Sunday, October 29, 2023

Israel sends elite troops into Gaza Strip for ‘long war’

James Rothwell




Israel said its best soldiers were fighting Hamas inside the Gaza Strip on Saturday night, as Benjamin Netanyahu declared that the “second stage” of a long war against the terror group had begun.

Israel’s forces fought fierce street battles against Hamas in northern Gaza using tanks and infantry, with Lt Gen Herzi Halevi, the chief of the general staff of the Israel Defense Forces, saying his troops had killed “hundreds” of terrorists.

Mr Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, said Israel’s campaign to “abolish evil” was “only just beginning”.

“This is a war with multiple stages, today we move to the next one,” Lt Gen Halevi said on Saturday. “The objectives of this war require a ground operation – the best soldiers are now operating in Gaza.”

A larger Israeli military operation against Hamas had been anticipated since it pledged to destroy the group in the wake of the Oct 7 attacks, but it appeared to have been delayed amid fears of a wider regional war involving Iran and its Middle East proxies.

The prime minister and military leaders stopped short of calling the country’s expanded ground offensive in Gaza an invasion, even as they confirmed that troops would remain in the coastal enclave.

Earlier on Saturday, the Israeli military dropped leaflets across Gaza City, which before the war had a population of half a million people, warning civilians to evacuate because it had become “a battlefield”.


As Israeli leaders braced for a regional escalation, Eli Cohen, the foreign minister, confirmed that he had recalled diplomats from Turkey, which has been a strong critic of the war on Hamas in Gaza because of the heavy loss of civilian lives.

At a rally in Istanbul earlier on Saturday, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish president, likened Israel’s assault on Gaza to the Holocaust and took aim at the country’s Western backers.

“The main culprit behind the massacre unfolding in Gaza is the West,” he told a crowd of hundreds of thousands of supporters.

Israel was facing mounting criticism over the assault from Gulf neighbours, including Saudi Arabia, which before the war had been considering a historic normalisation treaty.

In Egypt, the foreign ministry warned Israel that there would be “grave risks” and “unprecedented humanitarian and security repercussions” if it continued with the ground offensive.

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