The White House spokesman announced according to the American networks that Israel has agreed to daily humanitarian pauses.
According to reports in the American networks, White House spokesman John Kirby announced in a statement to the media that Israel has announced that it will take four-hour humanitarian pauses every day starting now, and will announce it three hours before.
According to the White House announcement, Israel has agreed to carry out ceasefires every day from now on, and that the "humanitarian ceasefires" will last four hours each day, and Israel will announce them three hours before they start and come into effect. Beyond that, according to the White House spokesman's announcement, there will be no fighting, no in the north of the Gaza Strip and not in the south of the Gaza Strip on a daily basis during this type of ceasefire, and no military activity will take place in the area.
According to the White House announcement, "these truces are the right step to allow people to leave the combat zone."
The Prime Minister's Office responded to the report and on their behalf stated that: "The fighting continues and there will be no ceasefire without the release of the abductees, Israel is allowing safe transit corridors from the north of the Gaza Strip to the south, as 50 thousand Gazans did during yesterday."
The Prime Minister's office added and emphasized: "We are once again calling on the civilian population in Gaza to evacuate to the south."
According to a statement from the Prime Minister's Office, it is more likely that this is a continuation of the regional humanitarian truces for the purpose of evacuating the civilian population, which Israel already began to implement on its own during the opening of the Salah al-Din axis, the main road of the Gaza Strip through which Israel allows residents of the northern part of the Gaza Strip to escape to the south.
The ceasefires in question do not include the cessation of all fighting in the north or south of the Gaza Strip, but in a concentrated area of the main road where Israel allows escape to the south of the Gaza Strip.
Beyond that, after the White House spokesman's statement, and the Prime Minister's clarification, Biden was asked what the chances of a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas were, and Biden, who had been pushing for a cease-fire in recent days, even if temporary, changed his approach and announced outright that: "There is no chance of a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas."