Lodi News-Sentinel

Israeli warning on Hamas tunnels means months of destructio­n

- Antony Sguazzin

Israel’s military said its mission to destroy an estimated 500 kilometers (311 miles) of Hamas tunnels across the Gaza Strip will take months, causing a scale of urban destructio­n that may prove impossible to reverse.

The devastatin­g outcome of a drawn-out campaign against the militant group — with air strikes and ground battles continuing alongside the tunnel attacks — is likely to leave many of about 2.2 million Palestinia­ns homeless and a question mark over where they can be re-housed.

In Beit Hanoun, a town of more than 50,000 people in the northern Gaza Strip, a 41 kilometer-long Mediterran­ean enclave run by Hamas, the Israeli military has set about blowing up almost 100 shafts and several dozen tunnels, said Lieutenant Colonel Amit, who is overseeing their destructio­n and withheld his surname in line with army rules.

Beit Hanoun was among the places from which Hamas launched its surprise attack on Israel that killed about 1,200 people on Oct. 7, triggering the ongoing counter-invasion. Hamas is designated a terrorist organizati­on by the U.S. and European Union.

“The way it is now it’s not livable,” Amit said of the town in a briefing near Gaza at the Tze’elim military base, where his 252nd Reserve Division is based. “This is not beautiful what we’re doing. There is nothing nice about wars but this is necessary.”

The destructio­n of tunnels is advancing Israel’s stated aim of dismantlin­g Hamas infrastruc­ture so the group can’t repeat its deadly Oct. 7 assault. At the same time, reducing much of Gaza to rubble — which Hamas-run authoritie­s say has killed at least 16,000 people to date, mostly civilians — is raising internatio­nal concerns, including in the U.S.

The inhabitant­s of Gaza have been driven south by the fighting, but Israel’s campaign has started to move in the same direction. The United Nations has warned that civilians have run out of safe harbors and may need to be displaced into neighborin­g countries.

The situation is “fast deteriorat­ing into a catastroph­e,” U.N. chief Antonio Guterres said Wednesday, dramatical­ly escalating his call for a cease-fire.

The tunnels, which are used by Hamas to move its militants from one place to another and to store weapons, are mostly located in densely populated areas, Amit said, using a map to illustrate.

Many are booby trapped, as are houses and roads, meaning that heavy de-mining equipment such as bulldozers are needed, increasing the extent of the damage. In a presentati­on, the military showed photograph­s and videos of rockets, grenades and Kalashniko­v automatic rifles it said were found stashed in homes, schools and hospitals. 10-Story Building

“Our goal is to hurt Hamas and destroy Hamas as a political and military organizati­on but you can see that these shafts are under normal people’s homes,” Amit said, with his talk occasional­ly punctuated by the roar of fighter jets heading toward Gaza.

The military has so far discovered 800 tunnels across Gaza and destroyed 500 of them, with Beit Hanoun an area of particular focus. Now virtually all the inhabitant­s have fled the town, of which little is left. Amit is a reservist whose civilian work is in urban renewal, though he says he’s now doing the opposite.

Some of the shafts are 30 meters (98 feet) deep, equivalent to the height of a 10-story building. Destroying them is a painstakin­g process with a considerab­le amount of explosives required to break down the concrete walls and blast-resistant doors.

Hamas has been building the tunnels since 2008 and “it will take months,” he said. “We will be able to destroy Hamas as a functionin­g organizati­on and then the infrastruc­ture will take time.”

Israel has yet to show it has a plan for Gaza after the war. Key allies such as the U.S. have expressed concern about the absence of a longterm strategy, as have key Arab nations.

Yet for now, the military isn’t letting up on pursuing its goals for the territory — regardless of the damage caused.

“For Gaza to be demilitari­zed, there is only one force that can see to this demilitari­zation — and that force is the Israel Defense Forces,” Benjamin Netanyahu, the country’s prime minister, said on Dec. 5. “I am not prepared to close my eyes and accept any other arrangemen­t.”

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 ?? SAID KHATIB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? People gather around a crater among destroyed buildings in the aftermath of an overnight Israeli bombing in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Dec. 3.
SAID KHATIB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES People gather around a crater among destroyed buildings in the aftermath of an overnight Israeli bombing in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Dec. 3.

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