Israel’s army on Early Tuesday said he was “making extensive strikes” against Hamas’ goals in Gaza, even struggling a high and more fragile fire between Israel and the militant group.
Israel’s defense forces were attacking Hamas’ objectives throughout the Gaza Strip, with the objective of “the liberation of all our hostages, alive and dead,” said Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office.
“From now on, Israel will perform against Hamas with a growing military force,” he said.
Gaza’s civil defense spokesman, Mahmoud Basal, said dozens of people have been killed and injured, and that there have been more than 35 household attacks.
“Our teams cannot deal with attacks due to limited resources and the dangerous situation,” Basal said. “We call the world that stops this aggression.”
The US House Secretary of the USA. UU., Karoline Leavitt, said in Fox News that the Trump administration and the White House had been consulted by Israel about the attacks in Gaza.
The last Israeli military action follows separate Israeli strikes that, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health, killed at least 14 people in 24 hours during the weekend. The Ministry reported the deaths in a statement on Sunday.
The IDF said on Saturday that he had identified two Hamas agents “operating a drone that represented a threat to the IDF troops” and saw others collecting equipment that operates with drones.
A FIRE HIGH AGREEMENT was reached between Israel and Hamas in January, the Biden administration announced at that time. Since then, there have been accusations of violations on both sides.
The first phase of the agreement, which included the launch of hostages held by Hamas after the terrorist attack of October 7, 2023 against Israel, expired this month. The second phase, designed for the release of male hostages, is intended to initiate conversations for a long -term end of the war.
Netanyahu’s office, in Tuesday’s statement, said the first miniters and defense minister Yisrael Katz instructed the military “who act strongly against the terrorist organization Hamas in the Gaza Strip.”
“This, after Hamas repeatedly refused to free our hostages and rejected all the offers they received from the presidential envoy of the United States, Steve Witkoff, and the mediators,” said Netanyahu’s office.
International negotiators have been conducting conversations in the hope of strengthening the agreement of Alto El Fuego.
Witkoff, the special envoy of the United States to the Middle East, in CNN on Sunday dismissed a proposal response from Hamas.
“Hamas’ proposal is not a narrow,” Witkoff said in the “State of the Union” program. He said that the United States favored a proposal of “bridge” that would include the release of five living hostages in exchange for the release of a “substantial” number of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.
“I will not go into the specific details of what made it unacceptable, but it was totally unacceptable,” he said.