logo
Gaza City the initial focus of takeover plan approved against recommendations of the Israeli military

Gaza City the initial focus of takeover plan approved against recommendations of the Israeli military

NZ Herald14 hours ago
It is likely to take the military days, at least, to call up reserve forces, carry out troop deployments for a push into Gaza City and allow time for the forced evacuation of tens of thousands of Palestinians from the new areas of combat.
The Cabinet also approved five principles for ending the war, including:
Disarming of Hamas;
Return of all 50 hostages, 20 of whom are believed to be alive;
Demilitarisation of Gaza;
Israeli security control over the enclave;
Establishment of an alternative civilian administration there that involves neither Hamas nor the Palestinian Authority, the rival, Western-backed body that exercises limited control in parts of the occupied West Bank.
The Israeli military has said that it has already conquered about 75% of Gaza. The coastal strip stretching from Gaza City in the north to Khan Younis in the south is the main area outside Israeli control.
Many of the two million Palestinians in Gaza, including those displaced from their homes in the territory, have squeezed into tents, makeshift shelters and apartments in those areas.
Cartons of humanitarian aid are dropped by parachute from a plane flying over Gaza City today. Photo / Saher Alghorra, The New York Times
Netanyahu said earlier that Israel planned to take control of all of Gaza, bucking the advice of the Israeli military and warnings that expanding operations could endanger the hostages being held there and kill more Palestinian civilians.
He made the comments in an interview with Fox News before the security Cabinet meeting.
They came as talks to achieve a ceasefire and the release of the hostages have hit an impasse, with Israeli and Hamas officials blaming each other for the deadlock.
When asked whether Israel would take over all of Gaza, he responded: 'We intend to'.
Netanyahu said the move would 'assure our security', remove Hamas from power and enable the transfer of the civilian administration of Gaza to another party.
'We want to liberate ourselves and the people of Gaza from the awful terror of Hamas,' he said in an excerpt from the interview, without providing details on any planned operation.
The Prime Minister, however, suggested Israel was not interested in maintaining permanent control over the entire enclave.
'We don't want to keep it,' he added. 'We don't want to govern it. We don't want to be there as a governing body. We want to hand it over to Arab forces.'
In the excerpt published by Fox News, Netanyahu offered few specifics about his plan.
Some analysts have said that he has threatened to widen the offensive to compel Hamas to offer concessions in the ceasefire negotiations.
Hamas, in a statement today, said Netanyahu's comments 'represent a clear reversal of the course of negotiations and clearly reveal the true motives behind his withdrawal from the final round'.
Israel's expansion of military action would also be in defiance of many other countries urging an end to the nearly two-year war in Gaza.
In recent weeks, Israel has come under growing pressure from some long-standing allies to do more to address a hunger crisis in the enclave.
The Israeli military's Chief of Staff, Lieutenant-General Eyal Zamir, has pushed back against the plan, according to four Israeli security officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive issues.
He has shared concerns about the exhaustion and fitness of reservists and about the military becoming responsible for governing millions of Palestinians, they said.
The military leadership would prefer a new ceasefire instead of ramping up fighting, according to three of the officials.
A majority of the ministers believed that the alternative proposals put forward by the military would not result in the defeat of Hamas or the release of the hostages, according to the statement from Netanyahu's office.
In earlier stages of the war, Netanyahu and the Israeli military clashed about strategy.
The latest episode appeared to be the most significant showdown since the Government appointed Zamir in February.
At the time, members of the governing coalition hoped that he would be more closely aligned with their approach than his predecessor. In recent days, however, he has been criticised by some supporters of the Government.
The Israeli military released comments made by Zamir today in which he said 'the culture of debate' was 'a vital component of the IDF's overall culture — both internally and externally', referring to the Israel Defence Forces.
'We will continue to express our position without fear,' he added. 'That is the expectation we have of our commanders as well. The responsibility lies here, at this very table.'
The military believes it could seize the remaining parts of Gaza within months, but setting up a system similar to the one it oversees in the Israeli-occupied West Bank would require up to five years of sustained combat, three of the security officials said.
Earlier this week Netanyahu's office said in a statement that the Israeli military would carry out any decision made by the security cabinet.
Palestinians collect humanitarian aid that was dropped by parachute from planes flying over Gaza City today. Photo / Saher Alghorra, The New York Times
Members of Israel's opposition and the families of the hostages held by Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad in Gaza have cautioned against expanding the military operation.
'Conquering Gaza is a bad operational idea, a bad moral idea, and a bad economic idea,' Yair Lapid, the leader of the parliamentary opposition, told reporters yesterday after a meeting with Netanyahu.
The families of hostages worry that extending Israeli control could lead the military to inadvertently kill their loved ones or Hamas to execute them.
About 250 people were taken hostage during the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on Israel, and more than three dozen hostages have been killed while in captivity, according to an investigation by the New York Times.
Israeli authorities have said that up to 20 hostages in Gaza are believed to be alive. The bodies of 30 others, they say, are also being held in the territory.
'Hamas is a brutal terrorist organisation, and they'll kill hostages if the military comes near them,' said Elhanan Danino, whose son, Ori, was killed by his captors a year ago when Israeli soldiers were operating near a tunnel in southern Gaza in which he was being held.
'Every moment they are being held there — being starved — puts their lives at risk,' Danino added. 'I don't want to see other hostages die the same way our son did.'
For Palestinian civilians, the possibility that Israel could escalate its operation has heightened fears that many more residents could be killed and that their already miserable living conditions in Gaza could become worse.
'They're talking about occupying areas that are packed with so many people,' said Mukhlis al-Masri, 34, who was forced to leave his home in northern Gaza and is now in Khan Younis.
'If they do that, there will be incalculable killing. The situation will be more dangerous than anyone can imagine.'
On Monday, al-Masri said that his brother, brother-in-law and four nephews and nieces had been killed and that his sister had been seriously wounded when a school-turned-shelter was bombed in Khan Younis.
He said that he was staying in a tent near Al-Nasr Hospital in the city to be near his sister, who is in the intensive care unit there.
The Israeli military asked for more information about the bombing but did not provide further comment.
The military has said that its strikes target militants and their weapons infrastructure in Gaza and has stressed that Hamas has embedded itself in civilian spaces.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
Written by: Adam Rasgon, Natan Odenheimer, Ronen Bergman and Isabel Kershner
Photographs by: Saher Alghorra
©2025 THE NEW YORK TIMES
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israel's plan to ‘take control' of Gaza City sparks wave of criticism
Israel's plan to ‘take control' of Gaza City sparks wave of criticism

NZ Herald

time34 minutes ago

  • NZ Herald

Israel's plan to ‘take control' of Gaza City sparks wave of criticism

Netanyahu, in a post on X, said, 'We are not going to occupy Gaza – we are going to free Gaza from Hamas." Buildings destroyed in Israeli strikes surround makeshift shelters for displaced Palestinians in Gaza City. Photo / Bashar Taleb, AFP He said that the territory's demilitarisation and the establishment of 'a peaceful civilian administration... will help free our hostages' and prevent future threats. Israel occupied Gaza from 1967, but withdrew its troops and settlers in 2005. Netanyahu's office said the cabinet had adopted 'five principles', including Gaza's demilitarisation and 'the establishment of an alternative civil administration that is neither Hamas nor the Palestinian Authority'. The plan triggered swift criticism from across the globe, with China, Turkey, Britain and numerous Arab governments issuing statements of concern. United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres called the Israeli plan a 'dangerous escalation' that risks 'deepening the already catastrophic consequences for millions of Palestinians'. Three diplomatic sources told AFP that the UN Security Council will meet on Saturday to discuss the plan. 'March of recklessness' Announcing the suspension of military shipments to Israel, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said it was 'increasingly difficult to understand' how the new plan would help achieve legitimate aims. In Israel, there were mixed reactions to the cabinet's decision, while Defence Minister Israel Katz said the military had already begun preparing for its implementation. The main campaign group for hostages' families also slammed the plan, saying it amounted to 'abandoning' the captives. 'The cabinet chose last night to embark on another march of recklessness, on the backs of the hostages, the soldiers, and Israeli society as a whole,' the Hostage and Missing Families Forum said. A young boy stands next to his bicycle as Palestinians check the devastation following an Israeli strike that hit Gaza City's southern al-Zeitoun neighbourhood. Photo / Bashar Taleb, AFP Out of 251 hostages captured during Hamas' 2023 attack, 49 are still being held in Gaza, including 27 the military says are dead. An expanded Israeli offensive could see ground troops operate in densely populated areas where hostages are believed to be held, local media have reported. Some Israelis, meanwhile, offered their support. 'As they take control of Gaza, they will eliminate Hamas completely – maybe not completely, but at least a good percentage of them,' said Chaim Klein, a 26-year-old yeshiva student. The Israeli army said last month that it controlled 75% of the Gaza Strip. 'We are human beings' Gaza residents said they feared further displacement and attacks as they braced for the next onslaught. 'They tell us to go south, then back north, and now they want to send us south again. We are human beings, but no one hears us or sees us,' Maysa al-Shanti, a 52-year-old mother of six, told AFP. Hamas on Friday said the 'plans to occupy Gaza City and evacuate its residents constitutes a new war crime'. It warned Israel that the operation would 'cost it dearly', and that 'expanding the aggression means sacrificing' the hostages held by militants. International concern has been growing over the suffering of Palestinians in Gaza, where a UN-backed assessment has warned that famine is unfolding. The World Health Organisation said at least 99 people have died from malnutrition in the territory this year, with the figure likely an underestimate. Gaza's civil defence agency said a 19-year-old was seriously injured during the delivery of aid by an airdrop over Gaza City. 'There are daily injuries and fatalities caused by the heavy parcels falling on people's heads in densely populated areas,' said civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal, adding that stampedes and overcrowding at aid drop sites frequently lead to casualties. Bassal said Israeli strikes across Gaza on Friday killed at least 16 people. Israel in recent months has eased some restrictions on aid entering Gaza, but the United Nations says the amount allowed into the territory remains insufficient. Israel's offensive has killed over 61,000 Palestinians, according to Hamas-run Gaza's health ministry. The 2023 attack on Israel resulted in the deaths of 1219 people, according to an AFP tally based on official figures. – Agence France-Presse

Positive Response To Petition To PNCC For Gaza
Positive Response To Petition To PNCC For Gaza

Scoop

timean hour ago

  • Scoop

Positive Response To Petition To PNCC For Gaza

Thyme4Action - Latest News [Page 1] The group has kicked off their initiative with a community petition urging Council to pass resolutions in support of a ceasefire in Gaza and existing international law relating to the illegally occupied Palestinian Territories. More >> Israeli Attack On Gaza Aid Flotilla Is State Piracy, Genocidal Violence — New Zealand's Silence Is Complicity Monday, 9 June 2025, 6:11 pm | Thyme4Action Aid is not terrorism. International waters are not Israel's territory. And silence in the face of evil is complicity. More >>

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store