Analysis
Israeli ground offensive in Gaza faces physical
and political risks
Dan Sabbagh
Defence and security editor
Military has might on its side but Hamas is prepared
and the humanitarian fallout could prove costly
Israel and
Hamas at war – live updates
Sat 14 Oct
2023 11.00 BST
Israel is
poised to launch a ground offensive into the northern half of Gaza, an attack that,
for all the country’s military superiority, is fraught with uncertainty and
whose potential humanitarian consequences are grim.
The
military called up 300,000 reservists on Monday to add to its 170,000-strong
standing army and has been massing them near the Gaza border. Hamas, it is
estimated, can count on 30,000 fighters, perhaps a tenth of the likely invasion
force, and it has neither the tanks nor the air power available to the
attackers.
Such an
overwhelming ratio should give the Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) a high chance
of capturing the area of the Gaza Strip, which includes its principal urban
centre, Gaza City, from which its leadership ordered 1.1 million Palestinians
to evacuate on Friday.
Hamas has
long been ready for an Israeli incursion, digging a sophisticated network of
tunnels across Gaza intended to allow its forces to survive aerial bombardment.
Some tunnels previously discovered by Israel because they went under the border
fence are as deep as 70 metres.
The heavily
urbanised terrain – the Gaza Strip is one of the world’s most densely populated
areas – will also favour the defenders as they try to fight back. Each
remaining building will have to be fought over, and heavy mining could further
impede the Israelis if Hamas copies the technique used by Russia to blunt
Ukraine’s counteroffensive.
Israel,
too, has been planning, and if the IDF gains control of the tunnel entrances it
is more likely to mine them than try to enter them. But without full control of
the subterranean network where Hamas command posts are likely to be based, any
military control of northern Gaza will be insecure.
Israel’s
demand that Palestinian civilians leave the north also indicates what is likely
to be another part of the invaders’ strategy: a brutal attempt to clear the
northern sector of Hamas fighters. Its intentions have almost certainly been
presaged by what has already been a merciless aerial bombardment, killing more
than 1,500 Palestinians, a third of them children.
Whole
neighbourhoods, such as Rimal in Gaza City, have been razed. Іsrael’s air force said it had
dropped 6,000 bombs on Hamas targets by Thursday, and it hit 750 more targets
the following morning. A former UN war crimes investigator, Marc Galasco, noted
that was nearly equivalent to the most bombs dropped in a year by Nato forces
in Afghanistan: 7,423.
The near
certain reality is that a ground invasion will be bloody, and it is possible
international political support for Israel, which is high after Hamas’s brutal
attack a week ago killed 1,300 Israeli civilians, will dip as more Palestinian
civilians are killed or remain trapped without shelter, food or electricity.
There is
also the question of what Israel’s medium-term strategy will be if it is able
to seize control of the northern half of Gaza. It would be logical to look to
the south; an incursion aimed at eliminating Hamas as a controlling force only
makes sense if the occupation is total. This was the reasoning, on a larger
scale, behind the 20-year, US-led occupation of Afghanistan in response to the
9/11 attacks.
Benjamin
Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, said on Wednesday that Israel’s goal is to
“crush and eliminate” Hamas, but as the governing authority in Gaza it is
deeply embedded in its society. HA Hellyer, an analyst with the Royal United
Services Institute thinktank, said that to take control Israel would have to
“destroy all governing capacity in Gaza” and replace it with a military
administration while almost certainly battling an ongoing insurgency.
Hasan
Alhasan, a Middle East expert at the International Institute of Strategic
Studies, went further, asking at an online seminar on Friday whether “there is
any viable military strategy short of a total ethnic cleansing of Gaza that
would lead to a permanent defeat of Hamas” and if “Israel is walking into a
trap set by Hamas”.
Alhasan’s
argument is that Hamas can “regenerate in a generation or two” because it can
ultimately draw strength from Gaza’s 2.3 million-strong population, with new
recruits nurtured on memories of a violent past. A similar point was made
earlier this week by the former MI6 chief Sir Alex Younger: “You cannot kill
all the terrorists without creating more terrorists.”

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