• @[email protected]
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    242 months ago

    The terms Hamas had agreed to were not immediately clear, but a senior Israeli official quickly said that the terms were not those that Israel had agreed to.

    Looks like the headline matches reality.

    You keep spewing totalitarian cacophony, you crazy diamond.

    • @[email protected]
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      112 months ago

      Linkerbaan vs PugJesus. Linkerbaan ratio is 5, PugJesus ratio is 2. Draw is 1. Results at 10pm.

      On the serious note: An accessible link would be appreciated.

      • @[email protected]
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        122 months ago

        Wayback machine cuts off early, but this is what it gives:

        https://web.archive.org/web/20240506193731/https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/06/world/middleeast/israel-hamas-gaza-ceasefire-talks.html

        The announcement by Hamas on Monday that it had accepted terms of a cease-fire added to the uncertainty that began over the weekend, when officials said that the armed group and Israel had reached an impasse after months of talks.

        As if to underscore that the fighting would continue, Hamas militants on Sunday launched rockets from Rafah, their last stronghold in Gaza, killing four Israeli soldiers. The following morning, Israel announced a mass evacuation of areas in Rafah, escalating fears that the military would soon begin a long-anticipated invasion of the crowded city.

        Hours later, Hamas suddenly announced that its leader, Ismail Haniyeh, had accepted a cease-fire proposal based on a plan proffered by Egypt and Qatar, which have been mediating the negotiations with Israel. The terms Hamas had agreed to were not immediately clear, but a senior Israeli official quickly said that the terms were not those that Israel had agreed to.

        While Israel and its main ally, the United States, said they were reviewing the proposal Hamas had agreed to, the public statements by the two sides in the war suggest that they remain far apart on key issues needed to reach a truce. Here is a look at those differences.

        Hamas wants a permanent cease-fire. Israel wants a temporary truce. The two sides are stuck on a fundamental question: will this cease-fire be a temporary pause to allow an exchange of hostages for prisoners or a long-term end to the fighting that would leave Hamas in power?

        Israel insists on a temporary cease-fire, saying it will keep fighting afterward with the eventual aim of toppling Hamas’s rule in Gaza. Hamas demands a permanent cease-fire and vows to remain in power there.

        AP is saying the same thing.

        https://apnews.com/article/israel-palestinians-gaza-hamas-war-humanitarian-aid-8659eae6e0a7362504f0aa4aa4be53e0

        • @[email protected]
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          52 months ago

          Thank you. It kinda sounds like there is a lack of information on what Hamas agreed to, for which I saw a post saying release of 33 hostages for 40 days of ceasefire. Can’t find it atm tho, the post may have vanished if it weren’t backed up with news.

          • mozz
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            2 months ago

            Al Jazeera: Here are all the details of what Hamas agreed to

            Washington Post: Here’s a quick overview of the plan, and details of what Israel doesn’t like about it

            BBC: Here’s a quick overview and Israel’s reaction

            NYT: OMG who can even say what might be in this proposal. Like the flying dutchman, it is an elusive and mysterious beast, and we need to wait for the light of the full moon to even glimpse its outline. Plus you know, Hamas lies all the time.

            Also NYT: the “armed group” (i.e. Hamas)

            Also NYT: “As if to underscore that the fighting would continue, Hamas militants on Sunday launched rockets” (motherfucker the Israelis are “militants” and “fighting”, too) … “killing four Israeli soldiers” (oh, so they attacked the soldiers in Gaza attacking them? I see the problem – they should have blown up an Israeli hospital or university; then apparently you’d be fine with it.)

            I genuinely can’t continue because I’m getting for real pissed off about it. But I think it’s safe to assume the whole fucking article is written this way. I actually started paying again for a subscription to the NYT because I like journalism, but I think I may cancel it and send them a short note explaining why, like an angry middle-aged white woman storming out of a Starbucks.

            • @[email protected]
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              12 months ago

              NYT: OMG it’s so uncertain

              It literally is uncertain. Like, that’s what this development has created for those of us observing.

              (motherfucker the Israelis are “militants” and “fighting”, too)

              “Militants” is a common usage term in journalism for combatants who are not or may not be formally a part of a state apparatus. Considering large parts of Hamas are ‘off the books’ of the local government in Gaza and a good number of those fighting currently are likely not regular soldiers, it’s not unreasonable to call them militants.

              • mozz
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                2 months ago

                It literally is uncertain. Like, that’s what this development has created for those of us observing.

                My point is that what Hamas agreed to isn’t uncertain (at least at this point). IDK, maybe there’s some timestamp issue where NYT published the OP article before it was clear… but as of last night (after the timestamp on the Al Jazeera article laying out everything in detail), the NYT wrote “Hamas’s Offer to Hand Over 33 Hostages Includes Some Who Are Dead”. I still haven’t seen any NYT article that simply lays out what the basic agreement details are; they seem to have wanted, with the “dead hostages” article, to just seize on an I-guess-technically-accurate data point and present it to make Hamas sound duplicitous and deadly, and then call it a day, with their readers still uninformed on the broad factual details of what was happening with the cease-fire talks.

                “Militants” is a common usage term in journalism for combatants who are not or may not be formally a part of a state apparatus. Considering large parts of Hamas are ‘off the books’ of the local government in Gaza and a good number of those fighting currently are likely not regular soldiers, it’s not unreasonable to call them militants.

                From Wordnik:

                from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

                • adjective Fighting or warring.
                • adjective Having a combative character; aggressive, especially in the service of a cause.
                • noun A fighting, warring, or aggressive person or party.

                from The Century Dictionary.

                • Fighting; warring; engaged in warfare; pertaining to warfare or conflict.
                • Having a combative character or tendency; warlike.

                from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

                • adjective disposed to warfare or hard-line policies
                • adjective engaged in war
                • noun a militant reformer
                • adjective showing a fighting disposition

                From Encyclopedia.com:

                Militant, in contemporary academic, activist, and journalistic interpretations, refers to an individual (as a noun) or to a party, a struggle or a state (as an adjective), engaged in aggressive forms of social and political resistance.

                My point is that by deciding that Hamas people with guns can’t be “soldiers,” but IDF people with guns can, the NYT is giving a subtle stamp of legitimacy to the IDF.

                I get what you’re saying – it’s not exactly a typical war. But I would argue that the IDF’s conduct is also equally non-typical for a “normal” armed conflict between capable state actors. It’s misleading to even call it a “war” – it is, very literally, more of a terrorist operation by Israel, blowing up civilian infrastructure and killing innocent people to put pressure on the Gaza state apparatus (such as it even exists) to agree to political terms they otherwise would never accept, to stop the killing.

                If we’re calling Hamas “militants” out of pure desire for accuracy, can we start calling people who work for the IDF who blow up universities and snipe doctors “terrorists”? And mount a factual defense of that term, based on their conduct in the “war”? Because I think I could make a pretty good argument for why that term applies to them more accurately than “soldiers” and “war” for what’s happening on the ground right now.

                • @[email protected]
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                  -12 months ago

                  My point is that by deciding that Hamas people with guns can’t be “soldiers,” but IDF people with guns can, the NYT is giving a subtle stamp of legitimacy to the IDF.

                  Let me put it this way - it was Nazi soldiers which rampaged across Europe during WW2.

                  Soldier is not a designation of morality or legitimacy. It is a designation of association - namely, association with a state’s military apparatus. Excluding paramilitaries, which are generally (though not always) referred to with other terms.

                  If we’re calling Hamas “militants” out of pure desire for accuracy, can we start calling people who work for the IDF who blow up universities and snipe doctors “terrorists”? And mount a factual defense of that term, based on their conduct in the “war”? Because I think I could make a pretty good argument for why that term applies to them more accurately than “soldiers” and “war” for what’s happening on the ground right now.

                  The category of ‘state terrorism’ is contentious, I wouldn’t reasonably expect it to be used in a reputable news source at this point in time (though I would be thrilled if it was used in one). But I agree that the description is absolutely apt.

                  • mozz
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                    42 months ago

                    Soldier is not a designation of morality or legitimacy. It is a designation of association - namely, association with a state’s military apparatus. Excluding paramilitaries, which are generally (though not always) referred to with other terms.

                    Yeah, I get that. My point is that this is part of a consistent pattern where the NYT uses one set of words for the “good guys” and a different set of words for the “bad guys,” as part of a (fairly successful) effort to get their readers to look at the conflict within their chosen parameters (which diverge quite a bit from the reality).

                    The category of ‘state terrorism’ is contentious, I wouldn’t reasonably expect it to be used in a reputable news source at this point in time

                    Yeah fully agreed. I don’t think anyone should be obligated to describe Israel as a terrorist state in their news coverage. Just saying that, if the pro-Israel writers want to be super specific about reporting every action with the exactly correct chosen words, then okay sure I think it becomes fair to start exploring the exactly correct words that actually do describe better what’s really going on.

          • @[email protected]
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            32 months ago

            Thank you. It kinda sounds like there is a lack of information on what Hamas agreed to, for which I saw a post saying release of 33 hostages for 40 days of ceasefire. Can’t find it atm tho, the post may have vanished if it weren’t backed up with news.

            Edit: Thanks @[email protected] for the link below.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      12 months ago

      A ceasefire for you is when israel can keep committing Genocide and Hamas doesn’t fight back right?

      • @[email protected]
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        02 months ago

        A ceasefire is when both sides agree to cease firing. The article headline is quite clearly correct, but I know you aren’t interested in facts.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          2 months ago

          Conveniently ignore that Hamas accepted the ceasefire deal proposed by Egypt and Qatar, which means that both israel and Hamas very well know what is in the deal.

          A cease fire is when both sides stop firing. Then you need the word deal to get there. Which Hamas has accepted and israel has not.

          • @[email protected]
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            2 months ago

            Conveniently ignore that Hamas accepted the ceasefire deal proposed by Egypt and Qatar, which means that both israel and Hamas very well know what is in the deal.

            And Israel says the deal Hamas agreed to isn’t the deal they agreed to. Did you even read the article? Jesus Christ.

            Four downvotes inside of a minute, lmao.

            • @[email protected]OP
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              92 months ago

              Good job you got there!

              Hamas accepts the deal.

              Israel rejects the deal.

              See that’s what the article title should be. Not “complicates things”.

              • @[email protected]
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                82 months ago

                I accept the deal in which you hand deliver me all of your money.

                When should I be expecting you?

                (For the record, I’m 100% in favour of Israel immediately stopping all offensive action and immediately withdrawing from Gaza and being forced to immediately let aid in)

                But this particular sticking point is kinda nonsense. If both parties aren’t involved in the development of the terms, then it’s just a political stunt to announce you’ve accepted them.

                Israel could JUST as easily draft their own terms, and announce they’ve agreed to them.

                • @[email protected]OP
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                  2 months ago

                  Israel could JUST as easily draft their own terms, and announce they’ve agreed to them.

                • @[email protected]
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                  -42 months ago

                  Linkerbaan thinks October 7th was legitimate resistance and the most precise irregular operation in modern military history. I guess all those civilians were Secret Zionist Spies. You’re not going to get through to them.

              • @[email protected]
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                -52 months ago

                Hamas accepts the deal. Israel’s final response is uncertain - they commented that it was not the deal they agreed to, and it is not simply a matter of “Hamas has agreed, the ceasefire can go into effect”. But neither is it a rejection on the Israeli side. It ‘complicates things’.

                Keep trying. You’ll show those big bad Lamestream Media types what for eventually, right?

                • @[email protected]
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                  52 months ago

                  I have accepted a deal Negotiated by Qatar where @PugJesus gives me all of his money indefinitely, this will go into effect immediately.

                • @[email protected]OP
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                  2 months ago

                  Is israel does not accept the ceasefire and invades Rafah after the proposal…

                  Then israel rejects the deal.

                  We’re not in a stalemate position. We’re talking about ignoring it and commencing a massively invasion to Genocide thousands of Palestinians

                  The mental Gymnastics you’re willing to do to defend israels Genocide is absolutely astounding.

                  The new deal accepted by Hamas was even brokered with massive American involvement:

                  The officials claimed CIA director Bill Burns and other Biden administration officials who are involved in the negotiations knew about the new proposal but didn’t tell Israel.

                  Between the lines: Two Israeli officials said Israel is deeply suspicious that the Biden administration gave guarantees to Hamas through the Egyptian and Qatari mediators about its key demand that a hostage deal will lead to the end of the war.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    2 months ago

                    The mental Gymnastics you’re willing to do to defend israels Genocide is absolutely astounding.

                    lmao

                    “The article headline, that the agreement of Hamas creates uncertainty over the ceasefire deal, is literally correct”

                    “YOU’RE DEFENDING GENOCIDE”

                    Absolute brainrot.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    -32 months ago

                    There it is once again. “If you disagree with me, you support genocide”

                    Does it ever get tiring, contorting every conversation into that exact same posture? Or is the pay enough to make it worth your while?

            • @[email protected]
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              22 months ago

              Dude has tons of sock puppet accounts. I got downvoted 18 times within minutes of responding to this guy before.