Israel continues to bomb Gaza amid questions about the fate of the hostages

He continues its violent and intense raids on the Gaza Strip, in what appears to have ignored the fate of the living hostages in the Strip, raising questions about the fate that they are waiting for if Israel continued to bomb Gaza, according to experts.
59 prisoners are holding estimates that half of them are alive, while the rest were killed in Israeli raids on the Gaza Strip and in Israeli attempts to liberate them, while Palestinian media reported news of the killing of an Israeli hostage with the renewed war, which did not confirm or deny the movement.
The expert in the Israeli affairs, Naji Al -Batta, believes that "the Israeli right government does not care about the fate of the living hostages in Gaza, and it has a firm belief represented in negotiating the bodies less expensive than negotiations on the neighborhoods."
The duck told Erm News that "Israel and the United States are Trojan to the idea that it is responsible for their lives, and that the prejudice to them, even if it was in an Israeli bombing, is because of the movement's practices and its refusal to reach an agreement to exchange prisoners."
He pointed out that "this helps the government of Benjamin Netanyahu to disavow the Israeli public and the international community of any danger that the fighting is up to the hostages of the hostages," stressing that Netanyahu will continue to fight even if it officially announced the killing of a number of detainees.
He added, "Israel realizes that the return to fighting makes the fate of the neighborhoods unknown, and Netanyahu is taking this step in order to reduce the cost that it can pay for the release of them," noting that the absolute American support will achieve Netanyahu what he wants.
Netanyahu's goals
Political analyst, Raed Narat, believes that "the political goals of Netanyahu do not include ensuring the hostages of the hostages to Israel, especially as he works to remain in power and avoid ending his political future and imprisoning him after issues and concerns of corruption."
Narat told "Iram News" that "he realizes that the hostage of the hostages is a priority that will be the price of the collapse of his government coalition," pointing out that the return to fighting in Gaza guaranteed the continuation of his government coalition, and also enabled him to pass the public budget in the Knesset.
He continued, "With my appreciation, Netanyahu will not hesitate to give permission to bomb any area in Gaza even if there are hostages, especially since the killing of any of them gives him an opportunity to increase military pressure on Hamas, and to impose more conditions."
And that “it is the party concerned with the survival of the living hostages safe, this matter will achieve two main goals, the first is strongly negotiating to liberate them, and the second is the lack of responsibility for the killing of any of them, especially since the United States exempt Israel from responsibility.”
He stressed that "military action will continue even if this costs her to kill all the hostages, and that the enthusiasm is required to make concessions and give mediators an opportunity to reach an agreement away from its conditions," noting that without that, Israel will completely destroy Gaza, according to his appreciation.