Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said
today, Thursday 2nd May, 2025 that defeating Israel’s enemies is more important
than securing the release of the remaining hostages in Gaza.
According to report monitored on CNN, while the prime
minister acknowledged that freeing the 59 remaining hostages is a “very
important goal,” he described Israel’s fight against its enemies as the
“supreme objective” of the war.
“We have many objectives, many goals in this war. We
want to bring back all of our hostages,” Netanyahu said.
“That is a very important goal. In war, there is a
supreme objective. And that supreme objective is victory over our enemies. And
that is what we will achieve.”
Netanyahu’s remarks, which came on Israel’s
Independence Day, mark the first time that the prime minister has explicitly
described returning the hostages as a secondary goal of the war. He has
previously described defeating Hamas and securing the release of the hostages
as the primary goals of Israel’s war in Gaza.
His comments drew a backlash from representatives of
hostage families.
“Prime minister, the return of the hostages is not
‘less’ important – it is the supreme goal that should guide the government of
Israel,” the Hostages and Missing Families Forum said in a statement. “The
families of the hostages are concerned.”
Netanyahu’s comments put him at odds with the majority
of the Israeli public, which overwhelmingly supports a deal to release all the
hostages and end the war in Gaza, according to recent opinion polls.
But it puts the prime minister in the company of
Israel’s far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who recently made similar
comments.
“We need to tell the truth – bringing back the
hostages is not the most important goal. It is, of course, a very, very, very,
very important goal,” Smotrich said last week. “But anyone who wants to destroy
Hamas and eliminate the possibility of another October 7 must understand that
in Gaza, there can’t be a situation where Hamas remains present and intact.”
Members of Netanyahu’s governing coalition have been
pushing the prime minister to continue fighting. Senior Israeli officials have
warned for weeks that the military will intensify its operations in Gaza if
there is no ceasefire agreement with Hamas.
A source familiar with the matter said Netanyahu is
set to meet with senior defense officials on Friday as Israel prepares to
expand the war.
Israel says its bombardment of Gaza, coupled with a
two-month total blockade, is an attempt to put pressure on Hamas to make
concessions in ceasefire negotiations. Israel has vowed to destroy Hamas and
said it cannot continue to rule the enclave.
Pressure mounts on Netanyahu
This is the second time this week that Netanyahu has faced backlash from the
families of hostages.
On Monday, his wife Sara was overheard on a microphone
saying that “fewer” than 24 hostages are still alive in Gaza. The remark
outraged families and prompted demands for clarity on what the government knows
about their loved ones’ fate, as well as questions on why the prime minister’s
wife has sensitive information about their loved ones that they do not.
“You sowed indescribable panic in the hearts of the
families of the hostages – families already living in agonizing uncertainty,”
the forum said in a statement. “If there is intelligence or new information
regarding the condition of our loved ones, we demand full disclosure.”
Israel has publicly said in recent weeks that it
believes up to 24 of the 59 remaining hostages are still alive. Sara
Netanyahu’s claim appears to be an indication that the government may have
information that some of the 24 hostages have died.
Israeli officials told news sources last week there
are “grave concerns” about three of the hostages but would not say whether
Israel knows for certain that they are dead. For months, Israeli officials used
the same language to refer to hostages Shiri Bibas and her two children, whose
bodies were returned in the most recent ceasefire.
Pressure has also been mounting on Netanyahu from
military reservists who have become increasingly vocal in their opposition to
the war, with several public letters saying that the Gaza war mainly serves the
political and personal interests of officials, not the country’s security
interests.
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