. Col. Richard Hecht told reporters it was “business as usual,” adding that due to the possibility of operations pausing soon, they could, in the interim, “even intensify.”

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Negotiators are getting closer to an agreement with Hamas to release an initial 50 civilians in exchange for Israel allowing in more aid including fuel, coinciding with a limited pause in fighting, multiple sources told CBS News. More civilian hostage releases could potentially follow.
At this stage, there is no firm deal in hand but rather a written draft agreement that is being passed between parties who remain locked in what were described to CBS News as very difficult talks brokered with the help of the U.S. and Qatar, according to two sources familiar.
In an interview with “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” White House deputy national security advisor Jon Finer said that “many areas of difference that previously existed” in the hostage talks “have been narrowed,” and that the U.S. is “closer than we have been to reaching a final agreement.”
Finer said it would not be helpful to detail the developing diplomacy in public, and acknowledged the caveat that past deals had been close before collapsing. Hopes were high last week that a breakthrough in diplomacy was finally imminent, but two officials in the region cited the Israeli military move on al-Shifa hospital as having complicated diplomacy with Hamas.
A source familiar with the draft agreement told CBS News that the proposal as it stands now would involve 50 hostages being released on day one with a limited pause in fighting that would last around four days for a duration of six hours a day. If that release and pause happens as planned, there would be a second release of around 20-25 hostages, according to this source. White House officials declined to comment on the sensitive diplomacy.
In a press conference on Sunday in Doha, Qatar’s Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani described the remaining sticking points to the emerging deal between Israel and Hamas as “very minor” logistical matters and said the parties are “close to reaching an agreement.”
AFP via Getty Images
Sources familiar with the talks have said there are several recent complicating issues, including whether overhead surveillance would happen during the releases. Israel has also demanded that Hamas provide some accounting for the captives it holds or can obtain from other militant groups such as Islamic Jihad, as the total figure of more than 200 hostages remains just an estimate. Last week, two of those unaccounted for who were believed to have been hostages, Noa Marciano and Yehudit Weiss, were found dead by the IDF nearby the 45,00-square-meter al-Shifa hospital complex in Gaza. The remains of those slaughtered by the terror group Hamas and other militants during the Oct. 7 attack in Israel continue to be identified.
“Obviously, Gaza is an extremely dangerous place to be a civilian, to be a hostage held at this point,” Finer told CBS’ Margaret Brennan, “so there is a time imperative.”
Finer said he wouldn’t use the phrase “running out of time,” but “we feel acutely that this should be done as soon as possible.”
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told CBS News’ Norah O’Donnell last week that Israel had “strong indications” hostages were held in al-Shifa hospital, which was one of the reasons he cited for the Israeli Defense Forces’ decision to enter al-Shifa. However, Netanyahu added “if there were they were taken out.”
The United States has not produced intelligence to confirm the assessment, but did issue downgraded intelligence last week that Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad members operate a “command and control node” from al-Shifa hospital and tunnels underneath, and have used it for both weapons and hostages.
Finer said the U.S. is still confident in its assessment, and said that the Israeli military is still “exploiting” the al Shifa facility to find further information.
On Saturday in Manama, President Biden’s top Mideast adviser Brett McGurk described the hostage talks as intensive and ongoing before heading to Doha for meetings with the Qatar Prime Minister that night. In public comments, McGurk echoed Israel’s call for the release of a “large number of hostages” in order to lead to a “significant pause in fighting” and what he described as a “massive” surge of humanitarian relief. He acknowledged that one of Hamas’ demands has been to receive fuel and humanitarian supplies. McGurk did not make public mention of an earlier request by Hamas for the release of an undetermined number of Palestinian women and children from Israeli detention centers.
“That’s the bargain they set,” McGurk has said from the earliest days. McGurk said the onus remains on Hamas to release all of the hostages – “the women, the children, the toddlers, the babies, all of them.”
CIA director Bill Burns is back in Washington but has remained involved following his meetings in recent weeks with the Mossad chief. President Biden himself has been working the phones, calling Qatar’s Emir on November 12th and as recently as Friday, an indication that a resolution was near.
Qatar is using its relationship with Hamas to mediate and the U.S. is helping to broker proposals that are passed from a tight circle in Doha to Hamas leaders in Gaza as well as Israel’s five-person war cabinet that is led by Netanyahu.

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