Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Trump says deaths of three hostages mean there's only 21 still alive



In a world where truth is often the first casualty, President Donald Trump has once again waded into the mire of the Gaza hostage crisis with a pronouncement as stark as it is contentious. 

Speaking to reporters after a tête-à-tête with Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, Trump declared with characteristic bluntness, "They said that only 24 are living, and I now correct... I say 21 because as of today, it's 21. Three have died. So this, this is a terrible situation." No names, no details—just a grim tally, dropped like a stone into the churning waters of public discourse.

Let's hope Trump's wrong this time.

Yet, as is so often the case with such claims, the waters are muddied. Trump’s assertion was swiftly challenged by Gal Hirsch, coordinator for the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, who took to X to set the record straight with the precision of a man who knows the weight of every word. "Currently, 59 hostages are being held by the terrorist organization Hamas," Hirsch wrote. "Twenty-four of them are on the list of living hostages. Thirty-five of them are on the list of deceased hostages, with their deaths officially determined. Fifty-four of the hostages are Israeli citizens. Five of the hostages are foreign nationals." 

His statement is a bulwark against speculation, a reminder that behind every number is a family clinging to hope or grappling with loss.

Trump, undeterred by the fog of uncertainty, pressed on. "We're trying to get the hostages out. We've gotten a lot of them out. As the expression goes, 'there's 21 plus a lot of dead bodies.'" The phrase is vintage Trump—crude, unpolished, honest, and cutting through diplomatic niceties like a scythe. Yet it raises more questions than it answers. Who are these three who have died? And why the discrepancy between Trump’s count and Hirsch’s meticulous accounting?

The plot thickens when we rewind to Trump’s earlier musings, where he suggested the number of living hostages was already "fewer than 24," a figure initially floated by a member of Israel’s hostage negotiation team to The Jerusalem Post. "Out of 59 hostages, 24 are alive - but my understanding now is that that number is even smaller," Trump said, citing what he claimed was the "official number submitted by the coordinator for the hostages and missing to the mediators during the negotiations." 

One needs to wonder if Trump’s sources are as reliable as he believes, or if he is, as ever, playing fast and loose with the facts to shape the narrative.

The drama takes a peculiar turn with a cameo from Sara Netanyahu, wife of Israel’s Prime Minister. Last week, as Benjamin Netanyahu told Israeli media, “There are up to 24 living hostages in Gaza,” Sara leaned in with a whispered correction: “Fewer.” Netanyahu, undaunted, doubled down: “Up to 24 living hostages.” It is a moment that captures the surreal uncertainty of the crisis—a leader’s assertion undercut by a hushed aside, as if the truth were too fragile to be spoken aloud.

What are we to make of this? The numbers shift like sand, the stakes are human lives, and the rhetoric—whether from Trump’s brash podium or Sara’s whispered interjection—only deepens the confusion.

Personally, I believe Trump might be correct or the living souls are between 24 and 21 because it's difficult to imagine a Hamasshole passing the chance to kill a helpless Jew.

Hirsch’s forum, at least, offers a lifeline of clarity, maintaining “continuous contact with all the hostages’ families” and standing ready to provide “updates, clarifications, and hostages’ status reviews.” 

In a world of half-truths and bold claims, their commitment to the families is a rare anchor. But as the numbers dwindle and the debates rage, one thing is clear: the tragedy of Gaza’s hostages remains a wound that no press conference or tweet can heal.

If you enjoy my blog, feel free to toss a virtual coffee my way on Buy Me a Coffee – it’s like a high-five with caffeine, and coffee keeps me focused. No pressure, it's your call. 

No comments:

Post a Comment

ICE sweeps up the trash: child abusers, drug traffickers, in Minneapolis: 1,000 more agents set to deploy

ICE agents made another solid haul of criminal illegal immigrants in Minneapolis over the weekend, including some truly vile specimens like...