US making intense effort to get hostages out of Gaza, no guarantee of success - official
Explaining why it took "so long" to get foreign nationals out, the official said Hamas conditioned the release of foreigners on wounded Palestinians being able to exit as well.
US officials are making intense efforts to gain the release of hostages held by Hamas terrorists in Gaza, but there is no guarantee of success or a timeframe, a senior Biden administration official said on Friday.
The official, briefing reporters on condition of anonymity, said there was "indirect engagement" aimed at finding a way to get the hostages out but that the work was extremely difficult.
Hamas, which rules the Palestinian Gaza Strip, killed 1,400 people and took more than 240 others hostage in an Oct. 7 assault in southern Israel.
Four weeks later, almost all of the hostages are still being held in Gaza, where the Israeli military has launched air strikes and a ground assault and imposed a siege. Gaza health officials say more than 9,250 Palestinians have been killed.
The official said it would require a "very significant pause in the conflict" to get the hostages out.
"It is something that is under a very serious and active discussion... There is no agreement as of yet to actually get this done, but it's something we're working on extremely hard," he said.
"We're hopeful and doing everything we possibly can to get the hostages out, but there's absolutely no guarantee a) that it is going to happen or b) when it's going to happen," the official added.
"We are going to do all we possibly can to make sure that all the hostages of all nationalities come out of Gaza. So there's an active process going on here with multiple lines of effort, including indirect engagement to try to find a framework to get the hostages out of Gaza," the official said.
US administration negotiating with Hamas
The official said the administration was also negotiating with Hamas over allowing foreign nationals trapped in the tiny enclave safe passage out of Gaza.
Explaining why it took "so long" to get foreign nationals out, the official said Hamas conditioned the release of foreigners on wounded Palestinians being able to exit as well.
"But the list that was provided, once it was vetted, (about) a third of the wounded Palestinians on the list were members of Hamas... That was just unacceptable to Egypt, to us, to Israel," the official said.
"And so this went on for some time. Eventually, what was worked out was that the wounded Palestinian civilians leaving with the foreign nationals were not Hamas fighters," the official added.
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