Israel
Expands Gaza Ground Offensive as Hamas Fires Rockets at Tel Aviv
A two-month
cease-fire in Gaza collapsed this week amid a renewed Israeli bombardment. The
fighting now looks like it is sliding back to full-scale war.
The truce
between Israel and Hamas collapsed early on Tuesday when Israel launched a
deadly round of airstrikes on Gaza, forcing a new wave of displacement. Hamas
retaliated on Thursday, firing the first barrage of rockets toward Israel in
months.
Aaron
BoxermanAdam RasgonPatrick Kingsley
By Aaron
BoxermanAdam Rasgon and Patrick Kingsley
Aaron
Boxerman reported from Jerusalem, and Adam Rasgon and Patrick Kingsley from
Doha, Qatar.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/20/world/middleeast/hamas-attack-tel-aviv-israel-gaza.html
March 20,
2025
Updated 3:27
p.m. ET
The Israeli
military expanded its ground operations across the Gaza Strip on Thursday as
Hamas fired rockets at central Israel for the first time in months, in what
looked increasingly like a slide back toward full-scale war.
Israeli
soldiers began raiding part of the city of Rafah in southern Gaza, the military
said, as well as near Beit Lahiya in the north of the enclave. Those moves came
a day after Israel announced it had recaptured part of the Netzarim corridor,
which bisects central Gaza, after withdrawing from the area as part of the
January cease-fire with Hamas.
There were
no reports of casualties from the Hamas rockets, which were fired at the
coastal city of Tel Aviv. The Israeli military said the three rockets were
either intercepted or fell in open areas.
The
escalation in hostilities came after a two-month cease-fire in Gaza collapsed
this week with a deadly Israeli aerial bombardment in the territory, which the
military said had targeted Hamas. Israel argued that the truce could not
continue unless Hamas released more hostages still held in Gaza, while Hamas
accused Israel of violating the cease-fire agreement.
The
potential endgame for this round of fighting, however, remained far from clear.
Israel and Hamas have set seemingly incompatible conditions for the next steps
in the cease-fire, and the renewed Israeli assault had yet to force Hamas to
accept its demands.
Husam
Badran, a senior Hamas official, said in an interview on Thursday that the
group was unwilling to disarm its military wing — a key Israeli precondition
for ending the war.
“If you do
that, you’re giving the occupation an opportunity to kill without any
Palestinian response,” Mr. Badran said from Doha, Qatar.
He added
that Hamas had delayed firing rockets until Thursday in an attempt to give
mediators more time to pressure Israel to halt its attacks. But as Israel
continued its assault and the death toll rose in Gaza, he said, “Hamas had to
give indications that it can respond.”
The renewed
Israeli assault has killed more than 500 people in Gaza over the past three
days, including scores of children, the Gazan health ministry said on Thursday.
The figures do not distinguish between civilians and combatants.
The United
States, which had been seeking to broker an extension of the cease-fire between
Israel and Hamas, has thrown its weight behind the Israeli offensive. Karoline
Leavitt, the White House spokeswoman, told reporters on Thursday that President
Trump “fully supports Israel” and “the actions that they’ve taken in recent
days.”
After the
Hamas rocket attack, the Israeli military warned Palestinians in Bani Suheila,
in southern Gaza, to flee, saying militants were firing from the area. Avichay
Adraee, an Israeli military spokesman, called it “a final advance warning”
before an Israeli attack.
Hamas said
at least five senior members of its Gaza leadership were among hundreds of
people killed in Israeli strikes on Tuesday. The Israeli military said on
Thursday that it had killed at least two other Hamas security officials.
In Gaza, the
escalating conflict prompted panic and fear among Palestinians, who had hoped
for a longer respite from violence. Many said they saw little hope for a
resolution to the crisis soon.
Abdelkarim
al-Harazin, 28, a doctor in Gaza City, said the truce had given Palestinians a
few weeks to recover from a year of hunger and deprivation: Border crossings
had reopened and aid had flowed in. Now, whatever food remains is sold at
“sky-high prices” out of reach for many who lost everything in the war, he
said.
He accused
Israel of breaking the cease-fire. But he also said that Hamas’s leaders should
turn over the dozens of Israeli and foreign hostages still held in Gaza to
spare Palestinians more Israeli attacks.
“Everyone is
exhausted,” said Mr. al-Harazin. “How long will we have to keep living like
this?”
Benjamin
Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, has vowed to step up pressure on Hamas
until the group capitulates and releases more hostages. About 24 living Israeli
and foreign captives — as well as the remains of more than 30 others — are
believed to be in Gaza, according to Israel.
Hamas
officials say their demands for the release of the rest of the captives remain
unchanged, including an agreement to end the war, a full Israeli withdrawal
from Gaza. and the release of more Palestinian prisoners.
The 15-month
war in Gaza has killed more than 48,000 in the territory, including thousands
of children, according to the Gazan health ministry. Hamas set off the conflict
by leading a surprise attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, that killed about 1,200
people and saw about 250 taken as hostages back to Gaza.
The
cease-fire reached in January secured an initial six-week truce while mediators
sought to bridge gaps between Israel and Hamas on a comprehensive truce. But it
elapsed in early March without a broader agreement.
Almost
immediately, Israel blocked humanitarian aid from entering Gaza, including food
and medicine, in an apparent effort to pressure Hamas in the negotiations to
free more hostages. Later, the Israeli government cut off electricity it
provided to a desalination plant.
Mediators
like the United States were trying to reach a deal to extend the truce,
including a permanent end to the war and the release of the remaining living
hostages. Steve Witkoff, Mr. Trump’s Middle East envoy, pitched a proposal that
would extend the initial cease-fire in exchange for the release of more
captives.
Mr. Badran,
the Hamas official, suggested the group was willing to show some flexibility
over such a deal to jump-start talks aimed at ending the war. Previously, Hamas
had spoken only of releasing one living and four slain American-Israeli
hostages in such an agreement, keeping more than 50 others still in Gaza.
“The problem
isn’t the numbers,” Mr. Badran said. “We’re acting positively with any proposal
that leads to the start of negotiations” over a permanent truce.
But Israel
has been unwilling to end the war as long as Hamas still controls Gaza. Hamas
is refusing to disband its armed battalions or send its leaders into exile.
Members of
the Israeli Parliament’s foreign affairs and defense committee — who receive
classified intelligence briefings — said in a recent letter that Hamas still
had more than 25,000 fighters.
Hamas’s
allies in Yemen, the Iran-backed Houthi militia, have also resumed shooting
missiles at Israeli territory, setting off air-raid sirens across the central
and southern parts of the country at least three times over the past two days.
The Houthis
shot missiles and drones at Israel for more than a year in solidarity with the
militants in Gaza, pausing only when the cease-fire went into effect in
January.
Over the
past week, U.S. warplanes have carried out large-scale attacks in Yemen against
the Houthis, in what American officials proclaimed was an attempt to stop the
group from targeting commercial ships in the Red Sea.
On
Wednesday, Mr. Trump said the Houthis would be “completely annihilated,” and
warned Iran to stop supporting the militants. Israel and the Biden
administration had repeatedly bombarded the Houthis without successfully
deterring them.
Rawan Sheikh
Ahmad, Ephrat Livni and Myra Noveck contributed reporting.
Aaron
Boxerman is a Times reporter covering Israel and Gaza. He is based in
Jerusalem. More about Aaron Boxerman
Adam Rasgon
is a reporter for The Times in Jerusalem, covering Israeli and Palestinian
affairs. More about Adam Rasgon
Patrick
Kingsley is The Times’s Jerusalem bureau chief, leading coverage of Israel,
Gaza and the West Bank. More about Patrick Kingsley
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