Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Sullivan meets with officials whose citizens are being held by Hamas

The national security advisor told the gathered diplomats about continued talks between U.S. President Joe Biden and the region’s leaders.

Jake Sullivan
Jake Sullivan, U.S. national security advisor, at the Hutchins Center on Fiscal and Monetary Policy at the Brookings Institution in Washington on April 27, 2023. Photo by Ralph Alswang/Brookings Institution.

Ambassadors and chiefs of missions from 18 countries joined to address the continued captivity of their citizens by Hamas in the Gaza Strip after terrorists kidnapped as many as 250 people from Israel on Oct. 7.

According to a readout from the U.S. State Department on Wednesday, National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan connected with officials from Argentina, Austria, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Colombia, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Spain, Thailand and the United Kingdom.

The group repeated their nations’ demands that Hamas release the hostages and spoke on strategies for ending the conflict. Attendees discussed how they could speak more collectively and what could be done to increase pressure on Hamas to make a deal.

Sullivan also revealed that dialogue on a hostage deal continues between U.S. President Joe Biden, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.

Plans for an Israeli-Saudi peace agreement continue to progress, according to Sullivan, as he visits the two countries this week to continue normalization discussions.

Kurt Schwartz of CAMERA told JNS that editors on the site commit “errors of omission” when they hide Piker’s “indifference to and even denial of Hamas’s sexual assault.”
“Every marker matters,” Michael X. Garrett, chairman of the American Battle Monuments Commission, said. “Because remembrance worthy of sacrifice must be careful, humble and exact.”
Simon Hankinson of the Heritage Foundation told JNS that policies restricting ICE cooperation “assist people who are deeply hostile to the United States.”
“Many of these faculty helped to create an atmosphere where Jewish, Zionist and Israeli faculty and students felt excluded, unwelcome and even physically threatened,” Raeefa Shams of the Academic Engagement Network told JNS.
Israel sees the move as a long-term strategic step, implementation due to begin in the coming days.
A 3,500-year-old heritage site sacred to Jews faces unnecessary Palestinian Authority barriers.