https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/21905/trump-israel-war-on-hamas
[T]he Trump administration doubtless understands that Netanyahu’s willingness to attack Hamas’s leadership even when they are being protected by a foreign power such as Qatar, merely indicates the Israeli leader’s determination to achieve the goal of “finishing the job” as the US requested.
Netanyahu seems to have come to the conclusion, after repeated evasions by Hamas, that the time for any productive negotiating is over.
Hamas has apparently realised that if it returns all the hostages, it will have no more leverage with which to blackmail Israel.
That is why Netanyahu will most likely ignore the continuing clamour among some Israelis for a premature ceasefire deal that would enable Hamas not only to hold on to some of the hostages to use as bargaining chips in any future negotiations. A premature ceasefire would essentially enable Hamas to retain a presence in Gaza, a move the terror group would pocket as a major victory.
So long as Hamas’s terrorist leaders show no willingness to lay down their weapons and leave Gaza, it is clear that Netanyahu needs to continue to hunt them down, irrespective of where they may be hiding. There seems no point in assuring terrorist kingpins safe havens.
If the Trump administration is serious about bringing peace to Gaza, the region and ultimately West – as to its enormous credit, it seems to be — then it should continue to support Israel’s attempts to destroy Hamas’s terrorist infrastructure instead of working on Gaza ceasefire plans that Hamas and its backers have no intention of ever accepting.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s decision to bomb Hamas’s terrorist leadership in Qatar should send a clear and unequivocal message to the Trump administration that the Israeli leader has absolutely no intention of ending hostilities in Gaza until Hamas is utterly destroyed, and all the remaining Israeli hostages have been returned.
Prior to Israel’s attack against the headquarters of Hamas’s terrorist leadership in Doha, the Qatari capital, US President Donald Trump had been pressing hard for Netanyahu to sign up to the latest version of the ceasefire proposal his administration has drawn up to end the Gaza conflict.
Under the terms of the latest deal negotiated by Trump’s Special Envoy Steve Witkoff, all the remaining 48 hostages captured during Hamas’s October 7 terrorist attack in 2023 were to be released. In return, Israel would free an estimated 2,500-3,000 Palestinian prisoners.