During a meeting on Monday with the families of Israeli hostages being held by Hamas in Gaza, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant painted a grim picture.

Hamas has hardened its stance and negotiations have reached a stalemate, he said, according to Ynet. “I hope we reach something, but right now there is no lead,” Gallant told the families. “Hamas is slow in establishing contact, communication is crawling, and there is no central control by [Hamas leader Yahya] Sinwar or his people.”

Furthermore, “The Americans are not really on this,” he said.

Gallant’s pessimism stems from the changing dynamics both in Gaza and the broader region. He informed the families that the focus of tensions has shifted to Israel’s northern border, with expectations of potential escalation involving Hezbollah and possibly Iran. “What is happening in the north serves Hamas, and they are waiting,” Gallant explained, suggesting that the terrorist group is hoping to leverage regional tensions to its advantage.

The families’ frustration was palpable following the meeting. One parent of a captive, speaking to Ynet, expressed their disappointment: “The defense minister didn’t tell us anything new. There is a complete stalemate between the sides, and there is no lead to renew the negotiations. Our frustration has worsened, as there hasn’t been such a stuck period since Oct. 7.”

Despite the challenges, Israel is attempting to restart negotiations and continue talks on multiple fronts. Israel Security Agency Director Ronen Bar made a secret visit to Cairo on Sunday, meeting with Egypt’s intelligence chief Maj. Gen. Abbas Kamal, according to Hebrew media reports. This marks the first visit by a senior Israeli official to Egypt since Aug. 22.

Amid these diplomatic efforts, Brig. Gen. (res.) Gal Hirsch, Jerusalem’s point man on the abductee issue, remains committed to the cause. Speaking at the World Summit on Counter-Terrorism at Herzliya’s Reichman University, Hirsch stated, “Negotiation efforts and moves related to negotiations are taking place constantly. The problem is the time it is taking.” He added, “We are still unable to get to effective negotiations with Hamas, which torpedoes talks all the time.”

This shift in focus has apparently altered Israel’s negotiation strategy. Gallant stated on Monday that Israel is now seeking a large-scale, one-time deal for hostage release, saying according to Ynet that, “If an opportunity arises to link the arenas of Gaza and Lebanon for a deal, Israel would use it, even though so far, efforts have been made to separate the connection Hezbollah is trying to create.” However, Gallant added that the United States has shied away from a deal that would see all of the hostages released at once. JNS

{Matzav.com Israel}