The National - News

DEADLY DAY FOR ISRAELI ARMY AS 24 ARE KILLED IN ATTACKS

▶ Highest toll of ground offensive as Netanyahu vows to keep fighting

- THOMAS HELM Jerusalem HOLLY JOHNSTON

Israel’s military said yesterday that 21 soldiers were killed in an attack in central Gaza on Monday – its biggest single loss since its ground offensive began.

Three more Israeli troops were killed in southern Gaza the same day, said the military.

Gaza’s Health Ministry said yesterday that 195 Palestinia­ns had been killed in Israeli attacks in the previous 24 hours.

Israeli military spokesman Admiral Daniel Hagari said the troops were killed while they were rigging two buildings with explosives for demolition when a militant fired a rocket-propelled grenade towards them.

The explosion caused the buildings to collapse on top of the soldiers, killing 21.

The other three soldiers were killed in fighting, as Israeli forces intensifie­d an assault on the southern city of Khan Younis.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday had been “one of the most difficult days” since the war began.

“I mourn for our fallen heroic soldiers,” he said. “We must learn the necessary lessons and do everything to preserve the lives of our warriors.

“In the name of our heroes, for our lives, we will not stop fighting until absolute victory.”

The soldiers killed in central Gaza “were removing structures” by laying explosives in two buildings in an area about 600 metres from the border with Israel near Kissufim kibbutz, said Admiral Hagari.

The incident took place at about 4pm local time, he said, when a militant fired an RPG at a nearby Israeli tank.

“The buildings collapsed as a result of this explosion, while most of the soldiers were inside and around the buildings,” he added. “The buildings likely exploded from ordnance that our forces set up there.”

The army released the names of 10 of those killed and said the names of the others would be released later yesterday.

Rescue efforts continued late into the night, involving units from Israel’s special rescue fire service, Israel’s Kan public broadcaste­r reported.

The army said most of the soldiers were reservists from training school and were involved in mine clearance and “securing” Gaza’s border with southern Israel.

Israeli President Isaac Herzog and ministers issued statements mourning the deaths, with some urging no let-up in the fighting.

“An unbearably difficult morning, in which more and more names of the best of our sons are added to the heroes’ tombstone, in a war that has no justice,” Mr Herzog wrote on X.

“The intense battles are taking place in an extremely challengin­g space and we are strengthen­ing the soldiers … and the security forces who are working with endless determinat­ion to realise the goals of the fighting.”

Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said the operations being carried out by the soldiers were vital to Israel’s objectives in Gaza, where more than 25,000 Palestinia­ns have been killed in Israeli strikes in the past three months.

“This is a hard and painful morning. Our hearts are with our precious families during their hardest hour,” Mr Gallant wrote on X. “This war will determine the fate of Israel in the next decades.”

Far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, who

has called for Israel to reoccupy Gaza, said: “It is clearer than ever – the war must not be stopped, the fighting must not be reduced.”

He called on Israel to “mow down” Hamas “with all our might”.

Israel called up about 360,000 reservists after the attack by Hamas on October 7 that killed 1,200 in southern Israel. Tens of thousands of soldiers have been sent to fight in the enclave since then.

Anti-war protests were held in Tel Aviv and Haifa at the weekend as calls grow for the fighting to end. Police dispersed protests outside Mr Netanyahu’s residence in Jerusalem, where relatives of the 130 hostages in Gaza appealed for a greater effort to free them.

Israeli pollster Dahlia Scheindlin said the incident will not change overwhelmi­ng public support for the war in Israel.

“Yes, there are questions about the war aims: whether they’re clear enough and costing too much for Israeli society and in the internatio­nal sphere,” said Ms Scheindlin, who works for think tanks including the Century Foundation.

“But, overwhelmi­ngly, the public supports the continuati­on of the war, with the exception of a few recent demonstrat­ions calling for the release of hostages, and that in itself is ambiguous because only a section of the demonstrat­ors are actually calling for a ceasefire,” she told The National.

“What we’ve found is that even the most extreme situations – particular­ly the three hostages killed by the IDF [in December] – do not seem to put the brakes on public support for the war.

“These kind of events feel like the price Israelis have to pay, and many agree with the government’s line that if the war stops now, these soldiers will have died in vain,” she said.

Meanwhile, the US called for Israel to protect innocent people in hospitals after Israeli forces laid siege on Monday to three health compounds in Gaza’s southern city of Khan Younis.

Washington expects Israel to defend itself “in accordance with internatio­nal law and to protect innocent people in hospitals, medical staff and patients as well, as much as possible”, National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said.

What remained of Gaza’s crumbling health sector came under attack on Monday as thousands of people were trapped in two Khan Younis hospitals, while Israeli troops entered a third and detained members of staff.

Mass graves were dug at Al Nasser Hospital as civilians sheltering inside reported Israeli tanks moving closer to one of the last operating hospitals in Gaza.

At Al Amal Hospital, run by the Palestinia­n Red Crescent, up to 8,000 people were “unable to move” for fear of being shot, a spokeswoma­n for the charity said.

Ambulance workers were also trapped inside and unable to rescue the injured lying in the streets.

Gaza’s Health Ministry said that Israeli troops had also raided Al Khair Hospital and detained staff.

At least 62,000 people have been injured since the war began, the ministry said.

Residents of Khan Younis said Monday’s attacks were the most intense of the war.

Dahlia Scheindlin, an Israeli pollster, says the lack of clarity about war aims does not affect popular opinion

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