[RD] War in Gaza News: Pas de Deux

It seems it is all working out very much as I had feared; the Israeli government has failed to:

A) destroy Hamas
B) persuade Hamas to abandon its objectives of destroying Israel and eliminating the Jews
C) persuade the Palestinian population to reject Hamas.

It has therefore resorted to continuing with the underlying plan to

D) evict the Palestinian population by famine.

I mean, if it was attempting to accomplish A, B and C, then it was by land seizure, mass displacement, control/withholding of food, destruction of infrastructure and punitive military strikes against civilians.

Does that seem reasonable or is it all just preparation to go straight to D?
 
I saw my listed A, B, C and D as logical alternative desires/outcomes.

From the point of view of a rational Israel either might have sufficed.

They started with trying for A by bombing, artillery and tank strikes,
but it turned out, as many had expected, that the embedment of
Hamas within the Palestinian population was indeed robust.

Hamas survival didn't require militarily defeating a powerful Israel
it merely required killing off any Palestinians that'd challenge them.

As for Israel's intentions, a state does not have a single mind and even
single mind leadership can change according to circumstances and events.

I have no doubt that some wanted outcome D from the outset
while others merely saw themselves as signing up for A.

But all that is moot, A, B and C failed; so I deduce the current
game plan is now D (desired by some but not all) all along.


It is a nasty business:

ethnic cleansing v ethnic cleaning

or if you like

genocide via genocide.
 

Israel to expand Gaza military operation with large-scale evacuations​

Israel's defence minister said evacuations would take place from areas where there is fighting

Israel announced a major expansion of military operations in Gaza on Wednesday, saying large areas of the enclave would be seized and added to its security zones, accompanied by large-scale evacuation of population.

Israeli leaders have been encouraged by signs of protest in Gaza against Hamas, the militant group which has controlled the enclave since 2007, and the expanded operation appeared at least partly aimed at increasing civilian pressure on its leaders.

In a statement, Defence Minister Israel Katz said the evacuation would take place from areas where there is fighting, while urging Gazans to eliminate Hamas and return Israeli hostages as the only way to end the war.

The Israeli military had already issued evacuation warnings to Gazans living around the southern city of Rafah and toward the city of Khan Younis, telling them to move to the Al-Mawasi area on the shore, previously designated a humanitarian zone.

Israel's Army Radio said the 36th division, sent to the Southern Command area last month to prepare for operations in Gaza, would take part in the operation.

Katz's statement did not make clear how much land Israel intends to seize.

Israeli forces have already set up a significant buffer zone within Gaza, expanding an area that existed around the edges of the enclave before the war and adding a large security area in the so-called Netzarim corridor through the middle of Gaza.

At the same time, Israeli leaders have said they plan to facilitate voluntary departure of Palestinians from the enclave, after U.S. President Donald Trump called for it to be permanently evacuated and redeveloped as a coastal resort under U.S. control.

Katz's remarks came after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu repeated calls for Hamas to disarm and said the application of military pressure was the best way to get back the remaining 59 hostages.

"I call on the residents of Gaza to act now to eliminate Hamas and return all the kidnapped," Katz said in his statement, which added that the operation would clear the area of militants and their infrastructure.

"This is the only way to end the war," Katz said.

War expands​

Israel resumed air strikes on Gaza last month and sent ground troops back in, after two months of relative calm following the conclusion of a U.S.-backed truce to allow the exchange of hostages held by Hamas for Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails.

Hundreds of Palestinians have been killed since the resumption of the strikes, and Israel has also cut off aid to the enclave, saying much of the material going in was taken by Hamas and used for its own members.

Efforts led by Qatari and Egyptian mediators to get back on track have so far failed to make progress.

As the operation in Gaza has escalated, Israel has also hit targets in southern Lebanon and Syria, with a strike on a Hezbollah commander in the southern suburbs of Beirut on Tuesday that added strain to the fraying ceasefire agreements that had largely halted fighting in January.

In addition, Israeli troops are still carrying out a major operation in the occupied West Bank which the military says is aimed at destroying Iranian-backed militant groups in the area's refugee camps.

Israel invaded Gaza following the devastating attack on communities in southern Israel by thousands of Hamas-led gunmen that killed 1,200 people according to Israeli tallies, and saw 251 taken as hostages into Gaza.

The Israeli campaign has killed more than 50,000 Palestinians and ravaged the Gaza Strip, forcing almost the entire population of 2.3 million from their homes, leaving hundreds of thousands in tents and improvised shelters.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/israel-military-operation-gaza-1.7499723
 
The intentions of Hamas and Israel to each other are very much
the same whether one defines it as ethnic cleansing or genocide.
 
This thread is supposed to be about news about the war in Gaza and also comments
on news, so I am not going down the rabbit hole of arguing on the definitions of words.
 
It's hard not to share the same impression as some here. Beyond the military objectives, it seems obvious that the current situation in Gaza is crossing into collective punishment. The famine risk is not just incidental, it's being used as a weapon. Whether we call it ethnic cleansing or not, the results are visible: displacement, starvation, death.

I find it terrifying how normalized it has become in media and politics to treat civilians as bargaining chips. Even international humanitarian organizations are losing access.

The most chilling part is that when people try to document what's happening, like filmmakers, journalists, or NGOs, they get silenced, harassed, or outright attacked.

And meanwhile, public opinion seems desensitized.
 
Last edited:
Moderator Action: Enough bickering and back to news and one's thoughts on the news. Thanks.
 

Survivor challenges Israeli account of attack on Gaza paramedics​

"I'm the only survivor who saw what happened to my colleagues," Munther Abed says, scrolling through pictures of his fellow paramedics on his phone.

He survived the Israeli attack that killed 15 emergency workers in Gaza by diving to the floor in the back of his ambulance, as his two colleagues in the front were shot in the early hours of 23 March.

"We left the headquarters roughly at dawn," he told one of the BBC's trusted freelance journalists working in Gaza, explaining how the response team from the Palestinian Red Crescent, Gaza's Civil Defence agency and the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (Unrwa) gathered on the edge of the southern city of Rafah after receiving reports of gunfire and wounded people.

"Roughly by 04:30, all Civil Defence vehicles were in place. At 04:40 the first two vehicles went out. At 04:50, the last vehicle arrived. At around 05:00, the agency [UN] car was shot at directly in the street," he says.

The Israeli military says its forces opened fire because the vehicles were moving suspiciously towards soldiers without prior co-ordination and with their lights off. It also claimed that nine Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad operatives were killed in the incident.

Munther challenges that account.

"During day and at night, it's the same thing. External and internal lights are on. Everything tells you it's an ambulance vehicle that belongs to the Palestinian Red Crescent. All lights were on until the vehicle came under direct fire," he says.

After that, he adds, he was pulled from the wreckage by Israeli soldiers, arrested and blindfolded. He claimed he was interrogated over 15 hours, before being released.

The BBC has put his claims to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), but it is yet to respond.

"The IDF did not randomly attack an ambulance," Israel's Foreign Minister Gideon Saar claimed, when questioned at a news conference, echoing the IDF's statements.

"Several uncoordinated vehicles were identified advancing suspiciously toward IDF troops without headlights or emergency signals. IDF troops then opened fire at the suspected vehicles."

He added: "Following an initial assessment, it was determined that the forces had eliminated a Hamas military terrorist, Mohammed Amin Ibrahim Shubaki, who took part in the October 7 massacre, along with eight other terrorists from Hamas and the Islamic Jihad."

Shubaki's name is not on the list of the 15 dead emergency workers - eight of whom were Palestinian Red Crescent medics, six were Civil Defence first responders, and one was an Unrwa staff member.

Israel has not accounted for the whereabouts of Shubaki's body or offered any evidence of the direct threat the emergency workers posed.

Munther rejects Israel's claim that Hamas may have used the ambulances as cover.

"That's utterly untrue. All crews are civilian," he says.

"We don't belong to any militant group. Our main duty is to offer ambulance services and save people's lives. No more, no less".

Gaza's paramedics carried their own colleagues to their funerals earlier this week. There was an outcry of grief along with calls for accountability. One bereaved father told the BBC that his son was killed "in cold blood".

International agencies could only access the area to retrieve their bodies a week after the attack. They were found buried in sand alongside the wrecked ambulances, fire truck and UN vehicle.

Sam Rose, acting director of Unrwa's Gaza office, says: "What we know is that fifteen people lost their lives, that they were buried in shallow graves in a sand berm in the middle of the road, treated with complete indignity and what would appear to be an infringement of international humanitarian law.

"But it's only if we have an investigation, a full and complete investigation, that we'll be able to get to the bottom of it."

Israel is yet to commit to an investigation. According to the UN, at least 1,060 healthcare workers have been killed since the start of the conflict.

"Certainly all ambulance workers, all medics, all humanitarian workers inside Gaza right now feel increasingly insecure, increasingly fragile," Mr Rose says.

One paramedic is still unaccounted for following the 23 March incident.

"They were not just colleagues but friends", Munther says, nervously running prayer beads through his fingers. "We used to eat, drink, laugh and have jokes together... I consider them my second family."

"I will expose the crimes committed by the occupation [Israel] against my colleagues. If I was not the only survivor, who could have told the world what they did to our colleagues, and who would have told their story?"
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckgere1y740o
 

Video footage appears to contradict Israeli account of Gaza medic killings​

Mobile phone footage has emerged that appears to contradict Israel's account of why soldiers opened fire on a convoy of ambulances and a fire truck on March 23, killing 15 rescue workers.

The video, published by the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS), shows the vehicles moving in darkness with headlights and emergency flashing lights switched on - before coming under fire. The PRCS said the video was obtained from the phone of a paramedic who was killed.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) initially denied the vehicles had their headlights or emergency signals on.
But in response to the new video, the IDF told the BBC: "All claims, including the documentation circulating about the incident, will be thoroughly and deeply examined to understand the sequence of events and the handling of the situation".

A surviving paramedic previously told the BBC that the ambulances were clearly marked and had their internal and external lights on.

The latest video, which the PRCS said had been shown to the UN Security Council, shows the marked vehicles drawing to a halt on the edge of the road, lights still flashing, and at least two emergency workers stepping out wearing reflective clothing.

The windscreen of the vehicle being filmed from is cracked and shooting can then be heard lasting for several minutes as the person filming says prayers. He is understood to be one of the dead paramedics.

The footage was found on his phone after his body was recovered from a shallow grave one week after the incident. The bodies of the eight paramedics, six Gaza Civil Defence workers and one UN employee were found buried in sand, along with their wrecked vehicles. It took international organisations days to negotiate safe access to the site.

Israel claimed a number of Hamas and Islamic Jihad militants had been killed in the incident, but it has not provided any evidence or further explained the threat to its troops.

Israel's Foreign Minister Gideon Saar earlier this week echoed the army account, saying "the IDF did not randomly attack an ambulance".

The IDF promised to investigate the circumstances after a surviving paramedic questioned its account.

In an interview with the BBC, paramedic Munther Abed said: "During day and at night, it's the same thing. External and internal lights are on. Everything tells you it's an ambulance vehicle that belongs to the Palestinian Red Crescent. All lights were on until the vehicle came under direct fire."

He also denied he or his team had any militant connections.

"All crews are civilian. We don't belong to any militant group. Our main duty is to offer ambulance services and save people's lives. No more, no less," he said.

Speaking at the United Nations yesterday the President of the PRCS, Dr Younis Al-Khatib, referred to the video recording, saying: "I heard the voice of one of those team members who was killed. His last words before being shot…'forgive me mum, I just wanted to help people. I wanted to save lives'. It's heartbreaking".

He called for "accountability" and "an "independent and thorough investigation" of what he called an "atrocious crime".

One paramedic is still unaccounted for following the 23 March incident.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4g2z103nqxo
 
The BBC showed a video providing irrefutable evidence that Israel's side of the paramedic story is inaccurate. They were caught in a lie.
 
Yeah, criminals aren't exactly known by respecting the truth. Trump, Putin, and Netanyahu are part of the same maffia. Some day they all will seat in the same court bench.
 

Palestinian-American boy killed by Israeli forces in West Bank​

A Palestinian-American teenager has been killed by Israeli forces in the occupied West Bank, Palestinian officials say.

Omar Mohammed Saada Rabea, 14, was shot on the outskirts of Turmus Ayya on Sunday evening along with two other 14-year-old boys, one of whom was seriously wounded. The other suffered minor wounds.

The Israeli military said its troops opened fire at three "terrorists" who were throwing stones towards a highway and endangering civilians driving on it.

The Palestinian foreign ministry condemned what it called the latest in a "series of extrajudicial killings" by Israeli forces.
There was no immediate comment from the US, where Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is due to meet President Donald Trump on Monday to discuss the war in the Gaza Strip, Iran and US tariffs.

There has been a spike in violence in the West Bank since Hamas's deadly attack on Israel on 7 October 2023 and the ensuing war in Gaza.

Hundreds of Palestinians have been killed as Israeli forces have intensified their search-and-arrest raids across the territory, saying they are trying to stem deadly Palestinian attacks on Israelis in the West Bank and Israel.

The mayor of Turmus Ayya said Omar Rabea was shot dead on Sunday near the entrance to the town, which is about 15km (9 miles) north-east of Ramallah and has a sizeable population of Palestinian-Americans.

The Palestinian Red Crescent said one of the two boys was shot in the lower abdomen and the other in the thigh.

AFP news agency cited one of the boys, whom it identified as Abdul Rahman Shehadeh, as saying he was shot by a soldier while collecting fruit.

The father of the third boy, Ayoub Asaad, said he was also a US citizen and that the ambulance transporting him to hospital was stopped by Israeli soldiers at a military checkpoint outside the town, according to AFP.

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said in a statement that during counter-terrorism activity in the Turmus Ayya area its soldiers "identified three terrorists who hurled rocks toward the highway, thus endangering civilians driving".

The soldiers fired towards them, "eliminating one terrorist and hitting two additional terrorists", it added.

The foreign ministry of the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority denounced the "use of live fire against three children" by Israeli forces.

"Israel's continued impunity as an illegal occupying power encourages it to commit further crimes," it warned.

Last Thursday, the UN human rights chief said the situation in the West Bank was "extremely alarming".

Volker Türk told the UN Security Council that Israeli operations in the north had killed hundreds of people, destroyed entire refugee camps and makeshift medical sites, and displaced more than 40,000 Palestinians.

In January, Israel launched a major operation called "Operation Iron Wall" against Palestinian armed groups in the northern West Bank, saying it aimed to "defeat terrorism".

Türk said his office had verified that Israeli state and settler violence had killed at least 909 Palestinians across the West Bank since 7 October 2023, including 191 children and five people with disabilities. He warned that some of the killings might amount to extrajudicial and other unlawful killings.

Over the same period, 51 Israelis, including 15 women and four children, had been killed in Palestinian attacks or armed clashes in the West Bank and Israel, he said.

Israel has built about 160 settlements housing some 700,000 Jews since it occupied the West Bank in the 1967 Middle East war. The settlements are considered illegal under international law, although Israel disputes this.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c99pnvmp3kmo
 

From razing rubble to blowing up homes: IDF soldiers share how they expanded Gaza buffer zone in new report​

Breaking the Silence report details how perimeter around Gaza expanded at least 1 kilometre into the strip

A new report from Breaking the Silence (BtS), an Israel-based NGO, has compiled testimony from soldiers who detail how they razed plots of land during the war in their mission to expand the buffer zone between Gaza and Israel deeper into the strip.

BtS, which was founded by Israel Defence Forces veterans, has released a report titled The Perimeter: Soldiers' testimonies from the Gaza Buffer Zone 2023-2024, containing information from interviews with dozens of IDF soldiers who served in Gaza and participated in the expansion of the buffer zone, which the report refers to as the perimeter. CBC News was able to speak to one of those soldiers who provided details of the IDF's activities in the area that runs north to south along the border.

Since it was founded in 2004, BtS has published reports based on more than 1,400 accounts from IDF soldiers based on their experiences while serving in Gaza, the West Bank and East Jerusalem since September 2000, in its effort to "expose the public to the reality of everyday life in the Occupied Territories" and "bring an end to the occupation."

In a statement to CBC News, BtS said the creation of the perimeter through "confiscation of land" will cause significant obstacles to reconstruction efforts in the Gaza Strip and "undermines its long-term sustainability." The organization says that statements by Israeli officials, including that the territory would "remain in Israeli hands" and that Palestinians would not be allowed to return, amount to what BtS calls "ethnic cleansing."

BtS is also calling on the Israeli government to return to the negotiating table and seek a diplomatic solution to return the hostages and bring peace to the region.

'A future of no security'​

Israeli forces have maintained a perimeter running north to south along the border between Gaza and Israel since at least the early 2000s. In 2015, the United Nations Humanitarian Agency OCHA noted that the buffer zone extended 300 metres into the strip. Palestinians generally have not been allowed within that distance of the fence separating the two regions.

Since Oct. 7, 2023 — when Hamas-led militants stormed across the Gaza-Israel border, killed over a thousand people and kidnapped 250, according to Israeli tallies — the perimeter has been expanded to at least one kilometre into Gaza, according to IDF soldiers who told BtS about their involvement in the mission to extend it. Though the report does not name the soldiers, it does give their ranks and the general areas and periods they served.

One IDF soldier featured in the report, a warrant officer who served in northern Gaza between January and February 2024, told BtS that the buffer zone would reach as far as 1.5 kilometres into Gaza, civilians would be banned and everything would be razed. When asked what the area would look like after they were through, they replied: "Hiroshima. That's what I'm saying, Hiroshima."

"This is a policy by the current Israeli government, which leads us to a future of no security," Joel Carmel, the advocacy director at BtS, told CBC News in a video call.

Carmel says Israel's ongoing push to extend the perimeter into Gaza during the war means the expanded zone where Palestinians are not allowed could become a permanent fixture in post-war Gaza, and that Israel is choosing a future for Gaza where "no one can ever come back" to that area.

Recent media reports, some citing Israeli humanitarian organization Gisha, have said that when Israel's expansion of the buffer zone is complete, it will encompass as much as 17 per cent of the Gaza Strip's area.

OCHA says 65 per cent of the enclave is now within "no-go" areas, under active displacement orders or both. Israel has not fully explained its long-term goals for the areas it is now seizing, though Gaza residents say they believe the aim is to permanently depopulate swaths of land, including some of Gaza's last farmland and water infrastructure.

Carmel points to a statement by Israel's Foreign Minister Eli Cohen in October 2023 where he said that "Gaza's territory will shrink" after the war ends.

CBC News reached out to the IDF and Israeli government officials for comment but did not hear back before publication.

In their testimonies to BtS, IDF soldiers who participated in the expansion of the perimeter, detail the destruction left behind and how the perimeter's presence impacts both Palestinian and Israeli societies.

Leaving Gaza as a 'mound of rubble'​

One soldier who spoke to BtS and CBC News served as a sergeant first class in northern Gaza in November 2023. They said that their unit was tasked with blowing up dozens of buildings in the perimeter during their tour in Gaza. Though CBC confirmed the identity of the sergeant, they spoke on the condition that their identity be kept confidential out of fear for their security and livelihood.

According to the sergeant, IDF soldiers were told in a briefing that the areas they were told to destroy were near enough to Israeli settlements and cities that they were a security threat and had to be destroyed. The sergeant told CBC that this was the first time the perimeter was mentioned during their mission.

They began their tour in northern Gaza, an area that was already mostly rubble, where they were tasked with razing abandoned homes and buildings. Soon, they said their mission expanded to blowing up houses in southern Gaza, where they noted there were still signs of life. It was at this point, the sergeant said, questions about the purpose of the mission began to grow in their mind.

"The houses there were not nearly as destroyed as in the north," the sergeant told CBC News over Zoom. "You see the signs of people's lives were there, and their stuff."

The sergeant noted that the reservist training they received didn't cover how to blow up houses. Instead, they said, they were taught how to blow up tunnel entrances and set up mines on bridges and in fields.

"Houses … are not really something we trained for," the sergeant said. "Even the commanders were kind of learning it as we were going."

The sergeant said that when they left Gaza in December 2023, it was a "mound of rubble."

'Everything is destroyed'​

Professor Adi Ben-Nun of the Geography Information Systems department at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem has been tracking the destruction in Gaza and the expansion of the perimeter since the beginning of the war.

He says that before Oct. 7, 2023, there were about 180,000 buildings in Gaza, based on United Nations estimations. He says 120,000 of those buildings were destroyed before the ceasefire was broken in March. Data detailing the destruction since then is not yet available.

He says the agricultural land within the perimeter contained about 3,000 buildings, and that it has all been "completely demolished."

"You must understand that it's not only the building, it's the roads, the electricity, the water structure, the sewage …everything is destroyed," he told CBC News during a video call, where he demonstrated the satellite imagery he used to track the destruction.

Using his computer, Ben-Nun toggled between two satellite images he created using Google maps — one showing the state of the perimeter before Oct. 7, and the other after. The map from before shows green patches of land and buildings. On the map from after, the greyish-beige colour of war emerges; tank tracks and destroyed buildings are all that can be seen.

He says that based on this level of destruction, it would take generations for Gazans to rebuild what has been lost.

"Even if people are allowed to go back home," Ben-Nun said, "there is no home."
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/gaza-idf-soldier-buffer-zone-report-1.7501560
 

World must act now to help Gazans under Israeli blockade, UN chiefs urge​

The heads of six UN agencies have appealed to world leaders to act urgently to make sure food and supplies get to Palestinians in Gaza, where Israel has stopped letting in deliveries for more than a month.

A joint statement said Palestinians were "trapped, bombed and starved again" with supplies "piling up" at crossing points.

Israel has blocked the entry of supplies, including humanitarian aid, since 2 March, after the first stage of a ceasefire expired, demanding Hamas agree to extend that part of the truce. Hamas has refused, accusing Israel of reneging on its commitments.

Israel has said there is enough food in Gaza "for a long period of time", but the agencies said this was not the case.

"The latest ceasefire allowed us to achieve in 60 days what bombs, obstruction and lootings prevented us from doing in 470 days of war: life-saving supplies reaching nearly every part of Gaza," the statement said.

"While this offered a short respite, assertions that there is now enough food to feed all Palestinians in Gaza are far from the reality on the ground, and commodities are running extremely low."

The statement was signed by the heads of the UN's Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA); the UN's children's agency (Unicef); the UN Office for Project Services (UNOPS); the World Food Programme (WFP); and the World Health Organization (WHO).

Because of the blockade, all UN-supported bakeries have closed, markets are empty of most fresh vegetables and hospitals are rationing painkillers and antibiotics.

The statement says that Gaza's "partially functional health system is overwhelmed [and]... Essential medical and trauma supplies are rapidly running out."

"With the tightened Israeli blockade on Gaza now in its second month, we appeal to world leaders to act – firmly, urgently and decisively – to ensure the basic principles of international humanitarian law are upheld.

"Protect civilians. Facilitate aid. Release hostages. Renew a ceasefire."

Under international humanitarian law, Israel is required to ensure that the basic needs of the civilian population under its control are met. The rapid and unimpeded passage of humanitarian assistance must also be allowed and facilitated.

The two-month pause in fighting saw a surge in humanitarian aid let into Gaza, as well as the release by Hamas of 33 hostages - eight of them dead - in exchange for about 1,900 Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.

Israel renewed its aerial bombardment and ground offensive in Gaza on 18 March.

The war was triggered by Hamas's unprecedented attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others taken back to Gaza as hostages.

More than 50,810 Palestinians have been killed in the Israeli offensive since then, according to Gaza's Hamas-run health ministry.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c87p15q8d74o
 

Israel's PM rejects criticism of Gaza war by air force reservists​

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected criticism of the Gaza war by some air force reservists, calling it "unforgivable".

The Israeli military said it would dismiss serving reservists who had signed a letter calling for the return of Israeli hostages to be prioritised over fighting Hamas.

The letter also says the current fighting is politically motivated and will lead to the deaths of the hostages, Israeli soldiers and innocent civilians.

The military said it could not allow serving reservists to engage in political protests.

Israel resumed its air and ground campaign in Gaza last month, saying that military pressure would force Hamas to release the hostages it is still holding.

Israel's military air power, which has been used extensively in Gaza over the past 18 months, relies heavily on reservist pilots.

Most of the 970 signatories of the letter published in Israeli newspapers on Thursday morning are retired. But it is reported that dozens are still active personnel.

The letter does not call for refusal to serve, but it demands "the return of all hostages even at the price of a cessation of hostilities".

"Currently, the war serves mainly political and personal interests, not security interests," it says.

"The continuation of the war does not contribute to any of its declared goals and will lead to the deaths of the hostages, Israeli soldiers and innocent civilians, and to the attrition of the IDF reserve forces."

It adds: "As has been proven in the past, only a deal can bring back the hostages safely."

An IDF spokesperson was quoted by Israeli media as saying that it was unacceptable to "use the Israeli Air Force brand" for a political protest.

"It is inconceivable for someone to do a shift at [the IAF] command centre and head out afterward and express mistrust in the task," they added.

Netanyahu said the letter came from a "radical, marginal group", accusing it of trying to fracture Israeli society from within.

"Refusal to serve is refusal to serve – even if it implied and in polite language," he said.

"Expressions that weaken the IDF and strengthen our enemies in wartime are unforgivable."

He also claimed that the signatories represent "neither the fighters nor the public".

Defence Minister Israel Katz said the letter was an attempt "to undermine the legitimacy" of what he called "the just war".

The latest opinion polls indicate widespread support among the Israeli public for a new ceasefire and hostage release deal.

When the Israel Democracy Institute (IDI) recently asked Israelis which of the state's declared war goals - toppling Hamas or bringing home all the hostages – was more important, 68% said it was the latter.

The Israeli military launched a campaign to destroy Hamas in response to an unprecedented cross-border attack on 7 October 2023, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage.

More than 50,880 people have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory's health ministry.

A ceasefire deal that began in January and lasted two months saw Hamas release 33 Israeli hostages – eight of them dead – and five Thai hostages in exchange for about 1,900 Palestinian prisoners and a surge in humanitarian aid entering Gaza.

Israel resumed its offensive on 18 March, blaming Hamas's refusal to accept a proposal for an extension of the agreement's first phase and the release of more of the 59 hostages it is still holding, up to 24 of whom are believed to be alive.

Hamas accused Israel of violating the original deal, according to which there would be a second phase where all the remaining living hostages would be handed over and the war brought to a permanent end.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c62ggy7vgq3o
 
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