Conflicts between parties and Israeli officials following the ceasefire

Some media outlets say that the far-right party of Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has made staying in the cabinet conditional on the resumption of the war after the end of the first phase of the ceasefire agreement. The extremist factions of Netanyahu's cabinet hope to stop this agreement.
Israeli media reported that Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will meet again with the aim of reducing differences over the Gaza ceasefire agreement.
The Israeli Radio and Television Authority, citing sources, said that there are issues between Netanyahu and Smotrich that have not yet been resolved.
The Israeli Channel 12 television reported that this will be their sixth meeting in the past 36 hours.
Smotrich, who opposes the Gaza ceasefire, has asked Benjamin Netanyahu for written guarantees about the resumption of the war after the first phase of the agreement.
Itamar Ben-Gvir, the hardline Minister of Internal Security of the Israeli cabinet, announced in a statement on Thursday night: "This agreement [the ceasefire with Gaza] is shameful and incomplete, and we in the Jewish Greatness Party will submit our resignation."
The Israeli Minister of Internal Security also added: "This agreement destroys all achievements and eliminates the remaining hostages."
The departure of Smotrich and Ben-Gvir 's parties from the coalition could lead to the collapse of Netanyahu's government, which needs at least 61 seats in the Israeli parliament to remain in power.
While Ben-Gvir alone, with six seats, lacks the leverage to topple the government, a united front with Smotrich, who has eight seats, could bring Netanyahu's coalition to its knees.
Ben-Gvir said: "If this deal is approved, we will resign from the government. We are ready to pay a heavy price for the release of our hostages, but the proposed conditions go beyond what we expected." He added: "Adherence to the goals of the war is what will bring back our hostages."
By posting a video on social media, Ben-Gvir called on Bezalel Smotrich, the regime's finance minister and his coalition partner in the cabinet, to stand by him in this position and resign from the cabinet if the ceasefire agreement is finalized.
He, who seemed extremely angry, told Smotrich to go to the Prime Minister (Benjamin Netanyahu) and tell him that if he signs this agreement, we will resign from the cabinet.
The "Otzma Judaism" party led by Ben-Gvir and "Religious Zionism" led by Smotrich have entered the Knesset (Israeli parliament) as a single list, but the two parties are separate, and Smotrich had previously announced his opposition to the ceasefire agreement, but unlike Ben-Gvir, he had not threatened to overthrow the cabinet.
Experts on Israeli affairs believe that Smotrich will not accept Ben-Gvir 's request because dissolving the cabinet is not in his favor and the poll results do not give him any hope of obtaining a quorum, and as a result, if he leaves the Knesset, it will be difficult to return to it.