“We will be adjusting our deployment, and our gradual withdrawal from specific locations and routes from within Gaza, in accordance with the agreement and the political echelons directly,” the official said on Saturday.

The official said the IDF’s 162nd Division was currently in the north of Gaza and the 143rd Division was in the south, but did not say how they would be affected.

Tank at border with Gaza in southern Israel
An Israeli soldier sits on a tank at the border with Gaza in southern Israel on January 16. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit)

The 99th Division in the Netzarim Corridor – a key buffer zone established by the IDF that bisects the Gaza Strip – would “be gradually moving as the agreement goes on,” the official said.

The official also repeated Israeli warnings to residents not to approach areas where IDF troops are stationed, noting that their whereabouts “will obviously change” as the troops withdraw.

Asked about the details of the phased withdrawals, the official said the IDF had been “planning in recent days and weeks,” but that the “political echelon” would ultimately decide.

President-elect Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with Republican governors at Mar-a-Lago, Thursday, Jan. 9, 2025, in Palm Beach, Fla. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
President-elect Donald Trump said he warned Netanyahu against a broken ceasfire. (AP)

Trump told Netanyahu to ‘keep doing what has to be done’

President-elect Donald Trump said he told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to “keep doing what has to be done” while emphasising his desire to see the war between Israel and Hamas end.

He again warned that “all hell will break out” if both parties do not uphold the ceasefire-hostage agreement.

Trump told NBC News in a phone interview on Saturday he plans to meet with Netanyahu “fairly shortly” but declined to share more details about a possible meeting. He said he told Netanyahu “this has to end” but that he should “just keeping doing what you have to do”.

When asked if he was confident hostages still held by Hamas in Gaza would be released as part of the agreement, Trump said, “Well, we’re going to see very soon, and it better hold”.

He added that the US will demand “respect” to ensure the agreement will be observed and warned of consequences if it does not hold.

“The United States has to get respected again, and it has to get respected fast. But respect is the primary word that I use,” he said.

“If they respect us, it will hold. If they don’t respect us, all hell will break out.”

Trump’s incoming national security adviser Mike Waltz and his incoming Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff worked alongside the Biden administration in helping facilitate the ceasefire agreement, which is expected to go into effect tomorrow.

Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said hostages would return home from Gaza.
Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said hostages would return home from Gaza. (AP)

Netanyahu says his support for hostage deal hinged on three key principles

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says he stuck to three “fundamental principles” in the negotiations that led to the ceasefire-for-hostages deal agreed with Hamas.

First, he said in a televised address Saturday, was Israel’s right to return to war, with the backing of the United States, if negotiations on the second phase of the deal break down.

Secondly, Netanyahu said he fought for a “significant increase” in the number of living hostages to be released in the first stage of the deal.

He claimed to have “nearly doubled” that number since discussions in May, but did not specify.

A woman pauses near posters of hostages held by Hamas in the Gaza Strip, in Tel Aviv, Israel. (AP)

Thirty-three hostages are expected to be released by Hamas in the first stage of the deal, but it remains unclear how many of them are living.

Israel has typically included hostages who have died but whose remains have not been returned to Israel among its official hostage tally.

The third principle, according to Netanyahu, was that Israel would maintain full control over the Philadelphi Corridor — the thin strip of land along the Gaza-Egypt border — and the security buffer zone surrounding the entire Gaza Strip.

Israel’s continued military presence in the Philadelphi Corridor was previously a sticking point in negotiations, but Netanyahu said Saturday that, “contrary to all the reports I hear from the outside,” Israel was “not only not reducing the forces there — we are even slightly increasing them.”
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