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What’s happened: Coinciding with the six month anniversary since the October 7th Hamas massacre, the IDF has pulled most of its forces out of the southern Gaza Strip.

  • A single IDF infantry brigade remains deployed along the east-west corridor, bisecting the Strip and preventing access to the north.
  • Defence Minister Gallant said, “The withdrawal of troops from Khan Younis was carried out once Hamas ceased to exist as a military framework in the city… The achievements made by the IDF’s Division 98 and its units, are extremely impressive. They have eliminated terrorists and destroyed terror targets including warehouses, weapons, headquarters, communication centres and more. Their activities enabled the dismantling of Hamas as a functioning military unit in this area.”
  • “Our forces are going to prepare for their follow-up missions. We saw examples of such missions in Shifa, and [will see] such missions in the Rafah area. We will reach a point when Hamas no longer controls the Gaza strip and does not function as a military framework that poses a threat to the citizens of the State of Israel.”
  • In parallel, the Iead Israeli negotiators, Mossad Director David Barnea, Shin Bet Director Ronen Bar and Maj. Gen. (res.) Nitzan Alon are in Cairo for renewed negotiations to reach a deal for the release of some of the hostages.
  • It is understood that the war cabinet has expanded the mandate given to the negotiators.  
  • Meanwhile, public pressure on the government continues, with large protests taking place over the weekend. On Sunday night, several thousand people gathered outside the Knesset (despite it being in recess) and called on the government to immediately reach a deal.

Context: At the height of the military operation there were 20 IDF brigades (around 35,000 troops) operating inside the Gaza Strip, now one remains (a few hundred).  

  • The withdrawal of the 98th Division effectively ends the four month operation in the southern city of Khan Yunis.   
  • However, forces are expected to re-enter and carry out targeted operations based on intelligence and operational needs.
  • According to the IDF, the decision was made having completed its bank of targets identified by their intelligence.   
  • Others are speculating that it was due to US pressure and also partly meets Hamas’s demands and may be connected to the negotiations for a hostage release in Cairo. For more analysis of the withdrawal and its implications, see Israeli Media Summary below.
  • Prior to the withdrawal over the weekend, four IDF soldiers were killed in an ambush in the southern Gaza Strip when terrorists emerged from a tunnel shaft and shot the soldiers at close range. Three soldiers were killed instantly; the fourth was wounded and later died of his wounds. The terrorists disappeared back into the shaft, but the soldiers chasing them did not enter it because they identified IEDs that had been placed at the entrance.
  • 260 soldiers have been killed since the beginning of the ground operation, over 3,000 have been injured.    
  • On Friday, the Commando Brigade retrieved the body of the one of the hostages, Elad Katzir, from the area of Khan Yunis. Elad was kidnapped from Kibbutz Nir Oz by terrorists along with his mother, Hanna, who was released in November.
  • This leaves 133 hostages held in captivity, with the estimated fear that only half are still alive.    
  • The basic formula for a deal presented during the talks is thought to include Hamas freeing about 40 Israelis – women, the elderly, and ill or wounded in exchange for several hundred Palestinian prisoners in Israel and a limited return of Gazans to the north of the Strip. This would be alongside a temporary ceasefire, during which further talks would be held.
  • The IDF released updated data on humanitarian aid that has entered into Gaza since the beginning of the war, which has included:
    • 272,000 tons of food
    • 44,190 tons of shelter equipment
    • 29,260 tons of water
    • 20, 310 tons of medical supplies
    • 23,090 tons of mixed equipment
    • 216 tanks of fuel, and 429 tanks of cooking gas.

Looking ahead: The redeployment will now facilitate Gazans who fled to Rafah to be able to return to Khan Yunis.

  • According to Israeli officials, an operation in Rafah is still on the agenda with the removal of the civilian population seen as a prerequisite of a ground incursion.
  • A Rafah operation is seen as essential for four reasons:

To engage, destroy, and dismantle the remaining four (out of 24) of the Hamas brigades, thereby removing the last bastions of Hamas military structure.

To block the smuggling routes from Egypt, which is crucial to preventing the re-armament of the Strip.

To continue to hunt down the Hamas leadership which, having evaded Israeli forces elsewhere, are now seemingly underneath Rafah.

To increase to the pressure on Hamas to soften their demands over the hostages negotiations. There is also a chance that the operation could allow for further rescue missions.     

  • Due to the sensitivity, any major military operation into Rafah will likely need to be coordinated with the US and Egypt.
  • In parallel, there is cautious optimism that the negotiators for a hostage release and prisoner exchange will reach an agreement, with the Hamas delegation expected to return to Cairo with answers later this week.  

CHALLENGING THE IRANIAN PRESENCE IN THE NORTH

In light of the targeted strike on Iranian Gen. Mohammed Reza Zahedi, this paper gives the latest assessment on the confrontation between Israel and Iran and its proxies.

Read BICOM’s briefing here.

UNDERSTANDING ISRAEL-UK WEAPONS TRADE

Recent reports suggest that the UK is considering ceasing arms sales to Israel. This paper looks at the current state of military trade between the two nations, in the context of strong bilateral ties.


Download BICOM’s briefing here

PODCAST

Episode 229 | Insight into Palestinian Affairs

In this episode, Richard Pater speaks to Prof. Kobi Michael, an Israeli expert on security affairs and the Palestinian arena. They discuss the performance of the IDF so far, the Israeli security calculus during Ramadan, the internal dynamics within both Hamas and the Palestinian Authority, and the need for Israel-Palestinian peace to be pursued through a multilateral regional framework. Prof. Michael is a senior researcher at INSS and the Misgav Institute, as well as a visiting professor at the International Centre for Policing and Security University of South Wales. The author of 20 books, he previously served as the deputy director general and head of the Palestinian desk at the Ministry for Strategic Affairs.

Listen on Apple PodcastsSpotify and Google Podcasts

ARTICLE & VIDEO

Those Who Tried: Conversations with the Peace Processors | Episode 1: ‘Focus on institution-building not dramatic diplomatic breakthroughs’: A Conversation with Elliott Abrams

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Top Stories From the UK and Israeli Media

The BBC and Sky News both lead their Middle East reportage with Israel significantly reducing its number of troops in the southern Gaza Strip. The BBC reports that while stressing that a “significant force” would remain in the coastal enclave, IDF spokesman, Lieutenant Colonel Peter Lerner said: “This is another stage in the war effort” implying that the decision was tactical “rather than a sign the war may be moving closer to its end”. Lieutenant Colonel Lerner also confirmed that this decision had been made given the IDF completing its mission in Khan Yunis and that “The war is not over. War can only be over when they [hostages] come home and when Hamas is gone.”
 
The BBC also reports that “Marking six months of the war, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel was ‘one step away from victory’ but insisted there would be no ceasefire without the release of Israeli hostages.”
 
Sky News quotes a senior source in the Israeli government who says that the withdrawal is linked to ongoing hostage release negotiations and that Prime Minister Netanyahu is “desperate” for a ceasefire deal.
 
The Times reports that the Deputy Prime Minister, Oliver Dowden, has confirmed that “Britain can continue selling weapons to Israel lawfully despite the death toll in Gaza”. Following the death of seven World Central Kitchen aid workers in a drone strike last week, there have been increasing calls for the UK to suspend its arms sales to Israel. Mr Dowden also said it was “not appropriate” to publish legal advice the government had received on whether international law had been broken in Gaza.
 
The Guardian and Reuters both report that indirect ceasefire negotiations between Israel and Hamas taking place in Cairo have made “significant progress” with more talks due to be held in coming days. According to a senior Egyptian source, “all parties have agreed on basic points” while Israel has “voiced cautious optimism about the latest round of mediated negotiations”. Reuters also quotes Israeli Foreign Minister, Yaakov Katz, as having “described the Cairo talks as the closest the sides have come to a deal since a November truce under which Hamas freed dozens of hostages”.
 
Writing for The TelegraphCon Coughlin says that “Iran’s paper tiger has finally been exposed”, and that “the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) were entirely justified in launching Monday’s missile strike on the base, which succeeded in killing several senior IRGC commanders” (Israel has not directly commented on this strike, neither confirming nor denying its responsibility). Suggesting that Iran’s Damascus consulate which was destroyed in an air strike last was functionally a front for the IRGC’s operations in the country, Coughlin also questioned “how much Iran will want to escalate tensions in the region” given its somewhat lacklustre response to Qassem Soleimani’s 2020 assassination.
 
The BBC also reports that “Israel’s military has said it is prepared for any Iranian threat, as tension builds after Monday’s attack on an Iranian consulate in Damascus, that an Iranian official had threatened Israeli embassies saying they were “no longer safe”, and that “US and Israeli forces in the region have been put on high alert in anticipation of a possible attack.”

Army Radio reports that Ali Ahmad Hussein, a commander in Hezbollah’s elite Radwan Force in charge of attacks on the Kiryat Shmona area, was killed in an Israeli strike on the southern Lebanese village of Sultaniyeh last night. Two other terrorists were also killed. Hussein’s is the fifth time a brigade commander-level Hezbollah fighter has been killed since the war began.
 
Many Israeli commentators focus on the IDF’s announcement of the withdrawal of large numbers of its ground forces from southern Gaza. “In the IDF’s operational plans,” writes Yediot Ahronot’s Nahum Barnea, “Gaza is now like Jenin: a target for pinpoint raids; not a target for operations, not a target for conquest… The [Israeli] decision-makers’ heartfelt wish,” he continues, “is that a huge number of Gazans will now move from Rafah to Khan Yunis and clear Rafah for an Israeli strike. America will welcome this and the world will accept it. Like all heartfelt wishes during wartime, this one does not take into account the reality in Gaza or our situation in the world. Israel is operating from inside walls of mistrust.”
 
Summarising the achievements of the war so far, Barnea says, “In the six months of war, we failed to achieve even a single one of the objectives that were laid out at its start. This refers both to the ambitious, untenable objectives that Netanyahu presented, and the more realistic objectives that the military leadership presented.” “War prosecution requires strategic thinking, not just heartfelt wishes. Netanyahu was laid bare in all his blindness: someone who has pretensions of destroying a regime that controls territory and a population, must prepare an alternative regime. There are 5,000 people in Gaza, perhaps more, who were involved in the past in administering the Gaza Strip under the Palestinian Authority. Ostensibly, their hands are not stained with terrorism. Their names are known to Israel. Netanyahu cast a veto on any initiative that mentioned them, in fact, he vetoed any initiative that sought to lay the groundwork for the day after.  He will not admit it, but he preferred a vacuum and chaos in Gaza. There were some who warned him: everywhere in the Middle East where chaos is created, the result is that Iran seizes control. That is what happened in Iraq, Lebanon, Syria and Yemen. He refused to listen. Even after October 7, he still considers Abu Mazen to be a worse enemy than Hamas.” 
 
Maariv’s Ben Caspit calls the withdrawal “a farce” – one he blames on Netanyahu’s handling of deteriorating relations with the US. “Just think,” Caspit says, “what would have happened had Netanyahu agreed to” large-scale humanitarian aid to Gaza “on day-one. Had he phoned President Biden and told him, Mr. President, I thank you for coming to our assistance so incredibly. In return, we will authorise all possible humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip. We won’t deny them anything. Netanyahu could have struck the following deal with Biden: Israel’s freedom to continue to fight until Hamas’s defeat in exchange for unlimited humanitarian aid throughout the entire duration of the fighting. Biden would have come away from that looking great and Israel would have come away from that looking great. Sharon would have reached an agreement of that kind with Biden. So would have Bennett. Every Israeli leader who is also a patriot would have come to that kind of agreement with Biden.”
 
Yediot Ahronot’s Nadav Eyal is similarly critical. “The failure is entirely owned by the politicians,” he says. “They were not worthy of the troops and failed to do their job. Wars are not won only by killing the enemy. There must be complementary political and diplomatic steps. Regional and global alliances must be maintained. Thought must be given to international law and to long-term strategy. Public opinion must be considered with caution. War requires sophistication and cunning. In all these spheres, which are under the government’s purview, under the prime minister’s purview, Israel has failed.”
 
Israel Hayom’s Ariel Kahana positions the withdrawals as a push to secure a hostage deal with Hamas. With its actions, “Israel effectively met two of the primary demands Hamas has made throughout the entire negotiations… Ahead of critical talks, the Israeli capitulation was designed—without saying so explicitly—to signal to Hamas that Israel was being very forthcoming with it from its perspective. To that, one needs to add Israel’s longstanding willingness to free hundreds of terrorists for the hostages, and to stop the fighting for six weeks. In other words, in practice, Israel has accepted most of Hamas’s demands in its effort to reach a deal. If Hamas responds positively in the course of the coming day, that means that the IDF is out of the Gaza Strip, has agreed to halt the fighting for an extended period of time that Hamas will certainly use to regroup, while Hamas will receive hundreds of terrorists, as it wanted from the get-go. Those will be historic achievements [for Hamas].”

Haaretz’s Amos Harel speculates that “it’s reasonable to assume that Sinwar and Deif will eventually be killed or captured, given the effort being invested in this. Hamas’ No. 3 in Gaza, Marwan Issa, was killed in an airstrike last month after he violated the rigid security protocols adopted by senior Hamas officials. It’s even still possible that there could be a breakthrough in rescuing the hostages. But the public should be told the truth: The enormous death and destruction the IDF is leaving behind in Gaza, alongside quite a few losses on our side, aren’t currently bringing us any closer to achieving the war’s goals. Hamas’ military and governmental capabilities are gradually being degraded, but the organisation isn’t close to being defeated. We aren’t one step away from victory, as Netanyahu once again claimed on Sunday with no basis in reality, to the dismay of officers and soldiers who, regardless of their political views, can spot the deception.” Regarding the prospects of a hostage deal, Harel worries that “Sinwar can see the growing rift between Jerusalem and Washington, and this could spur him to harden his positions.”

In favour of the withdrawal, Ynet’s Ron Ben-Yishai writes that “The shift to a new strategy offers two key advantages: First, it reduces the forces’ vulnerability to terrorist attacks by avoiding static positions, and second, it enables them to reach any current location in under an hour… The current pressure,” he continues, “stems not from the perpetual IDF presence posing a threat to forces in Khan Younis, but from the fear of surprise raids like the one on Al Shifa, which dealt a severe blow to Hamas in the northern Gaza Strip.” Contrary to Caspit’s assessment, Ben-Yishai argues that “highly reliable sources say that the move of the 98th Division tout of the area has been planned for several weeks, and has nothing to do with the political crisis in relations with the U.S. government.”
 
In other news, Israel Hayom reports on a terror attack yesterday morning, in which a Palestinian gunman opened fire on vehicles on Highway 55 in the northern West Bank. A 19-year-old woman was seriously wounded and a 50-year-old man suffered light to moderate injuries. Ynet adds that the attacker’s car contained a large explosive device. He remains on the run.

Recommended Reading  

In an ever-evolving strategy in Gaza, the IDF pullback is a smart move, Ron Ben-Yishai, Ynet

  • “Israeli forces left Khan Younis, but the IDF remains an hour away from any operational location, and tactical maneuvering in Gaza will continue, with surprise raids as seen in Al Shifa; Instead of remaining static targets in the field, soldiers will adopt a more dynamic stance, also allowing refugees to leave Rafah.” Read more 

Hamas’ puppet master should be held accountable, Meir Ben Shabbat, Israel Hayom

  • “We must remind the US and the West that while Israel is the one fighting this war, it is not just Israel’s war. It is being waged against those who view Israel as the spearhead of Western civilization.” Read more

Iran’s paper tiger has finally been exposed, Con Coughlin, The Telegraph

  • “For all their grand-standing about wiping Israel off the map of the Middle East, the ayatollahs are well aware that, if it came to direct hostilities, they would be no match for the Israelis’s superior firepower.” Read more

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