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Analysis

Israel’s coalition may be looking for a way to rescind its veto of the PA

Asking the PA to manage the Gaza side of the Rafah crossing could ease tension with Egypt

May 16, 2024 10:21
IDF Rafah 2024_credit IDF
4 min read

On the morning of Israel’s 76th anniversary, the soldiers of the Israel Defence Forces’ 460th Armoured Brigade had no time for celebrations. Two days earlier the combat group of combined tank and infantry battalions, along with platoons of engineers and instructors from the counter-terrorism training base, had been deployed to the eastern part of Jabalia, on paper the largest Palestinian refugee camp but actually a major northern suburb of Gaza City, and they were still finding their bearings

Tanks and other armoured vehicles of the 196th battalion combat group drove in and out of a makeshift compound as gunfire could be heard on either side of the hastily erected sand barriers. A few hundred metres up the road two loud explosions were heard, followed by dense black smoke columns rising as a fighter jet launched missiles at a spot where a Hermes 450 drone circling overhead had detected a Hamas ambush.

It was a scene that could have taken place six months earlier in the previous Battle of Jabalia, which began last year in late October - with some of the same soldiers and tanks who returned there on Saturday night. They tried to hide their frustration at being back in Jabalia a second time but it came through in the word that nearly all of them used to describe their mission: “Sisyphean.”

This isn’t the first time in this war that I’ve joined IDF forces returning to a location in Gaza they had already operated in. Previously it was with the naval commandos of Flotilla 13 who returned two months ago to Shifa Hospital. But Operation Local Surgery was different. That was a special forces operation based on intelligence that high value targets - commanders in Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad - were meeting there.