• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Era Of Kashmir

Weekly Newspaper

  • Home
  • J&K
  • India
  • Opinion
  • Editorial
  • Columns
  • SOCIETY
  • Tourism
  • Education
  • e Paper
Home » ‘Nothing is negotiated until everything is negotiated,’ says John Kirby on ceasefire deal in Israel-Hamas war

‘Nothing is negotiated until everything is negotiated,’ says John Kirby on ceasefire deal in Israel-Hamas war

By Agencies

 

US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby stated that the Biden administration believes that the ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas is 90 per cent agreed on, adding, “That’s how close we believe we are,” Al Jazeera reported.

“Nothing is negotiated until everything is negotiated,” Kirby said. He noted that several detailed issues remain to be resolved, adding that “that’s when things get difficult.”

“You call that optimistic. I call that accurate. That’s how close we believe we are. That’s where we have gotten to. The basic framework of the deal has been agreed to,” Kirby said.

“What we’re talking about now is the implementing details and specifically the exchange of prisoners. And now that calculus is different because of what happened over the weekend,” he said, referring to the recovery of the bodies of six captives from Gaza by Israeli forces.

But he added: “Nothing is negotiated until everything is negotiated, and the things that are still in play right now are very, very detailed… issues and that’s when things get difficult.” said Kirby.

 

Read More: Waterboarding, Electric Shocks, Siccing Dogs: U.N. Report Details Alleged Israeli Torture of Detained Palestinians

Meanwhile, Hamas’ lead negotiator has urged the US to press Israel for a truce in Gaza, as per Al Jazeera.

“If the US administration and its President Biden really want to reach a ceasefire and complete a prisoner exchange deal, they must abandon their blind bias towards the Zionist occupation and exert real pressure on Netanyahu and his government,” Qatar-based Khalil al-Hayya said in a statement.

He said Hamas still supports a proposal backed by Biden and a UN Security Council resolution for a ceasefire in Gaza.

“We confirm our adherence to what was agreed upon after President Biden-backed proposal at the end of May, and UN Security Council Resolution No 2735, which the movement agreed to on July 2,” al-Hayya said.

“We warn against falling into the trap of Netanyahu… who uses negotiations to prolong the aggression against our people.”

The Health Ministry says at least 39 people have been killed in the West Bank since August 28. This brings the total number of Palestinians killed across the occupied territory to 691 since October 7.

At least 1,200 people were killed, and 252 Israelis and foreigners were taken hostage in Hamas’ attacks on Israeli communities near the Gaza border on October 7. 

Filed Under: Latest News Published on September 6, 2024

Primary Sidebar

Latest ePaper

Cover Stories

The Thin Khaki Line

The Thin Khaki Line

Published on May 15, 2026

The induction of 4,000 new constables significantly bridges the vacancy gap, providing fresh strength for operations in rugged, far-flung terrains. These personnel serve as the frontline defense against foreign-sponsored incursions in the region’s most difficult ridges and forests. By Ajaz Rashid Beneath the towering chinar trees of the Armed Police Complex in Zewan, the rhythmic […]

  • The Jan Andolan Against Drugs
  • The Alchemy of Life
  • Pine Scents and Baisaran Scars
  • J&K’s 100-Day War on Drugs
  • License or Close
  • With 1.8 Million Blooms, Kashmir Kicks Off Tourism Season
  • J&K’s New Era of Public Healthcare
  • Champions at Last
  • Slopes of Unity
  • A Valley Under Diagnosis

More Posts from this Category

Education

The Rote Learning Malaise

Published on May 15, 2026

Traditional classrooms have become factories for the status quo, effectively punishing the curiosity required for modern progress. By prioritizing ancient methods over new solutions, we are graduating generations of students equipped only for a world that no longer exists. By Syed Mustafa Ahmad The modern educational landscape is currently locked in a struggle between the […]

  • Redefining Achievement in the Wake of the Winter Session
  • A Review of Majeed Masroor’s ‘Faizan-e-Nazar
  • The Dilemma of First Standard Admissions
  • Kashmir’s Pet Boom Demands Responsibility
  • Echoes of the Valley

Footer

About Us

Contact Us

e Paper

© 2005–2026 Era Of Kashmir