Award Banner
Award Banner

Israeli defence minister outlines new phase in Gaza war

Israeli defence minister outlines new phase in Gaza war
Israeli army tanks manoeuvre near the Israel-Gaza border, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in Israel, Jan 3, 2024.
PHOTO: Reuters

CAIRO/GAZA/JERUSALEM — Defence Minister Yoav Gallant on Thursday (Jan 4) outlined a new stage of Israel's war in Gaza: a more targeted approach in the north and further pursuit of Hamas leaders in the south while Israel seeks to free remaining hostages held by Hamas.

Under international pressure to shift to less intense combat operations and in the face of economic challenges, Israel has been drawing down its forces in Gaza to allow thousands of reservists to return to their jobs.

Gallant said in a statement that operations in the north would include raids, demolishing tunnels, air and ground strikes, and special forces operations.

In the south, where most of Gaza's 2.3 million population now live in tents and other temporary shelters, the focus would be on wiping out Hamas leaders and rescuing some 130 Israeli hostages remaining of some 240 abducted on Oct 7.

After the war Hamas would no longer control Gaza, Gallant said, adding that the enclave would be run by Palestinian bodies so long as there was no threat to Israel.

Israeli soldiers fire mortar shells, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, near Israel's border with Gaza in southern Israel, Jan 3, 2024.
PHOTO: Reuters

Aiming to help prevent the conflict from expanding, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken was set to travel on Thursday to the Middle East for a week of diplomacy, the State Department said.

Earlier on Thursday Israeli shelling of the Gaza Strip killed more than 20 Palestinians, including 16 in Khan Younis in a southern coastal area packed with people who had fled from other parts of the enclave, Gaza health officials said.

Among the dead were nine children, they said. Separately five Palestinians were killed in an Israeli airstrike on a car in Al-Nusseirat refugee camp, health officials told Reuters. Gaza residents said Israeli planes and tanks had also bombarded two other refugee camps, prompting many to head south.

Israel's war against Hamas is nearing the three-month mark amid international concern that the conflict is spreading beyond Gaza, drawing in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, Hezbollah forces on the Lebanon-Israel border, and Red Sea shipping lanes.

The concern grew after a drone strike on Tuesday killed Hamas deputy leader Saleh al-Arouri in Lebanon's capital Beirut. He was buried in the Palestinian camp of Shatila in the city on Thursday, amid throngs of mourners launching volleys of gunfire.

A view of closed shops during a strike as a protest against the killing of senior Hamas official Saleh al-Arouri, in Jerusalem's Old City, Jan 3, 2024. 
PHOTO: Reuters

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah vowed on Wednesday that his powerful Iran-backed Shi'ite militia "cannot be silent" following the killing, but he made no concrete threats to act against Israel in support of Hamas.

Hezbollah has been embroiled in nearly daily exchanges of shelling with Israel across Lebanon's southern border since the Gaza war began.

Israel neither confirmed nor denied assassinating Arouri. It has promised to annihilate Hamas following the Islamist group's assault in southern Israel on Oct 7 in which Israel says 1,200 people were killed.

Israel's ground and air blitz has laid waste to Gaza. The total recorded Palestinian death toll had reached 22,438 by Thursday — almost one per cent of its 2.3 million population, the Gaza health ministry said.

Israel has said it has killed 8,000 fighters in Gaza.

Adding to the violence in the region, two explosions on Wednesday killed nearly 100 people during a memorial ceremony for the late Iranian General Qasem Soleimani at the cemetery in southeastern Iran where he is buried. The militant Sunni Muslim group Islamic State claimed responsibility.

Gaza bloodshed

In Thursday's reported strike in Al-Mawasi on the western side of Khan Younis, Israeli shells landed near tents erected in the area by displaced people, health ministry officials said.

Footage on Palestinian media showed several bodies wrapped in blankets inside a hospital morgue in Khan Younis.

"Nowhere is safe in Gaza. Wherever you go, there are strikes. In the country, next to the camps, in Al-Mawasi. There is no safe space," said Bahaa Abu Hatab, the brother of one of the dead.

A Palestinian child inspects a house damaged in an Israeli strike, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip. 
PHOTO: Reuters

The Palestinian Red Crescent said its headquarters in Khan Younis was hit, killing one person and wounding others.

In its daily briefing, the Israeli military said Israeli warplanes killed three Hamas militants who had tried to detonate explosive next to ground troops, and Israeli soldiers killed two more.

Later the military said soldiers had destroyed an underground military compound on the Gaza Strip coast with a weapons cache including mortars, grenades, and RPG missiles.

Mud adds to misery

Smoke rises over Gaza, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, as seen from Israel, Jan 3, 2024. 
PHOTO: Reuters

Israeli bombardments have flattened much of the densely populated enclave and created a humanitarian disaster. Most Gazans have been left homeless, with food shortages threatening famine.

On Thursday, people poured out of Al-Bureij, Al-Maghazi and Al-Nusseirat refugee camps following attacks, with some families riding on donkey carts loaded with mattresses, luggage and children. Rain has turned earth to mud, adding to the misery.

Over the course of the war, the Israeli military has expressed regret for civilian deaths but it accuses Hamas of operating in densely populated areas and using civilians as human shields, a charge the group denies.

ALSO READ: Hezbollah, Israel appear to signal no desire for spread of Gaza war

Source: Reuters

homepage

trending

trending
    GE2025: PAP returns to power with 65.57% of popular vote; WP retains 10 seats
    PAP's vote share up to 65.57%, WP to get 2 NCMP seats
    PAP edges WP in Tampines GRC, NSP and PPP receive less than 1% of votes
    PAP wins East Coast GRC with 58.76% of votes over WP
    GE2025 results: WP wins Sengkang GRC with 56.31% of votes over PAP
    PAP wins Punggol GRC with 55.17% of votes over WP
    WP wins Aljunied GRC with 59.68% of votes over PAP
    PAP's Poh Li San wins Sembawang West SMC with 53.19% of votes over SDP's Chee Soon Juan
    PAP's Ng Chee Meng wins Jalan Kayu SMC with 51.47% of votes over WP's Andre Low
    PAP's Liang Eng Hwa retains Bukit Panjang SMC with 61.41% of votes over SDP's Paul Tambyah
    PAP's Eric Chua wins Queenstown SMC with 81.12% of votes over PAR's Mahaboob Batcha
    GE2025 first results in: PAP's Melvin Yong wins Radin Mas SMC

Singapore

Singapore
    • 'Call it out when you see it': Aware criticises treatment of women candidates in GE2025
    • 13 youths under police investigation for damaging wheelchairs at Sengkang and Boon Lay polling stations
    • Singapore car driver filmed getting into brawl with man at parking lot in JB
    • Let's choose unity over division, integrity over half truths: PM Wong in PAP's final rally speech
    • PAP wins Sembawang GRC with 67.75% of votes over SDP and NSP
    • PAP wins Nee Soon GRC with 73.81% of votes over RDU
    • PAP romps home in West Coast-Jurong West GRC with 60.01% of votes as PSP falls well short
    • PAP wins Jurong East-Bukit Batok GRC with 76.66% of votes over RDU
    • PAP's Henry Kwek retains Kebun Baru SMC with 68.50% of votes over PSP's Tony Tan
    • PAP's Gho Sze Kee wins Mountbatten SMC with 63.84% of votes over independent Jeremy Tan

Entertainment

Entertainment
    • (G)I-dle rebrands in light of 7th anniversary, sparking mixed emotions from fans
    • Parents thank Park Seo-joon for donation that saved child: 'It was the first time in a long while our family laughed'
    • Red Velvet's Irene and Seulgi, Exo's Doh Kyung-soo, Xdinary Heroes: Singapore concert calendar for 2025
    • 'My acting wasn't going anywhere': Zhang Zetong was close to leaving showbiz before winning Star Award
    • US singer-songwriter Jill Sobule dies following a house fire
    • Comedian Russell Brand appears in UK court over rape and sex assault charges
    • A$AP Rocky 'living his dream', now a dad of 2
    • Tom Cruise always eats a 'massive breakfast' before doing any daredevil stunts
    • Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo, Chappell Roan and Sarah Michelle Gellar will be guest judges on RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars season 10
    • Ozzy Osbourne feared his health problems were 'never going to end'

Lifestyle

Lifestyle
    • Local brands like Ann Chin Popiah and Tian Tian Hainanese Chicken Rice to open at 5-star hotel in Macau
    • 'It hurts, losing everything': Mentai-Ya boss closes all remaining stalls after $550k losses in 2 years
    • Kenny Rogers Roasters now has an all-you-can-eat buffet for $28.90++, here's a sneak peek at the menu
    • This new American malt shop along Joo Chiat Road looks like it came straight out of a Wes Anderson film
    • Best high tea experiences in Singapore for an elegant afternoon escape
    • Award-winning Hong Kong cha chaan teng Keming Bing Sat to make Singapore debut in late May
    • 60 times Singapore made the world take notice
    • Building on success: All-new BMW 2 Series Gran Coupe now in Singapore
    • What to do this weekend (May 2 to 4)
    • On this day in 1932, Tanjong Pagar Railway Station opened at Keppel Road

Digicult

Digicult
    • A $500 wake-up call: How the Samsung Galaxy Ring made me realise my stress
    • Monster Hunter Wilds producer explains how game has remained unique and fresh over 20 years
    • Google Pixel 9a: The best AI-centric phone under $800 in 2025?
    • Western intelligence agencies warn spyware threat targeting Taiwan, Tibetan rights advocates
    • Taiwan says China using generative AI to ramp up disinformation and 'divide' the island
    • Russian court fines Telegram app for refusal to remove anti-government content, TASS reports
    • One Beijing man's quest to keep cooking — and connecting with Americans — on camera
    • Nintendo Switch 2 to launch in June with US$449.99 price tag
    • Games in April: RPGs, racing and Ronaldo in a fighting game
    • Is it time to get a MacBook at a good price? The M4 MacBook Air says yes

Money

Money
    • Giant deal: Malaysian company to acquire Cold Storage and Giant supermarket chains in Singapore
    • How tariffs could shape interest rates in 2025: What Trump's 'Liberation Day' means for Singapore home loans
    • GM delays investor call, UPS axes 20k jobs as Trump's tariffs create corporate chaos
    • India prepared to 'future-proof' trade deal as sweetener in US talks, sources say
    • UPS cuts 20,000 jobs, GM delays investor call as Trump's tariffs create corporate chaos
    • Profit warnings and uncertainty as Trump tariffs send a chill through businesses
    • Risk of global economic recession surges on US tariff shockwaves
    • World military spending hits $3.6 trillion in record 2024 surge
    • China warns countries against striking trade deals with US at its expense
    • Why we bought a $960k 2-bedder condo at Penrose during Covid-19: A buyer's case study

Latest

Latest
  • King Charles and royals gather for military parade to mark VE Day anniversary
  • Australia's reelected government says US-China tussle to be top priority
  • Kim Jong Un visits tank factory, touts progress in Korean-style tanks
  • PAP wins Pasir Ris-Changi GRC with 67.66% of votes over SDA
  • Dennis Tan retains WP stronghold Hougang SMC comfortably
  • PAP's Desmond Choo wins Tampines Changkat SMC with 56.17% of votes over WP's Kenneth Foo
  • PAP wins Ang Mo Kio GRC with 78.95% of votes in three-cornered fight
  • PAP's Yip Hon Weng wins Yio Chu Kang SMC with 78.73% votes over PAR's Michael Fang
  • PAP wins Marsiling-Yew Tee GRC with 73.46% of votes over SDP

In Case You Missed It

In Case You Missed It
  • Tan Kiat How weighs in on viral video of Gan Kim Yong being ignored by passers-by in Punggol
  • PSP's Tan Cheng Bock turns 85; SDP's Paul Tambyah joins celebration at Teban Gardens
  • PM Wong urges voters to 'choose leaders of good character' in PAP's first party political broadcast
  • It is 'important for Singapore's democracy' that WP wins more seats, says Pritam in election broadcast
  • GE2025: PSP, RDU, SDP, PPP, PAR, NSP promise to push for policy changes if elected to Parliament in first political broadcast
  • 'Everyone has the right to express their feelings': WP candidates address four-cornered fight in Tampines GRC
  • PAP's Desmond Lee responds to opposition's calls for GST exemption, says 'we want to make it progressive'
  • 'A fresher Pritam Singh': Teo Chee Hean to Aljunied resident who mistook PAP's Faisal Abdul Aziz for WP chief
  • SDP leaders criticise GST hike and govt vouchers: 'Give you cup of water to put out fire'
This website is best viewed using the latest versions of web browsers.