The Post

HAMAS TUNNELS SMASHED

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The Israeli military said air strikes destroyed 15km of militant tunnels under Gaza yesterday, claiming that it has taken out 100km of the undergroun­d network in the past week.

Israel said 54 aircraft took part in an operation targeting an elaborate tunnel system it describes at the ‘‘Metro’’ used by militants to move safely and avoid surveillan­ce.

War planes struck 35 other targets, it said, including nine homes belonging to high-level commanders in Hamas, the militant group that has run the besieged enclave since seizing power in 2007.

Israel describes the tunnel network as an undergroun­d city that is enabling Hamas to fight a ‘‘war of attrition’’.

‘‘You’re talking about hundreds of kilometres of tunnels used for various operations, they are used to move commanders and troops undergroun­d, they used to move munitions, rocket, fuel, food, everything,’’ an Israeli military official said.

‘‘This is a war of attrition, the IDF can go with this forever, and they [Hamas] can go on sadly also for a very long time,’’ the official said, using the acronym for the Israel Defence Forces.

In seven days, the Israeli military says it has destroyed over 100km of tunnels in Gaza, a strip of territory 40km long and up to 12km wide.

It was not clear how the military determined the length of destroyed tunnels and its claims could not be independen­tly verified. Hamas tightly controls reporting on its military installati­ons and Israel is currently restrictin­g journalist­s from entering the enclave.

Early on Friday, the Israeli military incorrectl­y alerted the media that a ground invasion of Gaza had begun. While officials later said the erroneous notificati­on was an accident due to the fog of war, Israeli media reported that it was a ‘‘planned ploy’’ aimed at luring Hamas fighters into tunnels and frontline positions, where they could be more effectivel­y targeted in Israeli air strikes.

Afterwards the military said 160 aircraft, alongside tanks, artillery and infantry units stationed on the border had struck 150 targets and ‘‘damaged many kilometres of the Hamas ‘Metro’ network.’’

Hamas has previously offered journalist­s tours of parts of its tunnel network, which was constructe­d in the years since the last Gaza war in 2014.

 ?? AP ?? People inspect the rubble of a destroyed residentia­l building that was hit by an Israeli airstrike, in Gaza City.
AP People inspect the rubble of a destroyed residentia­l building that was hit by an Israeli airstrike, in Gaza City.

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