with all of the palestinian parties and factions represented in cairo, including lambic jihad and hamas. there's the israeli military no longer on the ground. when we have the ceasefire that took place on friday, the israeli military, during the ceasefire, continued their operations destroying tunnels. now they are outside gaza, and we are hearing that israel believes that its military objectives now have been met. so different circumstances. having said all of that, the tough part really starts now, because both sides want to get something out of these negotiations in cairo. they don't want to return to the status quo. they'll be tough talks. >> if we look beyond the 72 hours, a lasting trurks the demands have been rejected by both sides. >> absolutely, and there'll be very, very tough negotiations. i am sure the plan will be to extend that 72 hours, if the 72 hours holds, and there aren't any violations to extend it, because the talks will take time. the israeli delegation has not left for cairo, they know what has been discussed around the table even though they've not been sitting a