After Hamas attack, Israeli retaliation tactics raise Gaza invasion
fears
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[October 11, 2023]
By Jonathan Saul and Nidal al-Mughrabi
JERUSALEM/GAZA (Reuters) - Israel's military has rallied after an
initial chaotic scramble to halt an assault by Palestinian Islamist
group Hamas and is retaliating with airstrikes on roads, buildings and
other sites in Gaza while sending huge reinforcements towards the
enclave.
To many of the 2.3 million residents of the strip of land that Israeli
forces quit in 2005, the mobilisation and intense bombardment look
ominously familiar: the prelude to a ground invasion and one that may
match, or even eclipse, Israel's incursions in 2008 and 2014.
One Israeli security source told Reuters a ground offensive now looked
inevitable.
"People feared the bombardment of the border area was a tactic to create
scorched earth before tanks advance," said Yamen Hamad, a father of four
who fled with his family and others from Beit Hanoun near Gaza's north
border, where blast craters have made roads impassable and buildings
nearby have been turned into rubble.
Israeli security sources said it took more than 48 hours to restore
military cohesion, halt infiltrations and clear Hamas fighters from
towns they stormed on Saturday in an operation that caught the Middle
East's most powerful army off guard.
Using a web of deception and relying on motorbikes, paragliders and
other basic equipment, Hamas fighters killed more than 1,000 Israelis
and took scores of hostages - a move that potentially complicates any
Israeli response.
But Israel's retaliation has nonetheless been fierce. The death toll
from airstrikes on Gaza was at least 830 people on Tuesday and,
according to U.N. figures, more than 180,000 had been made homeless.
One Israeli security source, who like others declined to be named, said
he believed an Israeli ground invasion was "not preventable because of
the heavy price that we paid. This will be after airstrikes by the air
force."
'YOU CANNOT JUST ENTER'
The source said the objective was "softening the other side and within
this, causing people to flee (built up areas). It is also about building
force strength, strategy and surprise. You cannot just enter."
Smashing up roads has been a typical tactic in the prelude to two
previous Israeli ground assaults in Gaza, disrupting communications and
the movement of Hamas and other militants. When Israel enters, residents
say its forces often bulldoze new routes for their vehicles to avoid
landmines in existing roads.
But sending troops into a densely packed, urban environment is not an
easy choice, even as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vows "mighty
revenge" in response to the huge death toll meted out by the Hamas
fighters in the worst breach in Israel's formidable defences since Arab
armies attacked in 1973.
Giora Eiland, a former head of Israel's National Security Council, said
airstrikes in Gaza "seemed very similar to previous Israeli operations"
but that these tactics had not neutralised Hamas in the past.
A ground offensive could more effectively kill Hamas fighters and
destroy the chain of command, Eiland said, but added: "The government is
still reluctant in taking such an initiative because it might involve
many, many more Israeli casualties."
Urban warfare erodes Israel's overwhelming superiority in firepower,
pitting it against a group which is more battle hardened from previous
conflicts and increasingly well-equipped by Iran. The group, which took
power in Gaza in 2007, has also had years to build a network of tunnels,
which helps fighters melt away. Israeli troops sometimes call it the
"Gaza Metro".
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A view shows houses and buildings destroyed by Israeli strikes in
Gaza City, October 10, 2023. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem/File Photo
In 2008, Israel lost nine soldiers during its incursion. In 2014,
the number killed soared to 66.
This time, Hamas also has dozens of hostages it seized in the Oct. 7
operation - some of them soldiers but many civilians. It presents a
huge challenge for a nation whose principle is to leave no one
behind. In 2011, it agreed to exchange hundreds of Palestinian
prisoners for one Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit, who had been held
captive for five years.
'PAY A HEAVY PRICE'
"Israel knows the great preparedness of the resistance factions and
their ability to handle ground incursions," said Talal Okal, an
analyst in Gaza who writes for the daily Al-Ayyam newspaper, saying
Israel may yet hesitate over a land assault.
"It wants to make Gaza pay a heavy price but I don't think it is
prepared to pay the heavier prices should they enter Gaza," he
added.
Even as Israel masses forces on Gaza's border and mobilises hundreds
of thousands of reservists, the government has not said whether or
not it will send in troops.
Gaza residents said on Wednesday more roads were among sites hit
overnight, including a key coastal road. Israel's military said
targets included what it said was a Hamas surveillance camera
network, weapons storage and manufacturing facilities and tunnels
used by operatives.
Asked about a possible land invasion, Israeli military spokesperson
Major Amir Dinar said: "We are striking Hamas infrastructure and we
are going to strike hard and keep striking." He did not elaborate.
The Israeli prime minister's office and Foreign Ministry declined to
comment.
Two Hamas spokespeople were not available for comment for this
article.
A Palestinian militant official, who declined to identified, said:
"There is a history between 2008, 2014 and 2023. The resistance is
no longer the same or that under-equipped."
"We are always prepared. If Israel sends more soldiers in, they will
either become bodies or hostages," the official added.
Hamas has already proved to be a tougher and more capable force than
Israel had expected by launching its Oct. 7 attack.
The Palestinian operation marked a massive intelligence failure for
Israel, which has prided itself on its ability to infiltrate and
monitor militants. It also exposed weaknesses in Israel's southern
command.
"The communication and command of the south collapsed and there was
no communication. It took time to understand the full picture," said
David Tzur, a former head of Israel's Border Police force who also
commanded the police's elite counter-terror unit Yamam. But the said
force had now recovered.
"Once all forces are on alert there is a quick reaction."
(Reporting by Nidal al-Mughrabi in Gaza and Jonathan Saul in
Jerusalem; Editing by Edmund Blair)
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