Business Day

IDF suffers heavy casualties, with 24 killed in one day

• The deaths came amid the heaviest fighting of 2024 so far, as Netanyahu remains committed to ‘absolute victory’

- Nidal Al-Mughrabi, Emily Rose and Bassam Masoud Gaza/Jerusalem /Reuters

Twenty-four Israeli soldiers were killed in Israel’s worst day of losses in Gaza, the military said on Tuesday, as it claimed to have encircled southern Gaza’s main city in a major ground assault.

Spokespers­on R-Adm Daniel Hagari said 21 soldiers were killed when two buildings they had mined for demolition exploded after militants fired at a nearby tank. Earlier, three soldiers were reported killed in a separate attack in southern Gaza.

“Yesterday we experience­d one of our most difficult days since the war erupted,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said. “In the name of our heroes, for the sake of our lives, we will not stop fighting until absolute victory.”

The deaths came amid the heaviest fight of 2024 so far, as the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) stormed remaining parts of Khan Younis, the main city in the south of the enclave sheltering hundreds of thousands of displaced Palestinia­ns.

“Over the past day, IDF troops carried out an extensive operation during which they encircled Khan Younis and deepened the operation in the area. The area is a significan­t stronghold of Hamas’ Khan Younis Brigade,” the military said.

“Ground troops engaged in close-quarters combat, directed (air) strikes, and used intelligen­ce to coordinate fire, resulting in the eliminatio­n of dozens of terrorists.”

Gazans say the Israeli forces, advancing west across the crowded city towards the Mediterran­ean coast since Monday, have blockaded and stormed hospitals, leaving the wounded and dead beyond the reach of rescuers.

At least 195 Palestinia­ns were killed in the previous 24 hours, raising the documented toll to 25,490, according to Palestinia­n health officials, who say thousands more dead are feared lost in the rubble. Bodies were being buried in the grounds of Khan Younis’s main Nasser hospital because it was unsafe to go to the cemetery.

Another Khan Younis hospital, al-Khair, was stormed by Israeli troops who arrested staff there, and a third, al-Amal, run by the Palestinia­n Red Crescent, was unreachabl­e, according to Palestinia­n officials. The Red Crescent said a tank shell had hit its headquarte­rs on Amal’s fourth floor, a civilian had been killed at the entrance, and Israeli forces were firing from drones on anyone who moved nearby, making it impossible to dispatch ambulances for the entire Khan Younis area.

Israel says Hamas fighters operate in and around hospitals, making them legitimate targets. Hospital staff and Hamas deny this.

Palestinia­ns celebrated the Israeli losses as a victory, while Israelis spoke of them as a necessary sacrifice in a war against Hamas fighters who attacked Israeli towns on October 7, killing 1,200 people and capturing some 250 hostages, around half of whom remain in Gaza.

“The resistance said it is going to make Gaza a graveyard for the occupation, and this is what is happening,” said Abu Khaled, sheltering in a school in Deir alBalah, one of the few areas yet to be stormed by Israeli forces.

“The more they stay, the more we will suffer for sure — but the more they will suffer too.”

Blina Rhodes, an Israeli woman on the street in Jerusalem, said: “You know, it’s our sons, it’s our brothers, it’s terrible — but we’ve got to do what we’ve got to do so that October 7 doesn’t happen again. You have to get rid of Hamas and make Gaza safe for us. Otherwise, we have no place to live.”

Sami Abu Zuhri, head of the political office of Hamas in exile, said the Israeli losses were proof that the armed wing of Hamas was only getting stronger, and “the American and Israeli goal to get rid of Hamas or weaken it is not possible”.

“We call on the American administra­tion to stop this pointless policy and stop betting on the possibilit­y of weakening or finishing Hamas,” he said by phone from an undisclose­d location.

“Instead, the American administra­tion must recognise the rights of the Palestinia­n people in freedom.”

Israel has vowed to wipe out Hamas, which is sworn to Israel’s destructio­n and has controlled Gaza since 2007. Since Israel launched its ground assault in October, nearly all Gaza’s 2.3-million people have lost their homes, the vast majority now penned into towns just north and south of Khan Younis, many sleeping rough in makeshift tents, with inadequate food, water or medication.

Though the war still has overwhelmi­ng public support in Israel, discontent is emerging with Netanyahu’s strategy — committed to annihilati­on of Hamas but with only vague discussion of what should follow.

Since last week, Netanyahu has publicly vowed never to allow an independen­t Palestinia­n state, disavowing the decades-old bedrock of Middle East policy of Israel’s main ally, Washington.

Relatives of hostages still held in Gaza have called for more effort to bring them home, even if that means reining in the military campaign. Some burst into a parliament­ary committee hearing on Monday.

Last week, a member of Netanyahu’s war cabinet, former military chief-of-staff Gadi Eisenkot, whose own soldier son was killed in Gaza in December, said the campaign had yet to dismantle Hamas and there was no hope of freeing the hostages by force. He called for elections to replace a government he said had lost public confidence.

The conflict has been accompanie­d by an escalation in violence elsewhere in the Middle East where armed groups allied to Israel’s arch-foe Iran operate, including Lebanon, Iraq, Syria and Yemen.

 ?? /Amir Levy/Getty Images ?? Killed in action: Family and friends mourn as they walk behind the coffin during the funeral of Sgt-Maj Matan Lazar.
/Amir Levy/Getty Images Killed in action: Family and friends mourn as they walk behind the coffin during the funeral of Sgt-Maj Matan Lazar.

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