Overview Logo
Article Main Image

Israeli security cabinet approves plan to take over Gaza City

TheJournal

Ireland

Friday, August 8


Alternative Takes

International Condemnation of Israel's Plan

Germany's Arms Export Suspension

Netanyahu's Response to Germany


ISRAEL’S SECURITY CABINET has approved a plan to take over Gaza City, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said early this morning.

The war on the Gaza Strip in Palestine has already killed more than 60,000 people, destroyed much of the territory’s infrastructure and pushed the territory of some two million Palestinians toward famine.

Ahead of the security cabinet meeting, which began yesterday and ran through the night, Netanyahu said Israel planned to retake control over the entire territory and eventually hand it over to a governing body other than the current Hamas government.

The announced plans stop short of that, perhaps reflecting the reservations of Israel’s top general, who reportedly warned it would endanger the remaining 20 or so living hostages held by Hamas and further strain Israel’s army after nearly two years of regional wars.

Many families of hostages are also opposed, fearing further escalation will doom their loved ones.

Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid has described the government’s decision as “a disaster”.

The military “will prepare to take control of Gaza City while providing humanitarian aid to the civilian population outside the combat zones,” Netanyahu’s office said in a statement after the meeting.

It said a majority of the security cabinet had adopted “five principles for concluding the war: the disarming of Hamas; the return of all hostages – living and dead; the demilitarisation of the Gaza Strip; Israeli security control in the Gaza Strip; the establishment of an alternative civil administration that is neither Hamas nor the Palestinian Authority.

“A decisive majority of security cabinet ministers believed that the alternative plan that had been submitted to the security cabinet would neither achieve the defeat of Hamas nor the return of the hostages,” it added, without giving further details.

Lapid said in a post on X the decision would lead to “many more disasters”.

“In complete contradiction to the opinion of the military and security ranks, without considering the erosion and exhaustion of the fighting forces, Ben Gvir and Smotrich dragged Netanyahu into a move that will take months, lead to the death of the hostages, the killing of many soldiers, cost tens of billions to the Israeli taxpayer, and lead to a political collapse,” he said, referring to Israel’s extremist finance and internal security ministers.

“This is exactly what Hamas wanted: for Israel to be trapped in the field without a goal, without defining the picture of the day after, in a useless occupation that no one understands where it is leading.”

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer has described the decision as “wrong”.

“This action will do nothing to bring an end to this conflict or to help secure the release of the hostages,” he said, warning that it “will only bring more bloodshed”.

Israel has repeatedly bombarded Gaza City and carried out numerous raids, only to return to different neighbourhoods again and again as militants regrouped.

Today, it is one of the few areas of Gaza that has not been turned into an Israeli “buffer zone” or placed under evacuation orders.

A major ground operation there could displace hundreds of thousands of people and further disrupt efforts to deliver food to the territory.

It is unclear how many people reside in the city, which was Gaza’s largest before the war.

Hundreds of thousands fled Gaza City under evacuation orders in the opening weeks of the war, but many returned during a ceasefire at the start of this year.

Israel already controls around three-quarters of the devastated territory.

Families of hostages held in Gaza fear an escalation could doom their loved ones and some protested outside the security cabinet meeting in Jerusalem.

Former top Israeli security officials have also come out against the plan, warning of a quagmire with little added military benefit.

An Israeli official had earlier said the security cabinet would discuss plans to conquer all or parts of Gaza not yet under Israeli control.

The official, speaking on condition of anonymity pending a formal decision, said that whatever is approved would be implemented gradually to increase pressure on Hamas.

At least 42 Palestinians were killed in Israeli airstrikes and shootings across southern Gaza on Thursday, according to local hospitals.

Asked in an interview with Fox News ahead of the security cabinet meeting if Israel would “take control of all of Gaza”, Netanyahu replied: “We intend to, in order to assure our security, remove Hamas there, enable the population to be free of Gaza.

“We don’t want to keep it. We want to have a security perimeter. We want to hand it over to Arab forces that will govern it properly without threatening us and giving Gazans a good life.”

Israel’s military chief of staff, Lt Gen Eyal Zamir, warned against occupying Gaza, saying it would endanger the hostages and put further strain on the military after nearly two years of war, according to Israeli media reports.

Of the 42 people killed on Thursday, at least 13 were seeking aid in an Israeli military zone in southern Gaza where UN aid convoys are regularly overwhelmed by looters and desperate crowds.

Another two were killed on roads leading to nearby sites run by the Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, an American contractor, according to Nasser Hospital, which received the bodies.

Get the full experience in the app

Scroll the Globe, Pick a Country, See their News

International stories that aren't found anywhere else.

Global News, Local Perspective

50 countries, 150 news sites, 500 articles a day.

Don’t Miss what Gets Missed

Explore international stories overlooked by American media.

Unfiltered, Uncensored, Unbiased

Articles are translated to English so you get a unique view into their world.

Apple App Store Badge