152 Soldiers Have Been Killed In Gaza War – Israeli Army

The Israeli army reported on Sunday that, as a result of its offensive against Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip, 152 soldiers had died.

According to reports, combat on Saturday claimed the lives of nine troops, making it one of the worst days for the armed forces since they began a ground operation in Palestinian territory on October 27.

According to military spokesman Jonathan Conricus, soldiers were almost at operational control in north Gaza. The Israeli army would continue its operations throughout Gaza.

Rescuers in the central Gaza city of Deir al-Balah worked through the night to extract survivors from a completely demolished apartment building.

Israel denies directly targeting civilians and says the war against Hamas is vital to ensure October’s shock raids on farms, villages and kibbutzim in Israel can never be repeated.

‘We want a ceasefire’

Early on Sunday, Hamas said new strikes had hit Jabalia and Khan Yunis.

Nearly 80 percent for Gaza’s 2.4 population has been displaced by the fighting, the UN estimates.

Many people from the north escaped to the south, where there was comparatively more safety, only to find themselves drawn into the conflict again.

In light of this, US President Joe Biden reported that he and Israel’s hardline prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, had another “long talk.”

According to the White House, the “objectives and phasing” of Israel’s military operation and “the critical need” to protect civilians were the main topics of discussion.

According to a curt description of the conversation provided by Israeli officials, Netanyahu “made it clear that Israel would continue the war until all of its goals have been achieved.”

Netanyahu, Israel’s longest-serving premier, has had testy relations with a string of US presidents.

However, differences over how the war in Gaza is being fought, when it will stop, and what will happen the day after have further strained relations.

A UN Security Council resolution that essentially demanded that Israel permit “immediate, safe, and unhindered” deliveries of life-saving aid to Gaza “at scale” was approved on Friday thanks to American support.

‘Lost contact’

World powers had wrangled for days over the wording, and at Washington’s insistence toned down some provisions — including removing a call for a ceasefire.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has accused Israel of “creating massive obstacles” for aid deliveries.

South Gaza is the main avenue for humanitarian relief to enter the territory.

What little aid arrives into the territory comes, for the most part, across the Egyptian border near Rafah.

For Palestinians in that southern city, the prospect of aid alone was not enough.

“We don’t want food, we want a ceasefire,” said Mahmud al-Shaer.

Ahmad al-Burawi, who was displaced from Beit Lahia further north, added: “We just want to return to our lands, that’s all. We want a solution” to end the war. “People are dying.”

Israelis, including friends and relatives of the 129 captives still believed held in Gaza, demonstrated again on Saturday in Tel Aviv.

Hamas’s armed wing said it “lost contact” with militants tasked with guarding five of the hostages, including three elderly men who appeared in a hostage video the group released this week.

“We believe that those hostages have been killed” in Israeli strikes, said spokesman Abu Obeida without providing evidence.

Ship attacks

Talks aimed at resuscitating a truce and prisoner swap appeared to be stalled.

An earlier truce allowed 80 Israeli hostages to be released in exchange for 240 Palestinian prisoners, but ended after one week.

The army says about 700 Hamas and Islamic Jihad “terrorist operatives” have been captured since the war began.

Far from Gaza, new attacks on shipping routes showed the war is already spilling over into the broader region.

Maritime agencies said a drone strike damaged a chemical tanker in waters off Veraval, India.

There was no claim of responsibility, but the Pentagon said it was a “one-way attack drone fired from Iran”.

The United States blamed Yemen’s Iran-backed Huthi rebels for firing drones and missiles at a US warship and two other vessels around the Red Sea.

US Central Command said four unmanned aerial drones had targeted the USS Laboon, but had been shot down.

The US military also said an Indian-flagged crude oil tanker in the Red Sea was hit and sent out a distress call.

Iran’s deputy foreign minister, Ali Bagheri, on Saturday denied Iran was orchestrating the campaign, saying the Huthis act on their “own decisions and capabilities”.

There also have been cross-border skirmishes between Israeli forces and Lebanon’s powerful Hezbollah movement which, like Hamas, is backed by Iran.

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