Egyptian intelligence quietly changed the terms of a ceasefire proposal that Israel had already signed off on earlier this month, ultimately scuttling a deal that could have released Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners, and set a pathway to temporarily end the fighting in Gaza, according to three people familiar with the discussions.

The ceasefire agreement that Hamas ended up announcing on May 6 was not what the Qataris or the Americans believed had been submitted to Hamas for a potential final review, the sources said.

The changes made by Egyptian intelligence, the details of which have not been previously reported, led to a wave of anger and recrimination among officials from the US, Qatar and Israel, and left ceasefire talks at an impasse.

  • @whereisk
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    86 months ago

    In the age of secure electronic communications what’s the point of untrusted intermediaries?

    PGP the message and send it via some method.

    • @MinFapper
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      16 months ago

      How would you get the other party’s public key?

      • brianorca
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        56 months ago

        The whole point of a public key is it can be publicized. Use any public publishing method, the more public the better.

      • @whereisk
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        46 months ago

        Publicize/transmit it anywhere / everywhere you have plausible control or you can trace the origin of everything. Radio, newspapers, billboard, official website - multiple sources that all agree with each other should do it. You only need to do it once.

    • @Telodzrum
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      16 months ago

      “When tech workers are asked to try diplomacy”