THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING

Israel to swap Palestinian prisoners for information

Captive soldier video might lead to deal

Palestinians passed a mural of captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit yesterday in Jabalya, Gaza Strip. Shalit, 23, has not been seen in public since June 2006. Palestinians passed a mural of captured Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit yesterday in Jabalya, Gaza Strip. Shalit, 23, has not been seen in public since June 2006. (Ismail Zaydah/ Reuters)
By Richard Boudreaux
Los Angeles Times / October 1, 2009

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JERUSALEM - Shortly after he was seized by Palestinian militants, Gilad Shalit wrote that his ordeal was an “intolerable and inhumane nightmare.’’ The letter, one of three the captive Israel soldier has been allowed to write, appealed to authorities to bring him home from his “closed and solitary prison’’ in the Gaza Strip.

Yesterday, after more than three years of indirect negotiations for his freedom, Israel and Gaza’s Hamas rulers reported the first tentative step toward a deal - the exchange of 20 female Palestinian prisoners for a recent video as proof of Shalit’s well- being.

The swap, scheduled for tomorrow, was described in Israel’s announcement as a confidence-building measure in advance of “the decisive stages’’ of talks aimed at trading the 23-year-old conscript for a far larger number of Palestinian militants.

Israel has conducted prisoner exchanges before. But this is believed to be the first time during its decades of armed conflicts with Arab neighbors that the Jewish state has agreed to trade imprisoned adversaries for information about an Israeli captive.

The negotiations ahead are expected to be difficult, fraught with the same obstacles that have long frustrated Egyptian mediators. Among the 1,000 or so prisoners Hamas wants freed are some Israel has insisted on keeping locked up for deadly attacks against its citizens.

“This is a positive step in the negotiations,’’ President Shimon Peres of Israel said after yesterday’s announcement. “But the road to his release is still long and not simple, and we do not want to create any illusions.’’

Israel and Hamas nonetheless have reasons for wanting to strike a deal.

Shalit’s homecoming would end a painful ordeal for Israel, a country where military service is mandatory for Jews. Israelis have rallied behind the soldier and his family, which has led a vocal campaign to get him freed.

For Hamas, Shalit’s release would satisfy a key Israeli condition for ending the economic blockade that has caused shortages of many basic items for Gaza’s 1.5 million people and blocked repairs of the extensive damage caused by Israel’s 22-day military offensive last winter.

The restrictions were tightened after the soldier’s capture and tightened again when Hamas took control of Gaza in 2007.

Hamas officials said the video of Shalit is about one minute long, was made recently, and shows him reading something current. An Israeli official said the recording had been turned over to a German mediator in Cairo for delivery to Israel tomorrow.

The soldier’s parents and family issued a statement calling the deal a significant achievement. They said they were “yearning to receive a first authentic proof of life from Gilad.’’

Shalit, then a 19-year-old tank crewman, has not been seen in public since June 2006, when fighters from Hamas and other Gaza-based militant groups tunneled into Israel, attacked a base, and dragged him into Gaza.

Hamas has rejected requests by the International Committee of the Red Cross to visit the soldier, who was promoted to staff sergeant during his captivity.

Until now, the most recent communication from him had been a letter received by his parents in February 2008. In addition to permitting the three letters, Hamas had released a 2007 audio recording of the soldier that is believed to be authentic.

Yesterday’s announcement of the recording-for-prisoners deal was made almost simultaneously by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office in Jerusalem and masked representatives of Hamas’s military wing at a news briefing in Gaza City.

“This simple deal is a precursor, God willing, to a comprehensive deal,’’ said a Hamas spokesman using a pseudonym.

Netanyahu’s office said the Israeli leader approved the swap because it was “important that the world know that Gilad Shalit is alive and well and that Hamas is responsible for his well-being.’’