Why the Israeli Foreign Minister’s Trip to Turkey Matters

On February 14, the Israeli foreign minister Eli Cohen visited Ankara and met with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Cohen’s primary purpose was to express solidarity with Turkey in the aftermath of last week’s devastating earthquake and to reassure its government that Israeli humanitarian aid would continue. But the meeting also gave both parties a chance to reaffirm the thaw in their relations that began last year. Hay Eytan Cohen Yanarocak explains the visit’s significance, and its relevance to Turkish dealings with Hamas. (Audio, 5 minutes.)

Read more at i24News

More about: Hamas, Humanitarian aid, Israel diplomacy, Turkey

Hamas’s Hostage Diplomacy

Ron Ben-Yishai explains Hamas’s current calculations:

Strategically speaking, Hamas is hoping to add more and more days to the pause currently in effect, setting a new reality in stone, one which will convince the United States to get Israel to end the war. At the same time, they still have most of the hostages hidden in every underground crevice they could find, and hope to exchange those with as many Hamas and Islamic Jihad prisoners currently in Israeli prisons, planning on “revitalizing” their terrorist inclinations to even the odds against the seemingly unstoppable Israeli war machine.

Chances are that if pressured to do so by Qatar and Egypt, they will release men over 60 with the same “three-for-one” deal they’ve had in place so far, but when Israeli soldiers are all they have left to exchange, they are unlikely to extend the arrangement, instead insisting that for every IDF soldier released, thousands of their people would be set free.

In one of his last speeches prior to October 7, the Gaza-based Hamas chief Yahya Sinwar said, “remember the number one, one, one, one.” While he did not elaborate, it is believed he meant he wants 1,111 Hamas terrorists held in Israel released for every Israeli soldier, and those words came out of his mouth before he could even believe he would be able to abduct Israelis in the hundreds. This added leverage is likely to get him to aim for the release for all prisoners from Israeli facilities, not just some or even most.

Read more at Ynet

More about: Gaza War 2023, Hamas, Israeli Security