An encouraging report in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal about how Israel’s 
campaign in Gaza is bogging down. The fact that it appears in the WSJ, a 
right-wing pro-Israel publication rather than a pro-Palestinian outlet, adds to 
its credibility. The discouraging aspect is that prolongation of the war will 
extend the suffering of trapped Gazan civilians, although it may reduce the 
odds they will be expelled from the territory.

Repeated Raids in Gaza Raise Prospect of Endless War
An emerging insurgency in parts of the enclave that Israeli forces previously 
cleared threatens to extend the fighting
By Omar Abdel-Baqui and Marcus Walker
Wall Street Journal
March 24, 2024

Israel’s war effort in Gaza has been hampered by the lack of a plan for how to 
stabilize the enclave after suppressing Hamas’s fighters. Prime Minister 
Benjamin Netanyahu has rejected calls from Israel’s international partners, 
including the U.S. and key Arab countries, for a reformed Palestinian Authority 
to run Gaza. 

Without a civil authority to restore order, security and basic services, and 
with the Israeli military disinclined to fully reoccupy the strip with troops 
on the ground, swaths of Gaza have descended into anarchy. The lack of security 
is impeding the delivery of humanitarian aid, contributing to a growing hunger 
crisis that international aid groups say is pushing Gaza’s population to the 
brink of famine. 

Meanwhile, fighting around hospitals has raised concerns about the impact on a 
medical system already on its knees. The vacuum of security and governance has 
helped Hamas’s efforts to return to areas vacated by Israeli forces. 

“Hamas’s armed wing deploys where it can be, and withdraws where it can’t until 
conditions change and it can deploy again,” said Khalil Shikaki, director of 
the Ramallah-based Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research. 

With no end to the war in sight, the pattern of repeatedly raiding Gazan 
hospitals and neighborhoods is turning into an endless ordeal for civilians and 
a source of growing diplomatic tensions between Israel and its allies, 
including the U.S. 

The Biden administration is pressuring Israel to bring the war to a close soon, 
fearing the worsening international and domestic political fallout of the 
highly polarizing conflict. Israel’s war in Gaza has divided voters whose 
support President Biden needs for his re-election bid in November. 

Israel’s invasion of Gaza followed the Oct. 7 attacks by the U.S.-designated 
terrorist group Hamas on southern Israel, which killed about 1,200 people, most 
of them civilians, according to Israeli authorities. 

Israel’s military response has killed more than 32,000 people in Gaza, mostly 
women and children, according to Palestinian health authorities, whose numbers 
don’t distinguish between militants and civilians. Israel’s military has said 
the total estimated death toll is roughly accurate but disputes the 
composition, saying over one-third of the dead are militants. 

Israel’s declared war aim of eliminating Hamas as a significant military and 
political entity set a high bar that will be difficult to achieve, said Yossi 
Mekelberg, a Middle East analyst at London-based think tank Chatham House. 
“Anything less than that will be perceived as a failure,” he said. 

Israeli leaders proclaimed premature victories in Gaza City and Khan Younis, 
the enclave’s two biggest cities, said Mekelberg. Now, with much of the Gaza 
Strip destroyed and Hamas fighters re-emerging and using guerrilla tactics, 
Israel’s leadership is divided on how to craft a coherent war plan, he said. 
“Netanyahu’s government is reluctant to shift and seek a political solution to 
end this,” he said. 

Israel’s Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said earlier this year that the war 
would enter a prolonged phase of raids against remaining points of resistance 
by Hamas in northern Gaza. The period of raids would give way to a plan for 
stabilizing the Gaza Strip, he said. 

Some Israeli analysts say the repeated combat operations in Gaza City were part 
of the plan. “Once the Israeli forces are pulling out of a certain area, then 
[for] Hamas, it’s time to reconstitute,” said retired Israeli Brig. Gen. Shlomo 
Brom. “And what we are trying to do is prevent it, by this raid on Shifa and 
other similar raids that will follow.” 

However, criticism is growing in Israel and among the country’s international 
allies that the war effort is stagnating. More than 100 Israeli hostages—among 
them many who are believed dead—remain in the captivity of Gaza militants, 
despite months of military operations and negotiations aimed at their release. 
Israel has yet to locate Hamas’s leader in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar, who helped 
orchestrate the Oct. 7 attack. 

Israel is also grappling with how to oust Hamas from the city of Rafah on 
Gaza’s southern border with Egypt, where it says Hamas’s battalions are still 
intact. About 1.4 million civilians are sheltering in Rafah, most of them 
refugees from other parts of Gaza. The U.S. is urging Israel not to launch a 
major ground assault there, warning of disastrous humanitarian consequences. 
But Netanyahu said his forces will proceed with or without U.S. backing, as 
they seek to destroy Hamas battalions there.

In Washington this week, the White House will press the issue with delegations 
led by two senior Israeli officials, Netanyahu’s confidant Ron Dermer and his 
national security adviser Tzachi Hanegbi. 

Hamas and Israel remain deadlocked on negotiating an end to fighting. Hamas is 
pushing for Israel to allow Palestinians from Gaza’s north to be able to return 
there quickly. Israel insists that the process be carried out gradually, and 
only starting two weeks after a deal is struck, according to officials from 
Egypt, a key mediator. Israel is also resisting the exchange of 30 Palestinian 
prisoners with long sentences for each female Israeli soldier held hostage by 
Hamas.

Israel has greatly reduced the number of its troops in Gaza, from a peak of 
more than 60,000 to just a fraction of that currently, according to Israeli 
military officials and analysts. Israel activated hundreds of thousands of 
reservists in the beginning of the war but has demobilized most of those who 
were sent to Gaza, partly to relieve the pressure on Israel’s economy.

“It works for a short campaign to have so many people not contribute to the 
economy,” Mekelberg said. “Not for a war that lasts six months.”

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