within the terms of the agreement, the leader of hamas in gaza, yayha sinwar, has demanded that the air space above gaza is free of israeli and american drones for at least six hours a day. that was initially resisted by the israeli cabinet. we will see whether it forms part of the agreement. hamas is also demanding fuel, crucial to the disperal of aid, but also to their military operations. it helps with the ventilation of the tunnels underground. the un s director of operations isjorge moreira da silva. we see that infrastructure is collapsing. it s collapsing on health, on water, on sanitation, on education. and we know that one key element to recover is the access to fuel. for several years, since 2018, unops has been the agency that has brought the fuel from israel to gaza. so every day we were bringing, procuring and delivering 500,000 litres of fuel. that was fundamental to increase the access to electricity from five hours a day to 12 hours a day. if you check the fig
obtained in that 22-page statement from him. jenna: what would you want to know? i would want to know everything from the beginning, going back to 2000 because he was among the last of the afghan arabs with bin laden before bin laden gave the disperal order in late 2001. i would like to know his travel routes. how he got into iran, as has been reported. was he under house arrest? was it part of the modus operandi of tehran? communication systems and then contacts with others that he . jenna: why would he tell us any of that? well, with a skilled interview and interrogator that has deep background about his particular case i myself and partners have had terrific success getting that kind of information. a lot of it boils down to motivations, tapping into those motivations. i would think in this his case quid pro quo of cooperation of some kind. jenna: what would that mean though? what would we give up? what kind of cooperation, what stage would we set, if