Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday said Israel will be moving forward with a planned attack on the city of Rafah in the Gaza Strip despite pleas from the United States and other countries concerned for the 1 million civilians sheltering there.
Netanyahu said a victory against the militant group Hamas, which attacked Israel in October, "requires entry into Rafah and the elimination of the terrorist battalions there. It will happen - there is a date.”
The prime minister has for months insisted attacks in Rafah, a city in the southern Gaza strip, are necessary to eliminate Hamas and win the six-month war, but Western allies have warned against attacking the city that holds more than 1 million civilian refugees who have been driven from their homes.
Netanyahu’s announcement follows backlash from his far-right supporters after Israel withdrew most of its troops from southern Gaza on Sunday, a decision met with scrutiny and a threat from security minister Itamar Ben-Gvir warning that if he didn’t launch a "large-scale offensive" in Rafah, Netanyahu "will not have a mandate to continue" as prime minister.
The United States has put increasing pressure on Netanyahu to not authorize a major military strike in Rafah—President Joe Biden weeks ago said to do so would be a “mistake” and Thursday said continued U.S. support for the war in Gaza would depend on how well Israel worked to protect civilians and aid workers.
Biden told Netanyahu that he needed to take “measurable” steps to ease "civilian harm, humanitarian suffering and the safety of aid workers” or risk losing the support of the United States, Israel's closest ally.
About two-thirds of the entire population of the Gaza Strip (some 1.5 million people) was sheltering in Gaza as of two weeks ago with no safe way to evacuate, Deepmala Mahl of the humanitarian organization CARE International told ABC News while warning of a "terrible loss of life" if Israel's military invades.
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