Israel plans to widen coming offensive beyond Gaza City into last areas
not under its control
[August 12, 2025]
By JOSEPH KRAUSS
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says Israel plans to widen its coming
offensive beyond Gaza City to the last areas not yet under Israeli
control, and where most of Gaza's 2 million residents have sought
shelter as the territory slides toward famine.
The mobilization of forces is expected to take weeks, and Israel may be
using the threat of a wider offensive to try to pressure Hamas into
releasing more hostages or surrendering after 22 months of war sparked
by its Oct. 7, 2023, attack into Israel.
Any expansion of Israeli operations is likely to bring even more death
and destruction to the war-ravaged territory, around 75% of which is
already largely destroyed and controlled by Israel. A wider offensive
would also force more people to flee and further disrupt the delivery of
humanitarian aid during a severe hunger crisis.
The plans have also sparked controversy in Israel. Families of the
remaining hostages fear another military escalation could doom their
loved ones, while former senior security officials have said there is
little to be gained militarily.
Netanyahu says Israel will go into the central camps
Israel announced last week its plans to take over Gaza City, where it
has already carried out major raids and heavy bombardment throughout the
war. On Sunday, Netanyahu told a news conference that operations would
be expanded into the “central camps" and beyond.

He appeared to be referring to the built-up Nuseirat and Bureij camps in
central Gaza that date back to the 1948 war surrounding Israel's
creation. Israel has carried out near-daily airstrikes in the camps
since the start of the war but no major ground operations.
Netanyahu referred to Gaza City, the central camps and Muwasi — a vast
cluster of displacement camps along the coast — as Hamas strongholds.
These areas, along with the central city of Deir al-Balah, are the only
parts of Gaza that have not been almost completely destroyed in previous
Israeli operations. They are also areas where Hamas may be holding
hostages in tunnels or other secret locations.
An Israeli official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss
aspects of the plans that have not been made public, said the operation
will not begin immediately and will take a significant amount of time to
scale up. One indication will be the potential mobilization of thousands
of reservists.
The official said the announced plans were partly aimed at putting
pressure on various parties.
Few places left to flee
Netanyahu said Israel will allow civilians to flee to “designated safe
zones,” where “they will be given ample food, water and medical care, as
we have done before.” He did not say where they would go.
Israel designated Muwasi as a humanitarian zone earlier in the war. The
barren stretch of sandy coastline was soon filled with tents housing
hundreds of thousands of people with little in the way of food, running
water, toilets or trash collection. Israel has regularly carried out
airstrikes against what it said were militants hiding out there, often
killing women and children.
Last month, Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz reportedly floated the
idea of transferring Gaza's population to a so-called “humanitarian
city” that the military would build on the ruins of the southernmost
city of Rafah — now a largely uninhabited Israeli military zone — on the
border with Egypt.
Netanyahu has vowed to eventually relocate much of Gaza's population to
other countries through what he refers to as voluntary emigration. The
Palestinians and much of the international community see it as forcible
expulsion because Israel's offensive has made much of Gaza
uninhabitable.
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The sun sets behind buildings that were destroyed during the Israeli
ground and air operations stand in the northern Gaza Strip as seen
from southern Israel, Friday, Aug. 8, 2025. (AP Photo/Leo Correa)

They fear that concentrating people in the south would be a step
toward implementing such plans.
A possible negotiating tactic
Netanyahu has said he will end the war if Hamas gives up power, lays
down its arms and releases the remaining 50 hostages — around 20 of
whom are believed by Israel to be alive.
Israel would still maintain open-ended security control over Gaza
and facilitate the departure of those who wish to leave, according
to Netanyahu. He has said Arab forces friendly to Israel would
administer the territory, but none are known to have volunteered,
aside from an Israeli-backed armed group known for looting aid.
Hamas has said, in line with international demands, that it would
release the remaining hostages in return for a lasting ceasefire and
an Israeli withdrawal from Gaza. The militant group says it is
willing to hand over power to other Palestinians but will not give
up its weapons as long as Israel occupies lands the Palestinians
want for a future state.
Israel may hope that ratcheting up pressure will yield further
concessions from Hamas in U.S.- and Arab-mediated talks that appear
to have broken down last month.
But the hostages are Hamas' only remaining bargaining chip, and it
is unlikely to give them up if it believes that Israel will then
resume the war, attempt to eradicate the group and carry out plans
to depopulate Gaza.
Israel ended a previous ceasefire in March that had facilitated the
release of 25 hostages and the remains of eight others. Since then,
it has imposed a 2 1/2 month blockade that pushed the territory
toward famine, launched daily airstrikes across Gaza, expanded its
buffer zone and ordered mass evacuations.
Hamas has only released one hostage during that time, as a gesture
to the United States.

Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and
abducted 251 others in the 2023 attack. More than half of the
hostages have been released in ceasefires or other deals. Israel's
offensive has killed around 61,500 Palestinians, according to Gaza's
Health Ministry.
The ministry, which is part of the Hamas-run government and run by
medical professionals, does not say how many of those killed were
civilians or combatants, but it says women and children make up
around half of the fatalities. The agency's numbers are considered a
reliable estimate by the U.N. and independent experts. Israel
disputes them but has not offered its own figures.
___
Associated Press Writer Melanie Lidman in Tel Aviv, Israel,
contributed to this report.
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