Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered a gathering of Israel’s political safety cupboard on Friday to approve the Gaza cease-fire deal after Israeli and Hamas negotiators labored out their remaining variations.
Mr. Netanyahu’s workplace mentioned in an announcement early Friday that he had ordered the assembly to approve the deal for later within the day.
Lawmakers would later “convene to approve the deal,” the assertion mentioned, with out specifying the day.
A safety cupboard vote that had been anticipated on Thursday was delayed amid last-minute disputes with Hamas and rifts over the settlement that emerged inside Mr. Netanyahu’s governing coalition.
The prime minister’s workplace mentioned that the households of hostages had been knowledgeable of the settlement and that he had instructed the federal government authority chargeable for the hostages to organize to obtain the captives upon their return to Israel.
“The state of Israel is dedicated to attaining all of the objectives of the conflict, together with the return of all our hostages — each the residing and the useless,” the assertion mentioned.
A vocal member of Mr. Netanyahu’s governing coalition took a stand in opposition to a cease-fire deal late on Thursday. Itamar Ben-Gvir, Israel’s hard-line nationwide safety minister, threatened to resign and take away his occasion from the Israeli authorities if the cupboard voted to approve the provisional cease-fire deal.
“This deal would successfully erase the achievements of the conflict,” mentioned Mr. Ben-Gvir, including that the cease-fire would depart Hamas in energy in Gaza.
Whereas Mr. Ben-Gvir’s risk might destabilize Mr. Netanyahu’s coalition at a essential time, it was unlikely to scuttle the cease-fire deal, which might additionally free hostages held by Hamas and Palestinian prisoners in Israel. Mr. Netanyahu would nonetheless command a majority of 62 seats within the 120-member Parliament.
Opposition lawmakers have pledged to assist Mr. Netanyahu’s push for a cease-fire if extra hard-line allies depart the coalition. “That is extra essential than all of the variations of opinion that there have ever been between us,” mentioned Yair Lapid, the chief of the parliamentary opposition.
Mr. Netanyahu’s announcement suggests {that a} cease-fire might nonetheless come into impact by this weekend. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken had mentioned on Thursday that he was assured the settlement would go into impact as deliberate on Sunday.
President Biden and different mediators introduced on Wednesday that Israeli and Hamas negotiators in Qatar had reached a deal to cease the combating and free hostages held in Gaza. The difficulties on Thursday underscored the volatility of the truce and prompted fears of additional delays.
President-elect Donald J. Trump, who had pressured the events to achieve an settlement earlier than his inauguration on Monday, repeated his warning in a podcast interview on Thursday that he needed the deal closed before he took office. He advised the host, Dan Bongino, that “it higher be achieved.” In December, weeks after he was re-elected, Mr. Trump mentioned there can be “hell to pay” if a cease-fire and hostage deal was not reached.
Lethal strikes in Gaza have continued, regardless of the announcement of a cease-fire deal.
Gaza’s well being ministry said on Thursday morning that no less than eight Israeli assaults within the territory had killed 81 folks and injured almost 200 others over the earlier 24 hours.
The Palestinian Civil Protection, an emergency service group, mentioned that Israeli strikes had killed no less than 77 folks for the reason that deal was introduced. The claims couldn’t be independently verified.
The Israeli navy mentioned on Thursday that it had struck about 50 targets throughout the Gaza Strip over the previous day. The targets included militants from Hamas and Islamic Jihad, their compounds, weapons storage and manufacturing websites and launch and commentary posts, the navy mentioned in an announcement, including that “quite a few steps” had been taken to forestall civilian hurt earlier than the strikes.
“The fact within the strip stays very tough and catastrophic,” mentioned Mahmoud Basal, spokesman for the Palestinian rescue and emergency service.
President Biden, in his last tv interview in workplace that aired on MSNBC Thursday evening, defended his option to steadfastly assist Israel all through the battle, after he and his advisers struggled over many months of intense diplomatic efforts to finalize a cease-fire settlement.
Critics of the Israeli prime minister, together with some households of hostages who’ve pressed for a cease-fire deal, have accused him of deliberately stalling negotiations to lengthen the battle.
Mr. Biden didn’t instantly reply when Lawrence O’Donnell, the MSNBC host, requested whether or not he thought Mr. Netanyahu had achieved so. He mentioned that Mr. Netanyahu got here beneath political stress from Israel’s right-wing, and was at instances compelled “to do among the issues that, in my perception, I believed had been counterproductive.”
Zach Montague contributed reporting.