In a major escalation, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has reportedly expressed a clear intention to move toward the complete military occupation of the Gaza Strip, following nearly 22 months of ongoing genocide against the Palestinian people.
According to Israel’s public broadcaster, Netanyahu’s current trajectory includes a full invasion of central refugee camps and Gaza City itself. Additional meetings have been scheduled with the Israeli Security Cabinet and government officials to discuss expanding the war on Gaza.
A Shift Toward Total Control
Recent high-level security discussions involving Minister of War Yisrael Katz, Chief of Staff, and Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer—excluding Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir—reportedly focused on the logistics of tightening Israel’s grip on Gaza and enforcing a total military siege.
Israeli outlet The Jerusalem Post cited an unnamed senior official confirming:
“The direction is toward full occupation of the Gaza Strip.”
Meanwhile, Israel’s Army Radio reported that Netanyahu’s inner circle had this message for the Chief of Staff:
“If he opposes the occupation of Gaza, he should resign.”
Security Establishment Warns of Consequences
Haaretz newspaper cited sources within the Israeli military warning that such an operation would require pulling troops from other fronts and mobilising tens of thousands of reservists. The army raised concerns about:
- The erosion of combat readiness among both active and reserve units
- Deteriorating conditions of military equipment
- The high likelihood that any assault on areas housing captives would result in their death
The Chief of Staff reportedly cautioned that further military escalation would severely complicate the ability to locate and recover Israeli captives held in Gaza.
Green Light from Washington
On Monday, Israeli sources told Channel 12 that Netanyahu had made a final decision to pursue the full occupation of Gaza, with a green light from the United States to intensify military operations—particularly in areas suspected of housing Israeli captives and resistance fighters.
Despite internal disagreements within the Israeli security establishment, Netanyahu is pressing forward. According to ministers who spoke with Israel’s state broadcaster, the Prime Minister is determined to expand the military operation, even if the intelligence community warns against it.
Haaretz reported on 29 July that Netanyahu presented his cabinet with an American-approved plan for occupying parts of the Gaza Strip.
This move came shortly after controversial remarks by U.S. President Donald Trump, who said:
“Israel’s withdrawal from Gaza twenty years ago was unwise”—
in reference to the 2005 disengagement by former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
Resistance Offers Exchange, Israel Rejects
Hamas has repeatedly declared its readiness to release all Israeli captives at once, in exchange for:
- An end to the genocide in Gaza
- The withdrawal of Israeli forces
- The release of Palestinian prisoners
However, Netanyahu—who remains wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes—continues to sabotage negotiations by demanding conditions such as the disarmament of Palestinian factions and now insists on reoccupying Gaza entirely.
The Human Toll
Israel estimates that approximately 50 Israeli captives remain in Gaza, with around 20 confirmed alive. In contrast, Israel holds over 10,800 Palestinian detainees in its prisons—many subjected to torture, starvation, and deliberate medical neglect, resulting in numerous deaths, according to human rights reports.
Since October 7, 2023, and under direct American military and political backing, Israel has committed what international legal experts and UN officials have called a genocide in Gaza:
- Over 211,000 Palestinians killed or injured
- The vast majority are women and children
- More than 9,000 still missing under the rubble
- Hundreds of thousands displaced
- A famine that continues to claim lives daily