Israeli Military Says Combat in Part of North Gaza Is Over

Israeli Military Says Combat in Part of North Gaza Is Over
Israeli army armoured vehicles operate near the border with the Gaza Strip on May 30, 2024. Jack Guez/AFP via Getty Images
Reuters
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JERUSALEM—Israeli forces have ended operations in north Gaza’s Jabalia area after days of intense fighting and over 200 airstrikes, while probing further into Rafah in south Gaza, targeting what they say is the last major redoubt of Hamas terrorist battalions.

Israeli troops found caches of rocket launchers and other weapons, as well as Hamas tunnel shafts in the center of Rafah, the military said on Friday, pressing an offensive to break up terrorist units it says are hunkered down in the city on the border with Egypt.

In an update on more than two weeks of fierce fighting in Jabalia, the Israeli military said troops had completed their operation and withdrawn to prepare for other operations in Gaza.

During the operation, troops recovered the bodies of seven of the 250 hostages Hamas-led terrorists abducted when they stormed over the border into Israel on Oct. 7 last year and killed around 1,200 people, according to Israeli tallies.

Since then the Hamas-run health ministry says over 35,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s war in Gaza, but it does not distinguish between combatants and citizens.

Israel will not agree to any halt in fighting that is not part of a deal that includes the return of surviving hostages, a senior Israeli security official said on Friday. Hamas had said on Thursday that it would be ready for an accord, including an exchange of hostages for Palestinian prisoners held in Israel, as long as the Israelis stopped the war.

In Jabalia, a crowded urban district, Hamas turned the “civilian area into a fortified combat compound,” the Israeli military statement said.

It said Israeli troops killed hundreds of terrorists in close-quarter combat and seized large caches of weaponry and destroyed rocket launchers primed for use.

Underground, Israeli forces disabled a weapons-filled tunnel network extending over 10 km (6.2 miles) and killed Hamas’s district battalion commander, it said.

Israel has blamed what it calls Hamas’s deliberate embedding of combatants in residential areas for the high civilian toll in the war. Hamas has denied using civilians as human shields.

Jabalia has been battered by intense combat for weeks, underscoring Israel’s difficulty in destroying Hamas units.

There were weeks of heavy fighting in Jabalia in the early stages of the Israeli campaign and in January, the military said it had killed all the Hamas commanders and eliminated the combat formations of Gaza’s ruling group in the area.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken urged Israel on Wednesday to come up with a post-war plan for Gaza, warning that without one, further military gains might not be durable, and lawlessness, chaos and a Hamas comeback could ensue.

Palestinians transport their belongings as they flee the area of Tel al-Sultan in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on May 30, 2024. (Eyad Baba/AFP via Getty Images)
Palestinians transport their belongings as they flee the area of Tel al-Sultan in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on May 30, 2024. Eyad Baba/AFP via Getty Images

Rafah Fighting

Israeli tanks rumbled into the center of Rafah on Tuesday as part of a series of probing operations around the area that has become one of the main focal points of the war in Gaza.

The army said it had come across longer-range rockets as well as stocks of rocket-propelled grenades, explosives, and ammunition as it continued “intelligence-based operational activities” in Rafah, which skirts Gaza’s border with Egypt.

Hamas launched rockets at Tel Aviv for the first time in months on Sunday.

Islamic Jihad, Hamas’s smaller terrorist ally, said on Friday it fired a barrage of mortar bombs at Israeli soldiers and vehicles penetrating the vicinity of Salah al-Din Gate on Rafah’s southern fringes. It gave no more details.

Rafah, the only major city in Gaza yet to have been taken by Israeli forces, had been a refuge for more than one million Palestinians driven from their homes by fighting in other areas of the small coastal enclave, but most have now left after being told to evacuate ahead of the Israeli operation.

Israel has signaled for weeks that it intended to mount an assault on the remaining Hamas battalions in Rafah, drawing international condemnation and warnings even from allies like the United States not to attack the city while it remained full of displaced people.

As the war has dragged on and Gaza’s infrastructure has been widely demolished, the United Nations has warned of a famine.