
Breadcrumb
Israel has been heavily bombing the Gaza Strip for ten days following Hamasā unprecedented attack on 7 October, with its forces now mobilising in huge numbers for an impending ground assault.
So far, nearly 2,800 Palestinians have been killed and more than 10,000 wounded by Israeli airstrikes, with Gaza experiencing a humanitarian catastrophe following Israeli measures to cut electricity and water, and impose a ātotal siegeā.
Since the deadly attack on southern Israel ā dubbed operation 'Al-Aqsa Flood' ā which killed over 1,400 Israelis and saw Hamas fighters take nearly 200 hostages, Israeli officials have made clear that their military would strike Gaza harder than ever before.
An emergency government and war cabinet were set up last week to that effect, which includes opposition leader Benny Gantz. After its first meeting, Netanyahu vowed that āevery Hamas member is a dead manā, promising to eliminate not only Hamasā senior leadership but the entire organisation itself.
Militarily, Israelās Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said he has āreleased all restraintsā on Israelās army in their fight against Hamas, saying that Gaza would ānever go back to what it wasā.
Given such rhetoric and the huge mobilisation of Israelās military, rights groups and Palestinians are anticipating a catastrophe in Gaza.
"A ground invasion of Gaza would lead to more destruction and killings and would exacerbate the humanitarian disaster that Israel has been inflicting on Gazans, who lost access to water, fuel, electricity, and food"
'Second Nakba'
Prior to an expected ground invasion, Israel has already taken the extreme measure of imposing a ātotal blockadeā on Gaza, cutting off all necessities such as water, electricity, food, and fuel to the 2.3 million Palestinians who live there. Israeli ministers have said aid and other goods will only be allowed once Israeli hostages are freed.
In addition, living in the north of Gaza were ordered last Friday to move to the south within 24 hours, raising fears of a second āNakbaā amid mass forced displacement. According to the UN humanitarian agency, OCHA, hundreds of thousands of civilians have already desperately sought shelter in UN schools, which are well over capacity. Following a ground invasion, the scale of displacement could be inconceivable.
The Rafah border crossing with Egypt, which is the only gateway in and out of Gaza was shut down after ongoing Israeli airstrikes hit the Palestinian side of the crossing. Egyptian officials have been wary of an inflow of refugees, while Palestinians fear any displacement into the Sinai Peninsula could become permanent, echoing past forced displacements of 1948 and 1967.
Humanitarian catastrophe
Rights groups have multiplied pleas for the establishment of humanitarian corridors to allow aid into Gaza amid warnings over dwindling water, food, and fuel supplies amid ātotal blockadeā.
Gazaās only power plant has shut down, over-capacity hospitals are running out of life-saving supplies, and other vital services will soon stop functioning.
"A ground invasion of Gaza would lead to more destruction and killings and would exacerbate the humanitarian disaster that Israel has been inflicting on Gazans, who lost access to water, fuel, electricity, and foodā, Nur Arafeh, a fellow at the Malcolm H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Center, told °®Āžµŗ.
Health officials and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) warn that the health system is on the verge of collapse. "Hospitals are fully occupied with their clinical capabilities, and the wounded and patients are on the ground due to the intensification of Israeli aggression," the Palestinian health ministry said in a .
āWithout electricity, hospitals risk turning into morgues,ā Fabrizio Carboni, the ICRCās regional director for the Near and Middle East, said in a .
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The UNās World Food Programme (WFP) that critical supplies were running dangerously low after Israel ordered a complete siege on the crowded territory. Before this latest outbreak of violence, required humanitarian assistance. With half of the population under 18, those needs will only grow.
Many residents are now desperately rushing to stockpile food, but most stores are empty. āI went to the grocery store today to stock up on essentials as Israel cut food supply to Gaza,ā Maha Hussaini, a human rights activist based in Gaza, . āThe store owner told me the empty shelves wonāt be restockedā.
Nour Odeh, a Palestinian political analyst, expressed deep concern to °®Āžµŗ on the looming crisis ahead, fearing that the ground invasion and siege imposed on Gaza will mean that people could soon be without food, and the Al Shifa hospital, which faces an Israeli evacuation order, may have to shut down.
āOn a human level, this is beyond catastrophicā, Odeh told TNA. āOn a political one, itās the absolute act of cruelty that weāll be talking about for generations to comeā.
While thousands of Gazans have already fled their homes, others have refused to evacuate, with many more torn between the traumatic decision of leaving and the possibility of death if they remain.
"On a human level, this is beyond catastrophic. On a political one, it's the absolute act of cruelty that we'll be talking about for generations to come"
āWith a ground invasion, I can foresee all this carnage happening with civilians still trapped," Odeh said.
As hundreds of thousands flee their homes, the UN has explicitly said that mass relocation was āimpossibleā to implement and could have devastating humanitarian consequences.
āThere is absolutely no safe place. I canāt even imagine what impact a full or partial ground invasion would have,ā Heba, an activist from Gaza, told TNA. āIt will be ugly, devastating, and many more innocent lives will be lost.ā
Such vast movements of people ahead of a ground invasion could actually invite mass casualties among civilians, with the scale of the impending destruction far worse than any military offensive Gaza has witnessed in recent years.
āYou could get up to 10,000, 20,000, thereās really no limit to the amount of people that could be harmed,ā Frank Lowenstein, former US Special Envoy for Middle East Peace, BBC Newsnight, indicating that thousands of Palestinians could die in Israelās ground assault.
In 2014, Israelās 52-day āOperation Protective Edgeā killed more than 2,000 people, and saw 19 days of a ground invasion. The death toll from Israelās bombardments since Saturday has already exceeded that figure.
Urban fighting
Despite past ground invasions, Israelās military will still face considerable operational challenges in densely populated areas, with the possibility of huge civilian casualties.
Considering the nature of urban warfare, it could well turn into a prolonged ground campaign for Israel. Hamas has also likely been preparing for such a possibility and will be organised for urban combat.
āThis will be essentially an infantry battle with a lot of complications for the Israeli assailants,ā Frank Ledwidge, a former UK military intelligence officer and currently a senior strategy lecturer at Portsmouth University, France 24. He said that once Israeli troops enter Gaza, they will face IEDs, booby traps and Hamasā network of tunnels.
Additionally, the fate of hostages who are likely scattered across Gaza complicates a land assault and exacerbates the risks during ground operations. Hamas, meanwhile, could use the captives as a deterrent against Israeli actions.
With its highly advanced capabilities Israel will likely succeed militarily, but even if Hamas is defeated on the battlefield the Israeli occupation will ensure that its reason for existing continues.
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Previous offensives on Gaza in 2006, 2009, 2012, 2014, and 2021 saw Israel destroy vast swathes of infrastructure in Gaza and kill thousands of civilians, butĢżHamas remained in power.
āThe Israeli strategy of undermining Hamas has been a total failure while imprisoning 2 million civilians in a tiny plot of land. Now after 16 years of failed policy, Israel is pursuing a costly ground invasion. This is their Afghanistan,ā political scientist Robert Kubinec wrote in a .
But regardless of how the coming invasion will play out militarily, civilians in Gaza will pay the heaviest price. Even before the current escalation it had the highest unemployment in the world, with 80% of Gazans living below the poverty line, and only up to six hours a day of electricity.
In both 2012 and 2015, the UN urgently said that Gaza could become āunliveableā by 2020 due to the 16-year Israeli blockade. Israelās impending ground invasion could further determine its long-term future, potentially with unthinkable consequences.
Alessandra Bajec is a freelance journalist currently based in Tunis.
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