Israel
Strikes Gaza and Temporarily Halts Aid, Saying Hamas Broke Truce
Israel
launched a wave of attacks on Gaza after accusing Palestinian militants of
attacking its forces across cease-fire lines. Both sides say they are still
committed to the truce.
Isabel
Kershner
By Isabel
Kershner
Reporting
from Jerusalem
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/19/world/middleeast/israel-gaza-ceasefire.html
Oct. 19,
2025
Israel on
Sunday launched its heaviest wave of attacks on Gaza since a fragile cease-fire
took hold a week ago and said it had temporarily suspended humanitarian aid
after accusing Hamas of violating the truce by firing on its soldiers, killing
two.
After
nightfall, the Israeli military said in a statement that it had “begun the
renewed enforcement of the cease-fire” after carrying out a series of
significant strikes against Hamas targets and in accordance with a directive
from the government.
The
deadly flare-up of violence on Sunday and the temporary suspension of aid were
the most serious tests yet of the cease-fire, which was negotiated under heavy
pressure by the Trump administration and signed with great fanfare by President
Trump himself.
The aid
was halted because of the intensity of the Israeli strikes, and was expected to
resume once the bombing was over, according to an Israeli official, who spoke
on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter. Israeli officials
had initially said that humanitarian aid would be suspended until further
notice but later appeared to step back from that decision.
Israel
said two of its soldiers were killed early Sunday when Palestinian militants
attacked forces who were operating in an area where the Israeli military is
allowed to be under the cease-fire agreement. The deaths prompted a strong
response.
Gaza’s
health officials reported 44 Palestinian deaths across the territory on Sunday.
Both
Israel and Hamas have now accused each other of violating the truce after
repeated flare-ups of violence over the past three days. But both sides made
clear on Sunday that they were still committed to maintaining the truce.
The
Israeli military said the Palestinian fighters had fired an anti-tank missile
at its troops and then shot at them in the Rafah area of southern Gaza that
remains under Israeli control.
The
military called this “a blatant violation” of the truce. In response, the
military said, Israeli forces struck in the area “to eliminate the threat” and
dismantle tunnel shafts and other military structures.
On Sunday
afternoon, the military intensified its attacks, saying it struck dozens of
Hamas targets throughout the Gaza Strip. Israeli forces also struck a group of
people they identified as armed militants crossing the cease-fire line in
northern Gaza, the military said in a statement.
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Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel blamed Hamas for the latest violence. He
said he had consulted with his defense minister and security chiefs and had
instructed them to act forcefully against militant targets in Gaza.
Hamas’s
military wing said in a statement that it was “unaware of any events or clashes
taking place in the Rafah area,” saying they had lost contact with their
fighters there months ago.
Hamas
said in a statement that a delegation of its leaders had arrived in Cairo on
Sunday to follow up on the implementation of the cease-fire agreement with
mediators and other Palestinian groups. A Hamas official, Izzat al-Rishq, in a
separate statement on Sunday accused Israel of continuing to violate the truce
and of fabricating “flimsy pretexts” to justify its attacks.
On
Friday, the Israeli military fired on a vehicle in northern Gaza, killing at
least nine people, including four children, according to a Gaza rescue service
that is part of the territory’s Hamas-run Interior Ministry.
In
relation to that episode, the Israeli military said that the vehicle had
crossed over a demarcation line where Israel’s forces have withdrawn to under
the terms of the cease-fire. The military added that its forces had fired on
the vehicle, which it described as “suspicious,” after the vehicle ignored
warning shots.
The
Israeli military has repeatedly warned civilians not to cross the new lines or
approach its troops in the Israeli-held areas but many Gazans — either lacking
internet, puzzling over unclear maps, or simply lost in the devastated enclave
— have at times been unsure about whether they have entered a restricted area.
The
cease-fire deal had provided for a significant increase in humanitarian aid.
The number of trucks entering Gaza was supposed to have doubled to 600 a day
from about 300.
The
enclave has been gripped by widespread hunger in recent months. Most of its
population of about two million people have been displaced multiple times. Many
lack shelter, with whole neighborhoods flattened by Israeli forces and many of
the buildings elsewhere in Gaza now damaged or destroyed.
After
Sunday’s violence, members of Mr. Netanyahu’s hard-line government immediately
called for a full resumption of Israel’s offensive against Hamas, the militant
group that led the Oct. 7, 2023, attack against Israel that set off the war.
Itamar
Ben-Gvir, the ultranationalist minister of national security, called for a
resumption of fighting “at full strength.” Any notions that Hamas would abide
by the cease-fire agreement, he added, “are predictably proving dangerous to
our security.”
Mr.
Ben-Gvir was among the far-right ministers opposed to the cease-fire in the
first place, believing that Israel should have continued fighting until Hamas
was fully defeated.
Israel
still controls about half the territory in Gaza and has accused Hamas fighters
of operating out of tunnels beneath areas still under Israeli control.
Israeli
officials have also expressed frustration over the slow pace at which Hamas has
been handing over the remains of deceased captives as part of the cease-fire
deal.
Hamas has
freed the last 20 living Israeli hostages and turned over the bodies of 12
captives over the past week, according to the Israeli government. A 13th body
that Hamas handed over to Israel was found by forensic experts not to match any
of the captives.
Israel
has freed almost 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and sent the bodies of more than
100 Palestinians to Gaza.
Israel
identified two dead hostages whose bodies were handed over late Saturday as
Ronen Engel, 54, and Sonthaya Oakkharasri, 30, a Thai citizen who had been
working in agriculture in Be’eri, a border community.
Mr. Engel
was killed in Nir Oz, another Israeli border community ravaged during the
Hamas-led attack on Israel in 2023. His body was taken to Gaza.
The
bodies of 16 other captives still remain in Gaza, according to the Israeli
government.
Hamas has
said repeatedly that it will be difficult to locate and recover all of them.
Some are buried deep under rubble and require heavy equipment to extract them.
Reporting
was contributed by Gabby Sobelman, Johnatan Reiss, Abu Bakr Bashir and Iyad
Abuheweila.
Isabel
Kershner, a Times correspondent in Jerusalem, has been reporting on Israeli and
Palestinian affairs since 1990.


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