• en
ON NOW

Palestinians Expect Gaza Truce Before Rafah Assault Following Blinken’s Visit

Blinken and Saudi’s crown prince discussed the urgent need to reduce regional tensions.

Secretary of State, Anthony Blinken has met Saudi Arabia’s de-facto ruler on Monday during a Middle East visit that the Palestinians hope will clinch a truce before a threatened Israeli assault on Rafah, a border city where about half the Gaza Strip population is sheltering.

Blinken arrived in Riyadh at the start of his first trip to the region since Washington brokered an offer, with Israeli input, for the first extended ceasefire of the war and his meeting with the Saudi Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman lasted about two hours.

State Department spokesperson, Matthew Miller said Blinken and the crown prince had discussed regional coordination to achieve “an enduring end” to the crisis.

 “The Secretary underscored the importance of addressing humanitarian needs in Gaza and preventing further spread of the conflict,” Miller said in a statement.

Blinken however, did not answer reporters’ questions as he returned to his hotel.

The ceasefire offer, delivered to Hamas last week by Qatari and Egyptian mediators, awaits a reply from militants who say they want more guarantees it will bring an end to the four-month-old war.

A senior U.S. official told reporters during the flight to the Saudi capital “Impossible to say if we’ll get a breakthrough, when we’ll get a breakthrough. The ball right now is in Hamas’ court.”

Blinken also aims to win backing for U.S. plans for what would follow a truce: rebuilding and running Gaza, and ultimately for a Palestinian state – which Israel now rejects – and for Arab countries to normalize ties with Israel.

Washington also seeks to prevent further escalation elsewhere in the Middle East, after days of U.S. airstrikes against pro-Iranian armed groups across the region.

Miller said Blinken and the crown prince had discussed the urgent need to reduce regional tensions.

In London, British defence minister Grant Shapps told parliament that the air strikes had depleted the ability of Yemen’s Houthis to target Red Sea shipping but the threat was “not fully diminished.”

Follow us on:

ON NOW