The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Israeli attack has Egypt concerned

Israelis' push farther into southern part of Gaza Strip raises tensions in area

- By Samy Magdy

>> Israel faces a growing risk of damaging its peace with neighborin­g Egypt as its military pushes the offensive against Hamas further south in the Gaza Strip. Already, the two sides are in a dispute over a narrow strip of land between Egypt and Gaza.

Israeli leaders say that to complete their destructio­n of Hamas, they must eventually widen their offensive to Gaza’s southernmo­st town, Rafah, and take control of the Philadelph­i Corridor, a tiny buffer zone on the border with Egypt that is demilitari­zed under the two countries’ 1979 peace accord.

In a news conference last week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Hamas continues to smuggle weapons under the border — a claim Egypt vehemently denies — and that the war cannot end “until we close this breach,” referring to the corridor.

That brought a sharp warning from Egypt that deploying Israeli troops in the zone, known in Egypt as the Salaheddin Corridor, will violate the peace deal.

“Any Israeli move in this direction will lead to a serious threat to Egyptian-israeli relations,” Diaa Rashwan, head of Egypt’s State Informatio­n Service, said Monday.

Egypt’s concerns

Egypt fears that an Israeli attack on Rafah will push a massive wave of Palestinia­ns fleeing across the border into its Sinai Peninsula.

More than 1 million Palestinia­ns — nearly half of Gaza’s population of 2.3 million — are crowded into Rafah and its surroundin­gs on the border, most driven there after fleeing Israeli

bombardmen­t and ground offensives elsewhere in Gaza.

If Israeli troops assault Rafah, they have nowhere to flee. Palestinia­ns have broken through before: In 2008, early in the blockade imposed on Gaza by Israel and Egypt after the Hamas takeover, Hamas blew open the border wall. Thousands of people stormed into Egypt.

Egypt told the Israelis that before any ground assault on Rafah, Israel must let Palestinia­ns return to northern Gaza, a senior Egyptian military official involved in coordinati­on between the two countries told The Associated Press. He spoke on condition of anonymity to talk about the internal discussion­s.

Israel says it has largely driven Hamas out of northern Gaza but is likely to resist allowing Palestinia­ns back in the near term. Israel’s bombardmen­t and ground assault have reduced much of the north to rubble, leaving many without homes.

Israel’s dilemma

The dispute puts Israel in a bind. If it stops its offensive without taking Rafah,

it falls short on its top war goal of crushing Hamas. If its military pushes to the border, it risks underminin­g its peace deal with Egypt — a foundation of stability in the Mideast for decades — and upsetting its closest ally, the United States.

Israel and the U.S. are already divided over Gaza’s post-war future. The Israeli military is working to create an informal buffer zone about a kilometer (half a mile) wide inside Gaza along the border with Israel to prevent militants from attacking nearby communitie­s. The U.S. says it opposes any attempt by Israel to shrink Gaza’s territory.

Israel vows to expunge the militants from the entire Gaza Strip and has done so by a strategy of systematic destructio­n, at a huge cost in civilian lives. Starting in north Gaza, it leveled large swaths of the urban landscape, saying it was eliminatin­g Hamas tunnels and infrastruc­ture while battling militants. It is working its way down the territory, doing the same in central Gaza and the southern city of Khan Younis.

Netanyahu has said Israel

intends to keep openended security control over Gaza to ensure Hamas cannot repeat its Oct. 7 attacks that triggered Israel’s assault. He has been vague on what form that would take but said ensuring control over the Philadelph­i Corridor is crucial.

“There are a few options on how we can close it, we are checking all of them, and we haven’t made a decision, except for one thing: It must be closed,” he said.

Egypt warned Israel and the U.S. that any military operations in the zone “could tear apart our peace,” a second Egyptian official said.

Corridor importance

The corridor is a narrow strip — about yards wide in parts — running the8.6mile length of the Gaza side of the border with Egypt. It includes the Rafah crossing into Egypt, Gaza’s sole outlet not controlled by Israel.

The corridor is part of a larger demilitari­zed zone along both sides of the entire Israel-egypt border. Under the peace accord, each side is allowed to deploy only a tiny number of troops or border guards in the zone.

 ?? HATEM ALI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Palestinia­ns displaced by the Israel air and ground offensive on the Gaza Strip take shelter near the border fence with Egypt in Rafah on Wednesday.
HATEM ALI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Palestinia­ns displaced by the Israel air and ground offensive on the Gaza Strip take shelter near the border fence with Egypt in Rafah on Wednesday.

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