Israel’s western allies are warning it against expanding its military operations to southern Gaza, after Palestinians in the city of Khan Younis found thousands of leaflets from the Israeli army telling them to flee their homes.
Nearly a million Gazans have fled south as Israel’s ground troops widened their invasion of the blockaded enclave, including by raiding Gaza’s largest hospital. Periodic air strikes in southern Gaza have killed several people, but the bulk of Israel’s ground troops and aerial bombardments have focused on Gaza City, north of the Israel-ordered evacuation line.
Several western and Israeli officials told the Financial Times that Israel now believes that Hamas’ leadership is in southern Gaza. The leaflets, which the Israel Defense Forces declined to comment on, said it planned military operations in four heavily populated neighbourhoods east of Khan Younis.
“For your safety you have to evacuate your places of residence and head to the known shelters,” said a copy of the leaflet posted on social media. “Whoever is present near terrorists or their installations will be exposing their life to danger.”
The scale and intensity of Israel’s growing ground invasion had caused concern, one western official said, despite consistent support for Israel’s right to defend itself. “I don’t think anybody meant that this requires ground operations of such a scope,” the official said. “There are many different options to achieve the objective of destroying Hamas, whatever that means.”
“Now first of all, we are seeing strikes in the south,” the official said. “And second . . . operations in Khan Younis can be incredibly difficult [and] destructive.”
The neighbourhoods mentioned are in eastern Khan Younis — south of the Israeli-imposed evacuation line — and were home to at least 100,000 residents before the war. Those numbers have swollen as many Gazans fled south to escape the fighting in the north, also under Israel’s orders.
The leaflets were dropped after US President Joe Biden signalled that the US had not given Israel a timeframe to conclude its campaign against Hamas, despite mounting pressure from international allies, officials in his administration and members of the Democratic party to press Israel to rein in its operation.
Biden said on Wednesday night that Israel’s war against the Islamist militant group would end “when Hamas no longer maintains the capacity to murder, abuse and just do horrific things” to Israel.
“How long it’s going to last, I don’t know,” Biden said after meeting his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping outside San Francisco.
Hours after the Israeli military raided al-Shifa hospital, the largest healthcare facility in the Gaza Strip, the UN Security Council passed a resolution calling for urgent and extended humanitarian pauses “for a sufficient number of days” to allow aid to enter the besieged enclave. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vehemently opposed proposals for a pause in fighting.
The US, UK and Russia abstained, after Moscow tried to change the language to call for a ceasefire. Gilad Erdan, Israel’s envoy to the UN, said on social media that the security council resolution was “disconnected from reality and is meaningless”. “Israel will continue to act until Hamas is destroyed and the hostages are returned,” he added.
Israel declared war against Hamas after the group launched an attack from Gaza on October 7 that killed 1,200 people across southern Israel, according to Israeli officials. It has vowed to oust the armed group from the Palestinian territory.
The assault on Gaza has killed more than 11,000 people, according to Palestinian officials, and hospitals have gradually ceased operating as Israeli forces have advanced deeper into the coastal enclave and restricted shipments of fuel, water and food. Health officials have been unable to update death tolls since the weekend, and say at least 3,000 people are still buried under the rubble.
Israel’s military entered al-Shifa this week in what it called a “targeted” operation to find Hamas’s weapons and infrastructure. The raid was continuing on Thursday, according to two Palestinians, who said Israeli forces were surrounding the hospital and preventing people from leaving.
Doctors and patients sheltered on higher floors while soldiers inspected the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) department, detained several Palestinians and took several away for further questioning, some with visible bruises and wounds, said two people at the hospital.
In a video released by the IDF late on Wednesday, the army displayed roughly a dozen AK-47 rifles, a handful of grenades and radios, and a laptop displaying a picture of a hostage as evidence of the hospital being a major command and control headquarters of Hamas. It also showed a spindle of CD-ROMs that it said would be analysed. Such discs are commonly used to transfer the results of MRIs at al-Shifa.
More raids are expected to investigate the rest of the hospital. Israel contends that the hospital sits on top of an underground tunnel network housing Hamas command centres. Hamas has denied the claims, describing them as an Israeli excuse to take over the hospital.
“One thing has been established . . . Hamas does have headquarters, weapons, material below this hospital and I suspect others,” Biden said, referring to al-Shifa.
Biden drew a distinction between Hamas, which he said had vowed to attack Israel “again and again”, and the IDF, which he said was acting with deliberation.
“The IDF . . . acknowledges they have an obligation to use as much caution as they can in going after their targets, it’s not like they’re rushing into the hospital knocking down doors and pulling people aside and shooting people indiscriminately,” Biden said.
The Palestinians described a short gunfight at the hospital’s entrance as Israeli troops began their raid on Tuesday night. Armoured personnel carriers then demolished a wall to allow Israeli soldiers into the compound, they added.
The US president also indicated there was progress in talks between Qatar, Hamas, Israel and others to release some of the hostages held by Hamas, which according to Israel number more than 200.
Biden suggested Israel had already agreed to a pause in the fighting as part of that effort, but backtracked and said he was “getting into too much detail”. “I am mildly hopeful,” he added.
While Israel has agreed to pauses of several hours each day, Washington is pressing to extend them to a few days in order to allow more humanitarian assistance to enter the besieged strip and hostages to leave.
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