President-elect Donald J. Trump said on Tuesday that тАЬall hell will break out in the Middle EastтАЭ if the hostages being held by Hamas are not released by Inauguration Day, repeating the threat four times during a wide-ranging news conference at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.
тАЬIf theyтАЩre not back by the time I get into office, all hell will break out in the Middle East,тАЭ he told reporters. тАЬAnd it will not be good for Hamas, and it will not be good, frankly, for anyone. All hell will break out. I donтАЩt have to say any more, but thatтАЩs what it is.тАЭ
Mr. Trump did not elaborate about what actions he might take if the hostages were not released by the time he enters office. And he declined to provide details about what he or his advisers are doing in the days leading up to the inauguration. Officials say about 100 hostages, including some Americans, who were seized on Oct. 7, 2023, remain captive in Gaza, though they believe many of them may have died in captivity.
тАЬThey should have never taken them,тАЭ Mr. Trump told reporters. тАЬThere should have never been the attack of Oct. 7. People forget that. But there was, and many people were killed.тАЭ
President Biden and his top national security aides have been working for months to try to negotiate the release of the remaining hostages. A deal has seemed imminent several times, only to fall apart after what Biden administration officials have said were rejections by Hamas negotiators. Israeli officials have also objected to some parts of proposed deals.
During his remarks, Mr. Trump suggested that his threats against Hamas would cause the group to relent. But experts on the Middle East struggled to understand the meaning of Mr. TrumpтАЩs threats.
тАЬI donтАЩt have clue, nor does he,тАЭ said Daniel C. Kurtzer, a U.S. ambassador to Israel during the George W. Bush administration.
Over the past 15 months, IsraelтАЩs military has nearly destroyed Hamas as an organized fighting force. It is unclear what more any escalated attacks by the incoming Trump administration, or Israel, could accomplish.
тАЬI see no scenario where U.S. forces would be engaged; in any event, we donтАЩt have a better idea than the Israelis what would force HamasтАЩs hand,тАЭ Mr. Kurtzer added. тАЬBluster is the worst form of policy.тАЭ
Aaron David Miller, a former State Department Middle East analyst and negotiator, said it was unclear what Mr. Trump could do if the hostages were not released by his deadline. And he questioned whether Mr. Trump could persuade Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel to take a deal.
тАЬTrump will never be able to inflict more pain on Hamas and Palestinians than Israel already has,тАЭ Mr. Miller said. тАЬHe does have leverage over Netanyahu. But would he really use it to press Israel to agree to terms of a deal that might appear to benefit Hamas?тАЭ
At one point on Tuesday, the president-elect invited Steve Witkoff, whom he intends to appoint as his Middle East envoy, to speak to reporters. Mr. Witkoff said negotiators were тАЬmaking a lot of progress,тАЭ but he did not give specifics.
тАЬAnd I donтАЩt want to say too much, because I think theyтАЩre doing a really good job,тАЭ Mr. Witkoff said. тАЬIтАЩm really hopeful that by the inaugural weтАЩll have some good things to announce on behalf of the president.тАЭ
Mr. Witkoff seemed to praise the Biden administrationтАЩs efforts, saying that тАЬI actually believe that weтАЩre working in tandem in a really good way.тАЭ But he also singled out Mr. Trump, saying it was the president-electтАЩs тАЬstatureтАЭ and тАЬthe red lines heтАЩs put out there thatтАЩs driving this negotiation.тАЭ
Mr. Witkoff added that he was тАЬleaving tomorrowтАЭ to go back to Doha, where delegations from Israel and Hamas have been negotiating through Qatari mediators. It was unclear what role, if any, Mr. Witkoff has been playing in those talks.
The reality of a change of administrations in the United States has complicated the last-ditch efforts by Mr. Biden and his advisers to get a deal to release the hostages. Families of those still being held have urged Biden and Trump officials to work together toward that goal.
Biden national security officials have said they are keeping their Trump counterparts fully informed about the negotiations. And members of both teams appear aligned behind the same goal: using the deadline of the inauguration to pressure Hamas to release everyone it is holding.
But if a release happens, the two administrations are likely to be starkly divided over who deserves praise.
The comments by Mr. Trump and Mr. Witkoff on Tuesday appeared to be devised at least in part so the president-elect can claim credit for a release if it happens just before he takes office. Mr. Witkoff told reporters that he thought Hamas was listening to Mr. Trump.
тАЬHe exhorts us to speak emphatically, and emphatically means you better get it тАФ you better do this,тАЭ he said, adding that Hamas is not waiting for Mr. Trump to take office. тАЬI think they heard him loud and clear. Better get done by the inaugural.тАЭ
Aides to Mr. Biden said that Mr. Witkoff and Brett McGurk, the chief negotiator for the Biden administration, had been talking regularly and that the discussions had been тАЬconstructiveтАЭ and тАЬappropriate.тАЭ Mr. McGurk has been the lead negotiator working to bring the two sides to an agreement.
That contact illustrates that тАЬthe Biden and Trump teams are far more coordinated than were, say, the Obama and Trump teams in late 2016 and early 2017,тАЭ said Natan Sachs, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.
But Biden officials have argued that progress toward a deal is the result of months of painstaking discussions and IsraelтАЩs intense bombardment of Hamas.
IsraelтАЩs bombing of Gaza тАФ which has come under intense scrutiny from many parts of the world because it has killed tens of thousands of people тАФ severely damaged Hamas and left most of its leaders dead, including Yahya Sinwar and the masterminds of Oct. 7 attacks. IsraelтАЩs strikes against Iran and Hezbollah in Lebanon have further isolated Hamas, Biden officials say.
They also note that the deal under consideration now with Hamas is based on an agreement that Mr. Biden offered to Israel and Hamas in May and that was later endorsed by the United Nations Security Council.
Mr. Miller said it would be unusual for a member of an incoming administration, like Mr. Witkoff, to be a direct part of sensitive negotiations with foreign countries.
тАЬItтАЩs fascinating that he said today тАШweтАЩre making progress,тАЩтАЭ Mr. Miller said, referring to Mr. Witkoff. тАЬHeтАЩs inserted himself тАФ as has Trump тАФ in a negotiating process owned by the Biden administration and in which they have no official role. And of course theyтАЩre setting the stage to claim credit for the deal when it happens.тАЭ