GAZA, Palestine
Israel is preparing a ground invasion of Gaza, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday while Israeli shelling killed more Palestinian civilians and international pressure grew to deliver aid and to safeguard hostages held by Hamas.
A Palestinian woman is assisted, as people search for casualties at the site of an Israeli strike on a residential building in Gaza City, October 25, 2023. |
US President Joe Biden, in
remarks looking beyond the war that broke out with an Oct. 7 attack on Israel
by Palestinian Hamas militants, said the future should include a two-state
solution for Israel and the Palestinians.
Israel should be integrated
among its Arab neighbors, he said.
“Israelis and Palestinians
equally deserve to live side by side in safety, dignity and in peace,” Biden
said at a joint press conference in Washington with visiting Australian Prime
Minister Anthony Albanese.
Israeli retaliatory strikes
have killed over 6,500 people, the health ministry in the Hamas-run strip said
on Wednesday. Reuters has been unable to independently verify the casualty
figures of either side.
Biden said he had no notion
that the Palestinians were telling the truth about how many had been killed.
“I’m sure innocents have been killed, and it’s the price of waging a war.”
In Jerusalem, Netanyahu said
the decision on when forces would go into Gaza would be taken by the
government’s special war cabinet, but he declined to provide any details on the
timing or other information about the operation.
“We have already killed
thousands of terrorists and this is only the beginning,” Netanyahu said in a
televised statement.
“Simultaneously, we are
preparing for a ground invasion. I will not elaborate on when, how or how many.
I will also not elaborate on the various calculations we are making, which the
public is mostly unaware of and that is how things should be.”
Israeli tanks and troops are
massed on the border with Gaza awaiting orders. Israel has called up some
360,000 reservists.
International pressure is
growing to delay any invasion of Gaza, not least because of hostages. More than
half the estimated 220 hostages held by Hamas have foreign passports from 25
different countries, the Israeli government said.
The Wall Street Journal,
citing US and Israeli officials, reported that Israel had agreed to delay
invading Gaza for now so that the United States could rush missile defenses to
the region to protect US forces there, reflecting its concern about the Gaza
war spreading around the Middle East.
US officials have so far
persuaded Israel to hold off until US air defense systems can be placed in the
region, as early as this week, the Journal said.
Asked about the report, US
officials told Reuters that Washington has raised its concerns with Israel that
Iran and Iranian-backed Islamist groups could escalate the conflict by
attacking US troops in the Middle East.
An Israeli incursion into Gaza
could be a trigger for Iranian proxies, they said.
As Israel stepped up bombings
of south Gaza, violence flared elsewhere in the Middle East and a showdown
loomed at the United Nations over aid to Palestinian civilians, hundreds of
thousands of whom fled from north to south in the tiny coastal strip.
Israel had warned them it
would bombard mainly the north to wipe out Hamas militants.
Among Wednesday’s casualties,
an internally displaced person was killed and 44 were injured in an air strike
near an United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) school in the southern
town of Rafah, said the agency, which is responsible for Palestinian refugees
in the strip.
The school was sheltering
4,600 people and sustained severe collateral damage, an UNRWA statement said.
The Israeli-Hamas war has
already kindled increased conflict well beyond Gaza.
Israeli warplanes struck
Syrian army infrastructure in response to rockets fired from Syria, an ally of
Iran.
Syrian state media said Israel
had killed eight soldiers and wounded seven near the southwestern city of
Daraa, and hit Aleppo airport in the northwest, already out of action.
Israel did not accuse the
Syrian army of launching rockets but is suspicious of Iran, its arch-enemy
which has a significant military and security presence in Syria.
Iran has sought regional
ascendancy for decades and backs armed groups in Syria, Lebanon and elsewhere
as well as Hamas. It has demanded Israel stop its onslaught on Gaza.
Israel said its forces also
hit five squads in south Lebanon preparing attacks. Lebanon’s Iranian-backed
Hezbollah group said 42 of its fighters had been killed since border clashes
with Israel resumed after the Gaza war erupted.
The United States and Russia
were leading rival calls at the United Nations for a pause in fighting to allow
aid into Gaza, where living conditions are harrowing with medical care crippled
due to a lack of electricity, and food and clean water scarce.
Limited deliveries of food,
medicine and water from Egypt restarted on Saturday through Rafah, the only
crossing not controlled by Israel.
In proposals the UN Security
Council was expected to consider on Wednesday, the United States was seeking
short pauses to allow aid in while Russia advocated a wider cease-fire. Israel
has resisted both, arguing that Hamas would only take advantage and create new
threats to its civilians.
Give Hamas a good run for their cowardly aggressions
ReplyDelete