Clinton Says Israelis and Palestinians Need New Leadership
(Bloomberg) -- Former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said both Israel and the Palestinians need new leadership in order to have a chance of achieving a peace deal once the current war in the Gaza Strip ends.
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āYou have to create the environment in which there is a chance to revitalize the peace process,ā Clinton said in an interview with Bloomberg News Editor-in-Chief John Micklethwait at the Bloomberg New Economy Forum in Singapore on Thursday. āI think there needs to be new leadership of the Israelis and the Palestinians in order to have any chance at some kind of peace deal, especially a two-state solution.ā
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Israelās longest serving leader, is likely to come under pressure when an investigation is held into how terrorists were able to swarm across southern Israel on Oct. 7 and kill more than 1,400 people, while taking around 240 hostage. Hamas, designated a terrorist organization by the European Union and the US, is committed to Israelās destruction.
Pressed on whether Netanyahu could be a partner for a two-state solution, Clinton said, āI donāt think thereās any evidence of that. I think the Israeli people will have to decide about his leadership.ā
Israelās government has vowed to destroy Hamas, and its strategy has involved a bombing campaign that the Hamas-run Health Ministry says has killed over 10,000 Palestinians.
Clinton said while Israel is unlikely to agree to a ceasefire that would benefit Hamas, it probably will accept pauses to allow aid to reach civilians in Gaza.
āThere is a difference between a ceasefire which would, in effect, freeze the situation in Hamasās favor,ā Clinton said. Israel is unlikely to be interested in a ceasefire, ābut they are perhaps willing to have what we do call humanitarian pauses for the purpose of both getting aid in to try to assist the civilians in Gaza, but also getting the more than 240 hostages out.ā
Clinton also addressed the other major conflict in the world at the moment: Russiaās war on Ukraine. She urged the US and Europe to stay the course as further military aid to the former Soviet republic faces a groundswell of skepticism in Washington.
āThe more equipment that we can provide Ukraine, the more they can defend themselves and try to take back the territory that has been seized since 2022,ā she said. āThat should be our objective.ā
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She suggested that Russian President Vladimir Putin has been prepared to absorb the battlefield losses his military suffered in the hope of a change of leadership in Washington at the 2024 election and Donald Trumpās return as president.
āI think Putin is waiting to see whether Trump can come back,ā said the 76-year-old Clinton, who was the Democratic presidential candidate in the 2016 election won by Trump.
āSo if he could figure out how to hold this in a frozen conflict position, and not lose any more ground to the Ukrainians, and wait to see whether thereās some opportunity, in fact, probably try to help Trump in the election as he has before.ā
Thatās why, she said, the west has to keep āsupporting the Ukrainians to push as far as they can push.ā
The New Economy Forum is being organized by Bloomberg Media Group, a division of Bloomberg LP, the parent company of Bloomberg News.
(Updates throughout with comments on ceasefire, Putin and Trump.)
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