Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman ‎dismissed criticism leveled at him on Wednesday over Israel’s ‎attempts to negotiate a long-term ceasefire with ‎Hamas.‎

‎“My strategy is to talk directly to the Palestinian ‎public, not with Hamas leadership,” he told Israel ‎Hayom. ‎

According to Lieberman, toppling the Hamas regime ‎remains one of his main objectives, but it will not ‎come as a result of eliminating Hamas leader Ismail ‎Haniyeh—as he once promised to do—but rather as a ‎result of driving a wedge between the Palestinians in ‎Gaza and the terrorist group that rules them.‎

He further dismissed the criticism aimed at him by ‎Habayit Hayehudi leader Naftali Bennett, saying that ‎resuming the operations at the Kerem Shalom cargo ‎crossing was a reward for Hamas. ‎

‎“I took office on June 1, 2016, and instead of one ‎Haniyeh, there are 200 dead Hamas operatives and over ‎‎40 Hamas sites that we have destroyed. They [Hamas] ‎don’t care about human life, but they lament every ‎infrastructure we eliminate,” he said. ‎

The Diplomatic-Security Cabinet was briefed ‎on Wednesday about the progress in the Egyptian efforts to ‎broker a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas.‎

A senior Israeli official denied that an agreement ‎‎with Hamas would exclude the issue of the Israeli ‎‎captives, saying, “There can be no true agreement ‎‎with Hamas without the return of our citizens and ‎‎soldiers, and a guarantee of long-term calm on the ‎‎border.”

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