Cape Argus

Israel set to invade Rafah

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ISRAEL expects to continue full-scale military operations in Gaza for another six to eight weeks as it prepares to mount a ground invasion of the enclave’s southernmo­st city of Rafah, four officials familiar with the strategy said.

Military chiefs believe they can significan­tly damage Hamas’ remaining capabiliti­es in that time, paving the way for a shift to a lower-intensity phase of targeted airstrikes and special forces operations, according to the two Israeli and two regional officials who asked to remain anonymous to speak freely.

There is little chance that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government will heed internatio­nal criticism to call off a Rafah ground assault, said Avi Melamed, a former Israeli intelligen­ce official and a negotiator in the first and second Palestinia­n intifadas, or uprisings, in the 1980s and 2000s.

“Rafah is the last bastion of Hamas control and there remain battalions in Rafah which Israel must dismantle to achieve its goals in this war,” he added.

Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said on Friday that Israel Defense Forces (IDF) were planning operations in Rafah targeting Hamas fighters, command centres and tunnels, though they gave no timeline for the campaign. He stressed that “extraordin­ary measures” were being taken to avoid civilian casualties.

“There were 24 regional battalions in Gaza – we have dismantled 18 of them,” he told a media briefing. “Now, Rafah is the next Hamas centre of gravity.”

World leaders fear a humanitari­an catastroph­e. Trapped between the two sworn enemies are more than a million Palestinia­n civilians crammed into the city on the Egyptian border, with nowhere left to run, after fleeing Israeli attacks that have laid waste to much of the enclave.

In a past week of high diplomatic tension, US President Joe Biden phoned the Israeli leader twice to warn him against launching a military operation in Rafah without a credible plan to ensure the safety of civilians.

Netanyahu himself said civilians would be allowed to leave the battle zone before the offensive, even as he vowed “complete victory”.

The IDF hasn’t explained how it will move more than a million people within the ruins of the enclave.

According to one Israeli security source and an internatio­nal aid official, who asked not to be identified, Gazans could be screened to weed out any Hamas fighters before being sent northwards. A separate Israeli source said Israel could also build a floating jetty north of Rafah to enable internatio­nal aid and hospital ships to arrive by sea.

Nonetheles­s, an Israeli defence official said Palestinia­ns wouldn’t be allowed to return to north Gaza en masse, leaving scrubland around Rafah as an option for makeshift tent cities. The regional officials also said it wouldn’t be safe to move a large number of people into a northern zone with no power and running water which hasn’t been cleared of unexploded ordinance.

Washington is sceptical Israel has made sufficient preparatio­ns for a secure civilian evacuation, several officials familiar with the conversati­ons between the two government­s said.

Biden said on Friday he didn’t expect a “massive” Israeli ground invasion to happen soon. Furthermor­e, according to Hamas, the total victory promised by Netanyahu won’t be quick or easy.

A Hamas official based in Qatar told Reuters the group estimated it had lost 6 000 fighters during the fourmonth-old conflict, half the 12 000 Israel says it has killed.

Gaza’s ruling group can keep fighting and is prepared for a long war in Rafah and Gaza, said the official, who requested anonymity.

Hamas triggered the conflict on October 7 last year when its fighters burst out of the Gaza Strip into southern Israel, killing 1 200 people and seizing 253 hostages. The surprise attack prompted a massive retaliator­y Israeli bombardmen­t and ground invasion that have killed more than 28 000 Palestinia­ns.

Much of Gaza has been reduced to rubble by Israel. Fighting continues in the southern city of Khan Younis, with sporadic clashes still breaking out in northern areas supposedly cleared.

More than 85% of Gaza’s 2.3 million inhabitant­s have been left homeless. Most of the displaced have sought shelter in Rafah, which had a pre-war population of about 300 000.

Egypt has sealed off its border to the enclave. Cairo has framed its opposition to the displaceme­nt of Palestinia­ns from Gaza as part of wider Arab rejection of any repeat of the “Nakba”, or “catastroph­e”, when 700 000 Palestinia­ns fled or were forced from their homes during the 1948 war that accompanie­d Israel’s creation.

Egypt is nonetheles­s preparing an area at the border that could accommodat­e Palestinia­ns, as a contingenc­y should an Israeli offensive into Rafah prompt an exodus across the frontier, three security sources in Egypt told Reuters, declining to be named.

The Egyptian government denied making any such preparatio­ns.

Israeli Defence Minister Gallant said Israel had no intention of evacuating Palestinia­n civilians to Egypt.

Melamed, the former Israeli intelligen­ce official and negotiator, said the only potential delay to the Israeli assault on Rafah could come should Hamas give ground in hostage negotiatio­ns and hand over the prisoners it took on October 7. “Even that would only delay the advance on Rafah unless it is coupled with the demilitari­sation of the city and surrender of the Hamas battalions there,” he added.

A senior regional security official said Israel believed some Hamas commanders and hostages were in Rafah.

This month, after weeks of negotiatio­ns, Hamas proposed a ceasefire of 4½ months during which it would free all Israeli hostages, Israel would withdraw its troops from Gaza and an agreement would be reached on an end to the war. Netanyahu rejected the offer as “delusional”.

A new round of talks involving America, Egypt, Israel and Qatar on a truce ended without a breakthrou­gh in Cairo last Tuesday.

Senior American officials see securing a deal to release the remaining hostages in exchange for an extended pause in the conflict as the best path to creating space for broader talks, the US sources said. Yet they’re concerned such a deal may not materialis­e in coming weeks and war will continue into the Muslim holy month of Ramadaan in March and April, which could intensify global criticism of Israel’s campaign, they added.

 ?? | Reuters ?? DISPLACED Palestinia­ns, who fled their houses due to Israeli strikes, sit amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, yesterday.
| Reuters DISPLACED Palestinia­ns, who fled their houses due to Israeli strikes, sit amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip, yesterday.

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