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Israel's defense minister in crosshairs

The resignation of Israel’s coordinator on captive and missing soldiers suggests that Israel has stopped negotiating with Hamas for a prisoner exchange deal.

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Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman listens during a joint news conference with US Defense Secretary James Mattis at the Ministry of Defense in Tel Aviv, Israel, April 21, 2017. — REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

The highly publicized clash between Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman and the families of two soldiers — Hadar Goldin and Oron Shaul — whose bodies are being held by Hamas has underscored an Israeli decision to limit the price it will pay for the remains. An angry exchange erupted following the Aug. 24 resignation of Lior Lotan, the negotiator tasked by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with contacts for the return of Israeli captives and MIAs. The Goldin and Shaul families claimed Lotan quit because the government had tied his hands in negotiations with Hamas. According to the families, Lotan had concluded that the Israeli government was unwilling to pay the price Hamas was demanding, and therefore there was no hope of a deal.

The leaks from Liberman’s office in response have only served to bolster the families’ suspicions. Associates of the minister report that Liberman insists that there will be no “second Shalit deal” on his watch, referring to the October 2011 agreement freeing 1,027 Palestinian prisoners, mostly Hamas supporters, from Israeli jails in return for Gilad Shalit, an Israeli soldier held by Hamas for five years. According to Liberman’s associates, the demands being made by Yahya Sinwar, Hamas' leader in Gaza, are even steeper than those the organization presented for Shalit.

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