Gaza war
Gaza war | |||||||
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Part of the Gaza–Israel conflict, the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, and the Middle Eastern crisis (2023–present) | |||||||
![]() Gaza Strip under Palestinian control
Furthest Israeli advance in Gaza Strip
Evacuated areas inside Israel
Maximum extent of the 2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel Areas of Gaza subject to Israeli evacuation orders | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Units involved | |||||||
See Order of battle | |||||||
Strength | |||||||
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Casualties and losses | |||||||
Gaza Strip:
West Bank:[h] Militants inside Israel:[i] Lebanon and Syria: Total killed: 68,837+[l] |
Israel:
Total killed: 1,985+ | ||||||
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The Gaza war[p] has been fought between Israel and Hamas-led Palestinian militant groups[q] in the Gaza Strip and Israel since 7 October 2023. It is Israel's 15th war in Gaza,[77] and sparked an ongoing Middle Eastern crisis. The first day was the deadliest for Israel; it is the deadliest war for Palestinians in the history of the conflict.[78]
On 7 October 2023, Hamas-led militant groups
Since the start of the Israeli offensive, over 48,000 Palestinians in Gaza have been reported as killed,[r] over half of them women and children.[15][87][88] The Lancet has estimated more than 70,000 direct deaths due to traumatic injuries.[20] More than 100,000 Palestinians have also been injured.[89] Israel's tightened blockade cut off basic necessities, causing a severe hunger crisis with a high risk of famine persisting as of November 2024[update].[90][91] By early 2025, Israel had caused unprecedented destruction in Gaza and made large parts of it uninhabitable,[92] leveling entire cities[93] and destroying the healthcare system, agricultural land,[94] religious and cultural landmarks,[95] educational facilities,[96][97] and cemeteries.[98] Nearly all of the strip's 2.3 million Palestinian population have been forcibly displaced.[99][100] Over 100,000 Israelis were internally displaced as of February 2024.[101] Torture and sexual violence were committed by Palestinian militant groups and Israeli forces.[102]
Various experts and human rights organizations have stated that Israel and Hamas
Names
The Gaza war is referred to by different names. Israel calls it the "iron swords war" (
Background

The
Since 2007, the
Since 2007, Israel and Hamas, along with other Palestinian militant groups based in Gaza, have engaged in conflict,[129][127][134] including in four wars: in 2008–2009, 2012, 2014, and 2021.[135][136] These conflicts killed approximately 6,400 Palestinians and 300 Israelis.[137][49][121] In 2018–2019, there were large weekly organized protests near the Gaza-Israel border, which were violently suppressed by Israel, whose forces killed hundreds and injured thousands of Palestinians by sniper fire.[138][139] Soon after the 2021 Israel–Palestine crisis began, Hamas' military wing, the Al-Qassam Brigades, started planning the 7 October 2023 operation against Israel.[140][141] According to diplomats, Hamas had repeatedly said in the months leading up to October 2023 that it did not want another military escalation in Gaza as it would worsen the humanitarian crisis that occurred after the 2021 conflict.[132]
Hamas officials stated that the attack was a response to the
Confrontations
7 October Hamas-led attack on Israel
- Approximate situation on 7–8 October
- A blood-stained floor in the aftermath of the Nahal Oz attack
- Aftermath of Hamas rocket hit on the maternity ward of Barzilai Medical Center
- Satellite view of widespread fires in Israeli areas surrounding the Gaza Strip
- Footage of Israeli soldiers securing the area after the Nova music festival massacre
In the morning of 7 October 2023,
Militants massacred civilians in several
The 7 October attack was described as "an intelligence failure for the ages"[178] and a "failure of imagination" on the part of the Israeli government.[179] A BBC report commented on Hamas's "extraordinary levels of operational security".[180] It later emerged that abnormal Hamas movements had been detected the previous day by Israeli intelligence, but the military's alert level was not raised and political leaders were not informed.[181]
A briefing in The Economist noted that "the assault dwarf[ed] all other mass murders of Israeli civilians", and that "the last time before October 7th that this many Jews were murdered on a single day was during the Holocaust."[167] Hamas stated that its attack was a response to the blockade of the Gaza Strip, the expansion of
Initial Israeli counter-operation (October 2023)
- Approximate situation on 9 October
- Aftermath of a Hamas rocket hit on the maternity ward of Barzilai Medical Center, a hospital in Ashkelon, Israel, on 8 October 2023
- Building in the Gaza Strip being destroyed by Israeli missiles
- Remains of the Sderot police station, following recapture by IDF
- Destruction of a residential building in Gaza by an Israeli airstrike
The IDF began Israel's counter-attack several hours after the Hamas-led invasion.
The attack was a complete surprise to the Israelis.[190] In a televised broadcast, Benjamin Netanyahu, Prime Minister of Israel, announced that the country was at war.[164] He threatened to "turn all the places where Hamas is organized and hiding into cities of ruins", called Gaza "the city of evil", and urged its residents to leave.[191][142] Overnight, Israel's Security Cabinet voted to act to bring about the "destruction of the military and governmental capabilities of Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad".[192] The Israel Electric Corporation, which supplies 80% of the Gaza Strip's electricity, cut off power to the area.[193] This reduced Gaza's power supply from 120 MW to 20 MW, provided by power plants paid for by the Palestinian Authority.[194]
The IDF declared a "state of readiness for war",[162] mobilized tens of thousands of army reservists,[159][193] and declared a state of emergency for areas within 80 kilometers (50 mi) of Gaza.[195] The Yamam counterterrorism unit was deployed,[196] along with four new divisions, augmenting 31 existing battalions.[148] Reservists were reported deployed in Gaza, in the West Bank, and along borders with Lebanon and Syria.[197] Residents near Gaza were asked to stay inside, while civilians in southern and central Israel were "required to stay next to shelters".[193] The southern region of Israel was closed to civilian movement,[196] and roads were closed around Gaza[148] and Tel Aviv.[193] While Ben Gurion Airport and Ramon Airport remained operational, multiple airlines cancelled flights to and from Israel.[198] On 9 or 10 October, Hamas offered to release all civilian hostages held in Gaza if Israel would call off its planned invasion of the Gaza Strip, but the Israeli government rejected the offer.[199]
Blockade, bombardment, and evacuation of northern Gaza
- The line in black represents the IDF's boundary at evacuation of the northern Gaza Strip
- A man carries the body of a Palestinian child killed during the shelling of 17 October 2023
- A newborn baby was killed as a result of the Israeli airstrike
- Wounded Palestinians receive treatment on the floor at the overcrowded emergency ward of Al-Shifa hospital
- Aftermath of an Israeli airstrike on the El-Remal area of Gaza City, 9 October 2023
Following the surprise attack, the
On 13 October, the IDF ordered all civilians in
On 17 October, Israel bombed areas of southern Gaza.
Initial invasion to first truce (October–November 2023)


On 27 October, after building up an invasion force of over 100,000 soldiers, the IDF launched a large-scale ground incursion into parts of northern Gaza.
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On 31 October, Israel bombed a six-story apartment building in central Gaza, killing at least 106 civilians including 54 children in what Human Rights Watch called an "apparent war crime".[234] On 1 November, the first group of evacuees left Gaza for Egypt. Five hundred evacuees, comprising critically wounded and foreign nationals, were evacuated over several days.[235] On 18 November, Israel struck a marked Médecins Sans Frontières convoy, killing two aid workers.[236] On 22 November, Israel and Hamas reached a temporary ceasefire agreement, providing for a four-day pause[237] in hostilities to allow for the release of 50 hostages held in Gaza.[237][238] The deal also provided for the release of approximately 150 Palestinian women and children incarcerated by Israel.[238]
Resumption of hostilities (December 2023 – January 2024)
Israel adopted a grid system to order precise evacuations within Gaza. It was criticized as inaccessible, due to the lack of electricity and internet connectivity in Gaza, and confusing. Some evacuation instructions were vague or contradictory,[239][240] and Israel sometimes struck areas it had told people to evacuate to.[241][242][243] Law experts called these warnings ineffective.[244] Amnesty International found no evidence of Hamas targets at the sites of some strikes, and requested that they be investigated as possible war crimes.[245] On 6 December, Refaat Alareer, a prominent professor and writer in Gaza, was killed by an Israeli airstrike.[246] His poem "If I Must Die" was widely circulated after his death.[247]

In December, the IDF reported its troops had reached the centers of
On 1 January 2024, Israel withdrew from neighborhoods in North Gaza.[258] On 15 January, Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant said the most intense fighting in the north of the Gaza Strip had ended, and a new phase of low-intensity fighting was about to begin.[259] By 18 January, the IDF, who had previously stated that Hamas control over North Gaza was "dismantled", reported that Hamas had significantly rebuilt its fighting strength in North Gaza.[260]
On 22 January, 24 IDF soldiers died in the deadliest day for the IDF since the invasion began. Of these, 21 died when Palestinian militants fired an RPG at a tank, causing adjacent buildings to collapse.[261][262][263] On 29 January, Israeli forces killed Hind Rajab, a five-year-old girl, and six of her family members when the car they were driving was struck by an Israeli tank and machine gun fire; two rescue workers who attempted to retrieve Rajab were also killed.[264] The Red Crescent released the audio from Rajab's phone call with rescue workers, causing international outrage over her death.[265]
Build-up to the Rafah offensive (February–April 2024)


Between February and May 2024, preparations to invade Rafah became a dominant theme in Israeli officials' public rhetoric. On 12 February, Israel started a
Al-Shifa Hospital, previously besieged in November 2023, was raided again between 18 March and 1 April.[273] Israeli forces killed Faiq al-Mabhouh, who they said was head of the operations directorate of Hamas' internal security service. Hamas said al-Mabhouh was in charge of civil law enforcement and had been coordinating aid deliveries to north Gaza.[274][275] The IDF said it killed 200 people in the hospital fighting, including senior Hamas leaders; this account was disputed.[276][277] Survivors denied that militants had organised on the hospital grounds.[278] Israeli forces were accused of reducing the hospital to a "blown out, fire-blackened" state, and of massacring 400 Palestinians.[279][280][281]

A 25 March UN Security Council resolution calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza for Ramadan[282] was ignored by the IDF.[283] On 1 April, seven international aid workers from World Central Kitchen (WCK) were killed in an Israeli airstrike south of Deir al-Balah.[284][285][286] WCK, who said their vehicles were clearly marked and their location known to Israel, subsequently withdrew from operating in Gaza alongside ANERA and Project HOPE.[285][287] On 4 April, Israel opened the Erez Crossing for the first time since 7 October after US pressure.[288]
By 6 March, Israel had completed a new east–west road in Gaza. It was intended to mobilize troops and supplies, to connect and defend IDF positions on al-Rashid and Salah al-Din streets, and prevent people in the south of Gaza from returning to the north.[289] On 7 April, Israel withdrew from the south Gaza Strip, with only one brigade remaining in the Netzarim Corridor in the north.[290] Palestinians displaced from that city began to return from the south of the Gaza Strip.[291] Israel planned to initiate its ground offensive in Rafah around mid-April, but postponed to consider its response to the Iranian strikes on Israel.[292] On 25 April, Israel intensified strikes on Rafah ahead of its threatened invasion.[293][294]
Beginning of the Rafah offensive (May–July 2024)

On 6 May, the IDF ordered 100,000 civilians in eastern Rafah to evacuate to
The same day, the IDF entered the outskirts of Rafah,

On 24 May, the United Nations said only 906 aid truckloads had reached Gaza since Israel's Rafah operation began.[309] Israel bombed the Tel al-Sultan displacement camp in Rafah on 26 May, killing at least 45 people, allegedly including two senior Hamas officials.[310][311][312] This provoked a skirmish between Egyptian and Israeli soldiers at the Gaza border in which one Egyptian soldier was killed.[313] Less than 48 hours afterwards, another evacuation zone, the Al-Mawasi refugee camp, was bombed, killing at least 21 people.[310][314][315] The IDF denied involvement in the attack.[316]
On 6 June, Israel
Rafah, Khan Yunis, and general bombardment (July–September 2024)
On 22 July, the IDF began a brief
On 13 July, at least 90 people were killed and 300 were injured in
An Israeli airstrike on Nuseirat refugee camp on 11 September killed at least 18 people.[341][342][343]
Continued operations throughout Gaza (October – December 2024)
In October,
On 8 October, the IDF began to
The IDF has been accused of blocking aid delivery to the Gaza Strip by allowing looting gangs to target aid convoys.[357] On 16 November, 98 out of 109 food trucks carrying UN aid from Kerem Shalom crossing were looted in Israeli-controlled areas of the Gaza strip.[357][358][359] On 1 December, the UN suspended its aid shipments to Gaza through the Kerem Shalom crossing, blaming Israel for failing to "ensure safe conditions for delivering relief supplies."[360] On 12 December, two Israeli strikes on an aid convoy in southern Gaza killed 13 people and wounded at least 30 people, including several of them seriously.[361][362][363]
On 30 November, a strike on a World Central Kitchen vehicle transporting supplies killed three aid workers.[364][365][366] An Israeli airstrike on a group of Palestinians waiting for receiving food from an aid convoy in Khan Yunis killed at least 12 Palestinians and injured several others.[367] On 9 December, an Israeli strike hit people who lined up for buying flour in Rafah, killing 10 people.[368]
On 16 October, IDF ground forces killed Yahya Sinwar in a shootout in Tal as-Sultan.[369] The conscript soldiers who participated in the shootout were initially unaware of Sinwar's presence, and he was identified the following day by his dental records.[370] There were no hostages in Sinwar's vicinity at the time of his death,[371] and no civilian casualties were reported.[372] Biden urged Israel to end the war after Sinwar's death.[373]
Siege of northern Gaza

On 13 October, senior IDF officials told Haaretz that the government was not seeking to revive hostage talks and that political leadership was pushing for the annexation of parts of the Gaza Strip.[374] In the later weeks of October, Israel's siege of North Gaza intensified and daily aid shipments dropped significantly. Eyewitnesses reported the shelling of hospitals, razing of shelters, and abductions of men and boys by the Israeli military, leading to speculation that Israel had decided to implement a plan by a group of retired generals to turn the northern Strip into a closed military zone and declare all who refuse to leave as combatants.[375] On 5 November, Israeli Brigadier General Itzik Cohen told reporters that "there is no intention of allowing the residents of the northern Gaza Strip to return" and that no food aid had entered northern Gaza because there were "no more civilians left".[376]
The IDF continued its encirclement of Jabalia by sending tanks to Beit Lahia and Beit Hanoun and issuing evacuation orders to residents.[377] On 24 October, an IDF attack destroyed at least 10 residential buildings in the Jabalia refugee camp. According to an assessment by Gaza Civil Defense, 150 people were killed or injured.[378] On 25 October, the WHO said it had lost contact with Kamal Adwan hospital, and UN human rights chief Volker Türk called recent developments in North Gaza the "darkest moment" in the war so far.[379] Food aid to Gaza reached a new low in October at an average of 30 trucks per day, or less than 6% of the daily pre-war average.[380] Residents of northern Gaza said in November that no aid had reached their cities since 5 October.[376] The UN warned that the situation had become "apocalyptic" and that "The entire Palestinian population in North Gaza is at imminent risk of dying from disease, famine and violence".[381] On 2 November, UNICEF said that over 50 children were killed in Israeli strikes in Jabalia in the past two days.[382] On 12 November, aid in Gaza fell to its lowest level in 11 months despite a US ultimatum that it be restored.[383]
On 24 November, Israel issued a new wave of evacuation orders, triggering another round of displacements in Jabalia.[384] UNRWA said that Israel had rejected nine attempts to deliver aid to north Gaza in the month of November and obstructed an additional 82 attempts; they added that the survival conditions were diminishing for the 60,000 to 70,000 civilians remaining in north Gaza.[385] Mahmoud Almadhoun, a chef who founded the Gaza Soup Kitchen, was targeted and killed by an Israeli quadcopter near Kamal Adwan hospital.[386] On 5 December, Israeli Army Radio announced that 18,000 Palestinians were evacuated from Beit Lahia and that soldiers killed approximately 20 militants during fighting on the previous day.[387]
On 13 December, Israeli tank fire killed Dr. Sayeed Joudeh, the last orthopedic surgeon in northern Gaza.[388] On 26 December, an Israeli air strike hit a building in the vicinity of Kamal Adwan Hospital, killing about 50 people, including five staff.[389] Over the next days, the World Health Organization announced that the hospital had been put out of service by Israeli attacks and the hospital's director, Hussam Abu Safiya, had been abducted: the IDF forced patients to evacuate to an already-destroyed hospital by cutting off their oxygen.[390] The IDF claimed to have killed 19 militants during its raid;[391][392] Gaza Health Ministry said that 50 people including hospital staff were killed.[391]
Truces
First ceasefire (November 2023)

Following the introduction of a Qatari-brokered
Second ceasefire (January 2025 – present)

On 15 January 2025, an agreement was announced between Israel and Hamas, through the mediation of Qatar, in which Hamas agreed to release a number of Israeli hostages held in the Gaza Strip since the 7 October attack in exchange for Hamas militants and other Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli prisons. The two parties also agreed to a ceasefire for the second time during the war;[399] it went into effect on the morning of 19 January 2025.[400] On 27 January, tens of thousands of Palestinians began a mass return to northern Gaza after Israel opened a corridor for civilian movement following a 48-hour delay.[401] Hamas claimed that Israel had violated the terms of the ceasefire, and announced the suspension of the release of Israeli hostages on 10 February.[402] After Netanyahu and Trump threatened to restart fighting in Gaza,[403] Hamas relented on 13 February,[404] allowing the release of hostages to begin again two days later.[405] On 22 February, Hamas released six Israeli hostages;[406] however, Israel refused to release the 600 Palestinian prisoners, with Netanyahu objecting to the "use of hostages for propaganda" and saying that Israel would release the prisoners once the next hostage release was guaranteed without the ceremonies.[407] On 25 February, Israel and Hamas reached a deal to exchange the bodies of Israeli hostages who were agreed to be handed over during the first phase for releasing hundreds of Palestinian prisoners without public ceremony.[408]
On 1 March, the day the first phase of the ceasefire was scheduled to end, Hamas rejected an Israeli proposal to extend it to release more hostages, demanding the implementation of the second phase.[409] Netanyahu's office said that Israel endorsed a US plan to extend the Gaza truce for the Ramadan and Passover periods. Under this plan, half of the living and dead hostages would be released on the first day of the extended truce and the remaining hostages would be released at the end of the period if a permanent truce was reached. It claimed that the initial deal allowed Israel to resume war at any moment after 1 March if negotiations were deemed ineffective. Following Hamas's refusal to accept the US proposal,[410][411] Netanyahu ceased the entry of aid to Gaza the next day.[412][413]
The humanitarian aid blockade was condemned by mediators, namely Egypt, as a violation of the ceasefire, which stipulated that phase one would automatically be extended as long as phase two negotiations were in progress.[414][415] On 9 March, Israeli Energy Minister Eli Cohen ordered a halt to supply of Israeli electricity to Gaza.[416]
Post-war plans
After the announcement of a second ceasefire in January 2025, Donald Trump announced his intention to displace the Palestinian population of Gaza, reiterating his position that they should be resettled in neighboring Arab countries three more times that month. [417] Ahead of a 4 February meeting with Netanyahu, Trump specified his intention to permanently displace Gaza's Palestinian inhabitants, which would be in violation of international law. He proposed a US takeover of Gaza that evening during a press conference with Netanyahu.[418]
Trump insisted that neighboring countries would pay for Gaza's reconstruction and that "world people" would live there. He did not rule out deploying US troops if necessary. On 5 and 6 February, Trump aides and Trump himself walked back some of his comments, including his willingness to deploy US soldiers. On 10 February, Trump said that Palestinians who leave Gaza would have no right of return. In a meeting with King Abdullah II of Jordan, Trump said that the US would take rather than buy Gaza because "It's a war torn area. It's Gaza. There is nothing to buy."[419]
These statements were met with condemnation from world leaders; however, in Israel, Itamar Ben-Gvir praised Trump, saying that Palestinian "migration" was the only solution to the war.[420] Netanyahu and Ben-Gvir characterized the planned displacement of Gazans as a "voluntary migration", but communications minister Shlomo Karhi said the transfer will be forced rather than voluntary.[421]
Arab governments have rejected Trump's transfer plan, instead backing an Egyptian proposal. The Arab League, meeting on 4 March in Cairo, devised a $53bn plan detailing the reconstruction of Gaza while keeping its population in place.[422]
In March 2025, the United States and Israel contacted officials from Sudan, Somalia and Somaliland to discuss the resettlement of Gaza residents in their territories. Sudan immediately rejected the proposal.[423]
Spillover
- Rising smoke after the Israel strike on Hezbollah headquarters
- A damaged building in Kiryat Shmona, northern Israel
- Two United States carrier strike groups in the Mediterranean Sea.
The war's spillover has resulted in a
Israel has bombed targets in and around Damascus throughout the war,[426][427][428] with an attack on the Iranian embassy in Damascus on 1 April 2024 leading to a series of retaliatory airstrikes on Israel in response.[429][430] On 31 July, Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh was assassinated in Tehran, where he had traveled to attend the inauguration of President Masoud Pezeshkian,[431] and on 1 October, Iran fired approximately 200 missiles at Israel.[432][433]
By the end of 2024, a year-long
West Bank and Israel
Amnesty International released a report[437] on 5 February 2024 stating that Israel is carrying out unlawful killings in the West Bank and displaying "a chilling disregard for Palestinian lives" and that Israeli forces are carrying out numerous illegal acts of violence that constitute clear violations of international law.[438][439]
Before the war, 2023 was the deadliest year for Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank in 20 years. Violence in the West Bank has increased since the war began with more than 607 Palestinians and over 25 Israelis killed.[440][441] At the same time, Israeli settler violence further increased to around 1,270 attacks, against 856 for all of 2022.[442] About 1,000 Palestinians have been forcibly displaced by settlers since 7 October and almost half of the clashes have included "Israeli forces accompanying or actively supporting Israeli settlers while carrying out the attacks" according to a U.N. report.[443] According to the West Bank Protection Consortium, since the 7 October attacks six Palestinian communities have been abandoned due to the violence.[444]
On 19 October, more than 60 Hamas members were arrested and 12 people were killed in overnight
In July, Israeli authorities approved the seizure of 12.7 square kilometers of land in the occupied West Bank. According to Peace Now, this was the largest single appropriation approved since the 1993 Oslo accords."[446] Israeli authorities also approved plans for almost 5,300 new houses in occupied West Bank.[447] By July 2024, Israeli land seizures exceeded the combined total of the previous 20 years.[448] The following month, the Israeli government approved new settlements in the occupied West Bank,[449][450] and it was reported that Israeli settlers had taken advantage of the ongoing war to expand settlement activity supported by a far-right Israeli government,[451][442][452] including land seizure and large scale settlement plans.[453]
On 7 August, Wafa reported that Israeli forces destroyed the regional headquarters of
On 3 October, an Israeli
Attacks in Israel
On 30 November, two Palestinian gunmen killed three and wounded eleven Israeli civilians at a bus stop on the Givat Shaul Interchange in Jerusalem. Hamas claimed responsibility.[472] On 16 February 2024, a Palestinian gunman shot and killed two Israeli civilians and injured four others in Kiryat Malakhi, Israel. The shooter was killed by an off-duty IDF reservist at the scene.[473] On 12 April, a 14-year-old Israeli shepherd went missing near Ramallah and was found dead a day later. On 15 April, two Palestinians were killed by Israeli settlers in Aqraba.[474] On 13 May, at the Tarqumiya checkpoint, a convoy of trucks carrying food supplies to Gaza was attacked by Israeli settlers, who damaged the trucks and threw supplies on the ground.[475]
Israeli prisons and detention camps
Israel has increased its administrative detention of Palestinians from the West Bank and Gaza, as well as Palestinian citizens of Israel, since the start of the war. Administrative detention was already at a 20-year high before October 2023.[476] More than 11,000 Palestinians are held in Israeli jails, not counting detainees taken from Gaza during the war.[477] At least 60 Palestinians have died in Israeli detention since 7 October.[478] They are held without charge or trial, which violates international law.[479]
In December 2023, a military base at Sde Teiman in the Negev Desert was converted to a detention camp by the IDF. Whistleblowers and detainees reported beatings and torture of Palestinian detainees at the camp, as well as amputations of limbs due to injuries sustained from handcuffing, medical neglect, arbitrary punishment and sexual abuse. Prisoners have been coerced to make confessions that they are members of Hamas.[480][481][482] After conditions in the camp came to light in May 2024, the Supreme Court of Israel held a hearing and the IDF began transferring 1,200 of the prisoners to Ofer Prison.[483] Detainees have reported severe instances of violence during transfers between prisons.[478][484]
Several Palestinian healthcare workers have been abducted from Gaza hospitals during sieges by Israeli forces.[484] On 5 December, Israeli forces abducted the adult men present at Al-Awda hospital and took them to Sde Teiman camp. Dr. Adnan Al-Bursh was detained and later died in Israeli custody.[485] In March, Israeli forces abducted Khaled Alser, lead author of the first Lancet paper on trauma among Gazan ER patients and doctors, from Nasser Hospital. As of 31 August, he remains in detention and his whereabouts are unknown.[486]
In July 2024, military police raided Sde Teiman to arrest ten soldiers "suspected of the serious sexual abuse" of a Palestinian detainee. Israeli national security minister
On 7 October 2024, American journalist Jeremy Loffredo and three other international and Israeli journalists were detained at a checkpoint in the West Bank on suspicion of "assisting an enemy in war" for their reporting on the October 2024 Iranian strikes against Israel. The journalists' cameras and phones were confiscated. Loffredo was released after four days in detention, and barred from leaving the country until 20 October.[488]
As of February 2025, at least 160 healthcare workers from Gaza were believed to be held in detention by Israel, with another 24 missing after being taken from hospitals in Gaza. Al-Shifa hospital director Mohammed Abu Selmia, who was detained for 7 months and released without charges, detailed many of the abuses he faced and said that "no day passes without torture" in Israeli prisons.[489]
American involvement

The extent of American support for Israel has led the war to be labelled as 'the first US-Israeli joint war'.
Casualties
Victims of the... | Total | Civilians | Children | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total | % | Total | % | ||
October 7 attacks | 1,195[45] | 815[45] | 68.2% | 36[496] | 3.2% |
Israeli invasion of Gaza | 48,405[497] | ~80%[t] | 33.1%[501] | ||
Israeli attacks in the West Bank | 555From 2025-01-01 to 2025-01-31.[502] | 102[502] | 18.37% |
As of 4 March 2025[update], over 50,000 people – 48,405 Palestinian
The majority of casualties have been in the Gaza Strip. The Gaza Health Ministry (GHM) total casualty count is the number of deaths directly caused by the war. The demographic breakdown is a subset of those individually identified.[15][519] On 17 September 2024, the GHM published the names, gender and birth date of 34,344 individual Palestinians whose identities were confirmed and continues to attempt to identify all casualties.[15] The GHM count does not include those who have died from "preventable disease, malnutrition and other consequences of the war".[520] An analysis by the Gaza Health Projections Working Group predicted thousands of excess deaths from disease and birth complications.[521]
In January 2025, a peer-reviewed analysis of deaths in the Gaza war between October 2023 and 30 June 2024 was published in The Lancet. The paper estimated 64,260 deaths from traumatic injury during this period, and likely exceeding 70,000 by October 2024, with 59.1% of them being women, children and the elderly. It concluded that the GHM underestimated trauma-related deaths by 41% in its report, and also noted that its findings "underestimate the full impact of the military operation in Gaza, as they do not account for non-trauma-related deaths resulting from health service disruption, food insecurity, and inadequate water and sanitation."[20]
A survey by PCPSR reported showed over 60% of Gazans have lost family members since the war began.[522][523] Thousands of more dead bodies are thought to be under the rubble of destroyed buildings.[524][525] The number of injured is greater than 100,000;[89] Gaza has the most amputated children per capita in the world.[526]
The
According to the Israeli Ministry of Defense's Rehabilitation Division, about 1,000 soldiers are wounded every month.[532] On 14 August 2024, the ministry predicted that it would have to account for 100,000 disabled IDF veterans by 2030 due to the war.[533]
Humanitarian crisis

The Gaza Strip is experiencing a humanitarian crisis as a result of the war,[534][535] including a hunger crisis, in which famine-like conditions occurred in some areas of the strip and a high risk of famine persists as of October 2024,[536][91] as well as a healthcare collapse. At the start of the war, Israel tightened its blockade on the strip, resulting in significant shortages of fuel, food, medication, water, and essential medical supplies.[534][537][538] This siege resulted in a 90% drop in electricity availability, impacting hospital power supplies, sewage plants, and shutting down the desalination plants that provide drinking water.[539] In July 2024, available water worked out to 4.74 litres per person per day, just under a third of the recommended minimum in emergencies.[540] Doctors warned of disease outbreaks spreading due to overcrowded hospitals.[535] A polio epidemic was the target of mostly-successful vaccination campaigns.[541]
Heavy bombardment by Israeli airstrikes caused catastrophic damage to Gaza's infrastructure, further deepening the crisis. Direct attacks on telecommunications infrastructure by Israel, electricity blockades, and fuel shortages caused the near-total collapse of Gaza's largest cell network providers.[542][543][544] Lack of internet access has obstructed Gazan citizens from communicating with loved ones, learning of IDF operations, and identifying both the areas most exposed to bombing and possible escape routes.[542] The blackouts impeded emergency services, making it harder to locate and access the time-critical injured,[542] and have impeded humanitarian aid agencies and journalists.[542] By December 2023, 200,000 Gazans (approximately 10% of the population) had received internet access through an eSIM provided by Connecting Humanity.[545]

The Gaza Health Ministry reported over 4,000 children killed in the war's first month.[546] UN Secretary-General António Guterres stated that Gaza had "become a graveyard for children."[w][549][550] Indirect Palestinian deaths are expected to be much higher due to the intensity of the conflict, destruction of healthcare infrastructure, lack of food, water, shelter, and safe places for civilians to flee to, and reduction in UNRWA funding, with a Lancet study stating that the death toll in Gaza, including future deaths indirectly caused by the war, may exceed 186,000.[499][551]
Scale of destruction

The scale and pace of
The Guardian reported that the scale of destruction has led international legal experts to raise the concept of domicide, which it describes as "the mass destruction of dwellings to make [a] territory uninhabitable".[553] In October 2024, after monitoring and analyzing Israel's war conduct in Gaza for more than a year, Forensic Architecture published a cartographic map platform detailing Israel's campaign in Gaza titled "A Cartography of Genocide", accompanied by an 827-page text report that concludes that "Israel's military campaign in Gaza is organised, systematic, and intended to destroy conditions of life and life-sustaining infrastructure".[566]
War crimes
A UN Commission to the Israel–Palestine conflict stated that there is "clear evidence that war crimes may have been committed in the latest explosion of violence in Israel and Gaza, and all those who have violated international law and targeted civilians must be held accountable."[567][568][569] On 27 October, a spokesperson for the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) called for an independent court to review potential war crimes committed by both sides.[570]
The International Criminal Court (ICC) confirmed that its mandate to investigate alleged war crimes committed since June 2014 in the State of Palestine extends to the current conflict.[571][572] On 20 May, ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan announced his intention to seek arrest warrants against Hamas leaders Yahya Sinwar, Mohammed Deif and Ismail Haniyeh, as well as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and then-Minister of Defense Yoav Gallant, for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity during the war.[573][574][575] On 21 November, the ICC issued arrest warrants for Netanyahu, Gallant, and Deif for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity.[576][577][578]
On 7 June 2024, both Israel and Hamas were added to the list of shame, an annex attached to an annual report submitted by the UN Secretary-General documenting rights violations against children in armed conflict. While past reports accused Israel of grave rights violations against children, the country was never included in the annex.[579][580][581]
On 19 June 2024, the UN
The June report found that the military wing of Hamas and six other Palestinian armed groups were responsible for the war crimes of intentionally directing attacks against civilians, murder or willful killing, torture, inhuman or cruel treatment, destroying or seizing the property, outrages upon personal dignity, and taking hostages, including children.[585][586] In relation to IDF operations and attacks in Gaza, the commission concluded that Israeli authorities are responsible for the war crimes of starvation as a method of warfare, murder or willful killing, intentionally directing attacks against civilians and civilian objects, forcible transfer, sexual violence, torture and inhuman or cruel treatment, arbitrary detention and outrages upon personal dignity. It also found that Israel committed numerous crimes against humanity, including carrying out the extermination of Palestinians and gender persecution targeting Palestinian men and boys.[587][588][589] The commission said that they had submitted 7,000 pieces of evidence to the ICC related to crimes committed by Israel and Hamas, as part of the International Criminal Court investigation in Palestine.[590]
In another report published in October 2024, the commission accused Israel of "committing war crimes and the crime against humanity of extermination with relentless and deliberate attacks on medical personnel and facilities" as well as accusing the IDF of deliberately killing and torturing medical personnel, targeting medical vehicles, and restricting patients from leaving Gaza. The report also addressed the detention of Palestinians in Israeli military camps and facilities, finding that thousands of child and adult detainees, many arbitrarily detained, faced widespread abuse, including physical and psychological violence, rape and other forms of sexual and gender-based violence, and conditions amounting to torture, highlighting that deaths resulting from such abuse or neglect constituted war crimes and violations of the right to life. Israel refused to cooperate with the investigation, contending that it had an "anti-Israel" bias.[584][591]
On 5 December 2024, Amnesty International published a report concluding that Israel was committing genocide against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip;[92][592] and on 19 December 2024, Human Rights Watch published a 179-page report concluding that Israel is responsible for the crime of genocide by intentionally depriving Palestinians in Gaza of access to safe water for drinking and sanitation needed for basic human survival.[593]
On 13 March 2025, the UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory released a report stating that Israel's attacks on women's healthcare facilities in Gaza amounted to genocidal acts, destroying "in part the reproductive capacity of Palestinians in Gaza as a group".[594] Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned the report as "false and absurd", saying that the UN Human Rights Council was an "anti-Israel circus" and anti-Semitic.[595]
Diplomatic impact

The war sparked a
Negotiations have focused on the possibility of a
Following talks mediated by China, on 23 July 2024, Palestinian groups including Hamas and Fatah reached an agreement to end their divisions and form a unity government for Gaza, which they announced in the Beijing Declaration.[606]
At the UNGA, Saudi Arabia announced a global alliance to push for a two-state solution. Norwegian Foreign Minister Espen Barth Eide said almost 90 countries were at the launch of The Global Alliance for the Implementation of a Palestinian State and a Two-State Solution.[607][608][609] On 29 September, Saudi Arabia said they would send aid to the Palestinian Authority, $60 million in six installments according to a senior PA official. The aid is seen as means of keeping the PA solvent and maintaining the push for a two-state solution, notwithstanding Israeli financial restrictions.[610]
Reactions
Israel
The Israeli government's response to the
Settler expansions and officials' remarks heightened unrest, leading to
In an interview to the Wall Street Journal on 25 December, Netanyahu said that Israel's objectives were to "destroy Hamas, demilitarize Gaza and deradicalize the whole of Palestinian society".[612] There was broad support in Israeli society for military operations in Gaza.[613][614] Public opinion poll conducted in December 2023 by the Israel Democracy Institute found that 87% of Jewish Israelis supported the war in Gaza.[615]
Palestinian territories
Initially, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas asserted the Palestinian people's right to self-defense against the "terror of settlers and occupation troops"[616] and condemned the orders by Israel for residents to evacuate north Gaza, labeling it a "second Nakba".[617] Later, Abbas rejected the killing of civilians on both sides, and said that the Palestinian Liberation Organization was the sole representative of the Palestinian people.[618]
International
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Significant geopolitical divisions emerged during the war. Much of the
In contrast, the Islamic world and much of the Global South denounced the actions of Israel and its allies, criticizing the "moral authority of the West" and alleging that it holds double standards surrounding human rights.[619][630] The double standards, in their view, is condemning an illegal occupation in Ukraine while standing firmly behind Israel that has occupied Palestinian lands.[631] Bolivia has cut all ties with Israel as a result of the conflict, while Colombia and Chile recalled their ambassadors to the country.[232][630]
The United States, United Kingdom, and Germany have supplied Israel with substantial military and medical aid.[621][632][633]
The Israeli government's response prompted international
Evacuations of foreign nationals
Brazil announced a rescue operation of nationals using an air force transport aircraft.[635] Poland announced that it would deploy two C-130 transport planes to evacuate 200 Polish nationals.[636] Hungary evacuated 215 of its nationals from Israel using two aircraft on 9 October, while Romania evacuated 245 of its citizens, including two pilgrimage groups, on two TAROM planes and two private aircraft on the same day.[637] Australia also announced repatriation flights.[638] 300 Nigerian pilgrims in Israel fled to Jordan before being airlifted home.[639]
On 12 October, the United Kingdom arranged flights for its citizens in Israel; the first plane departed Ben Gurion Airport that day. The government had said before that it would not be evacuating its nationals due to available commercial flights. However, most commercial flights were suspended.
Impacts
Regional impact
According to Daniel Byman and Alexander Palmer, the attack showcased the decline of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) and the rise of Hamas as a power center in Palestinian politics. They predicted the PLO's further decline if the status quo held.[644] Laith Alajlouni wrote that the immediate effect of the Hamas offensive was to unite Hamas and PLO.[645]
Amit Segal, chief political commentator for Israel's Channel 12, said that the conflict would test Benjamin Netanyahu's survival as prime minister, noting that past wars had toppled the governments of several of his predecessors such as that of Golda Meir following the 1973 Yom Kippur War, Menachem Begin following the 1982 Lebanon War, and Ehud Olmert following the 2006 Lebanon War.[646] Citing the Israeli intelligence failure, which some observers attributed to the incumbent government focusing more on internal dissent, the judicial reform, and efforts to deepen Israel's occupation of the Palestinian territories,[647] some commentators criticized Netanyahu for putting aside the PLO and propping up Hamas,[155] and described him as a liability.[648][649]
In an analysis by The Times of Israel, the newspaper wrote, "Hamas has violently shifted the world's eyes back to the Palestinians and dealt a severe blow to the momentum for securing a landmark US-brokered deal between Israel and Saudi Arabia."[650] Andreas Kluth wrote in his Bloomberg News column that Hamas "torched Biden's deal to remake the Middle East", arguing that the deal that was being discussed between Saudi Arabia, Israel, and the US would have left Palestinians in the cold, so the group decided to "blow the whole thing up". He added that viewed from Gaza, things were only going to get worse, considering that Netanyahu's coalition partners opposed a two-state solution. He suggested they would prefer to annex the entirety of the West Bank, even at the expense of turning Israel into an apartheid state.[651]
Economic impact
The Bank of Israel estimates that by 2025, the war will have cost the country US$67 billion, notwithstanding a $14.5 billion US aid package, part of the $22.76 billion the U.S. has so far allocated for military assistance.[652][aa]
As early as 9 November 2023, the Bank of Israel reported that the drop in labor supply caused by the war was costing the Israeli economy $600 million a week, or 6% of weekly GDP. The bank also stated that the estimate did not include damage caused by the absence of Palestinian and foreign workers.[654] In the final quarter of 2023, the Israeli economy shrank by 5.2% quarter-to-quarter due to labour shortages in construction and from the mobilization of 300,000 reservists.[655] While Israel did still see economic growth of 2%, this was down from 6.5% growth in the year before the war. Consumer spending declined by 27%, imports declined by 42% and exports declined by 18%.
Israel's high-tech factories reported in December that recent bureaucratic obstacles with electronic imports from China had led to higher import costs and delayed delivery times.[656] Israeli officials also reported that China had refused to send workers to their country during the war against the backdrop of a worker shortage in Israel's construction and farming sectors.[657] China's actions were described as a de facto sanction.[658][656]
The 3,500-member Water Transport Workers Federation of India said it would refuse to operate shipments carrying weapons to Israel.[659] The declaration came a few months after one Indian company halted production of Israeli police uniforms due to the war in Gaza.[660]
About 9,855 Thai workers in the agricultural sector, 4,331 workers in the construction sector and 2,997 in the nursing sector left Israel following the 7 October attack. In addition, the prevention of 85,000 Palestinian workers from entering Israel created a shortage of about 100,000 foreign and Palestinian workers.[661]
It has been calculated that the carbon cost in terms of climate impact of rebuilding Gaza would exceed the annual greenhouse emissions of 135 countries.[662]
Media coverage
In reporting on the conflict, foreign media have limited access to Gaza and only in the presence of Israeli soldiers. Vox reported that the news organizations "have to submit all materials and footage to the IDF for review before publication".[663] The conflict has also seen large numbers of journalists wounded or killed in action. On 14 December, CBS reported on a statement from the International Federation of Journalists that "the number of journalists killed in the past two months in the war in Gaza has surpassed the amount killed in the Vietnam War, which lasted two decades".[664] Reporters Without Borders filed a complaint with the International Criminal Court under section 8.2.b of the Rome Statute, accusing Israel of committing war crimes against 8 journalists.[665][663] It also lodged a complaint against Hamas, under section 8.2.a of the Rome Statute for the killing of a reporter covering the 7 October attack.[665] The Committee to Protect Journalists accused Israel of targeting journalists reporting from Gaza and their families, saying that in at least two cases, "journalists reported receiving threats from Israeli officials and Israel Defense Forces officers before their family members were killed".[666]
See also
- Misinformation in the Gaza war
- Outline of the Gaza war
- List of modern conflicts in the Middle East
- List of wars involving Israel
- List of wars involving the State of Palestine
- Timeline of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict in 2023
- Timeline of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict in 2024
Notes
- American involvement
- ^ Fired by Netanyahu as defense minister on 5 November 2024.
- ^ The combined forces of Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad add up to 37,000.[1][2] Estimates for Hamas alone are highly variable, from 20,000 to over 40,000.[3][4]
- ^ Including 169,500 active personnel[5] and 360,000 reservists[6]
- ^ Per the Gaza Health Ministry[9] the number recorded killed is 48,572.[10][11][12]
The number of killed identified is 34,344:[13][14][15]
Israeli estimate: 36,000+ killed including nearly 20,000 militants[16]
US intelligence estimate: 10,000–15,000 militants (as of January 2025)[17][18][19]
- ^ In addition to direct deaths, armed conflicts result in indirect deaths "attributable to the conflict". Mortality due to indirect deaths could be due to a variety of causes, such as infectious diseases.[21]
- ^
- Estimated 51,000 natural deaths, natural death rate has gone up from 3.5/1000 to 22/1000 (late June 2024).[25]
- At least 68 deaths confirmed due to starvation and malnutrition only and deaths were also confirmed due to dehydration,[26][27][28][29][30] but the true figure is likely to be far higher.[31][32]
- ^ Per the Palestinian Health Authority
- ^ Based in Israel proper (1967 borders).
- ^ (per Hezbollah, Hamas, PIJ and Lebanese Health Ministry)[39]
- ^ (per Syrian Observatory for Human Rights)[42][43]
- ^ Total is derived from taking the current number of killed in Gaza, the current number of killed in West Bank, the current number of militants killed inside Israel, the current number of killed in Lebanon and the current number of killed in Syria.
- ^ Including:
- 810October 7 (including foreign or dual national citizens and including "up to" 14 Israeli civilians killed by the Israeli military as part of the Hannibal Directive[44][46])
- 82 dead hostages (including 34 dead hostages that remain in Gaza) hostages in Gaza thought dead[47]
- 46 on the Lebanese border[48]
- 3 in Alexandria, Egypt
- 23 in the West Bank and Israel by 6 January 2025 (per OCHA oPt and The Times of Israel),[49][50] not including 1 mistakenly killed by Israeli forces in Jerusalem[51] and 4 killed by militants (2 near Ofra,[52] 1 in Tel Aviv[53], 1 near al-Khader[54], 1 in Haifa[55], and 1 near Pardes Hanna-Karkur[56]), bringing the total to 30 conflict-related deaths for the period
- 2 in Gaza Strip[57][58]
- 8 in
- 3 in Allenby Bridge[61]
- 1 in Hadera[62]
- 1 in Afula by heart attack in Iranian missile attack[63]
- 1 in Herzliya[64]
- 1 in Rishon LeZion by heart attack in a Houthi missile attack[65]
- 1 in the West Bank from Israeli fire[66]
- 810
- ^ Including:[67][68][69][70][71]
- 912 (844 confirmed by names) Israel Defence Forcesoldiers
- 69 Israel Police officers
- 10 Shin Bet personnel
- 912 (844 confirmed by names)
- ^ including 5,569 soldiers (as of 2 January 2025)
- Arabic: معركة طوفان الأقصى), 'October 7 war,' and others. For more information, see Names.
- ^ Including Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades, the Palestinian Mujahideen Movement and the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine.[75][76]
- ^ 34,344 Palestinians of which have been fully identified as of 17 September 2024.
- ^ Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu is reported to have backed changing the name of the war to 'Genesis,' evoking the biblical Book of Genesis.[107][108] A group of Israeli politicians supported the name change because of what they see as "its universality and association with a new reality, separating between darkness and light, good and evil, barbarism and civilization."[108] The plan has also been presented to National Unity Party leader Benny Gantz and Israel's Public Diplomacy Directorate .[108]
- ^ Sources:[498][499][500]
- ^ Including:
- 915 civilians killed
- 828 on October 7[45][503][504][505][506] (including 258 foreign or dual national citizens and 14+ hostages in Gaza)[44]
- 33 additional hostages in Gaza thought dead[503]
- 27 on the
- 3 in Alexandria, Egypt
- 14 in the West Bank and Israel by 11 August 2024 (per OCHA oPt)[49] not including 1 mistakenly killed by Israeli forces in Jerusalem[51] and 3 killed by militants (2 near Ofra[52] and 1 near Kedumim),[509] bringing the total to 18 conflict-related deaths for the period
- 1 in Rafah, Gaza Strip[510]
- 1 in Tel Aviv[511]
- 3 in Allenby Bridge[61]
- 828 on
- 791 security forces killed[67]
- 715 soldiers
- 66 Israel Police officers
- 10 Shin Bet personnel[512]
- 915 civilians killed
- ^ Casualty by nationality[513][514]
152–158 Palestinian
2–4 Israeli
6–9 Lebanese
0–1 Syrian - ^ Israeli UN Ambassador Gilad Erdan responded directly to Guterres, stating, "Shame on [Guterres]... More than 30 minors – among them a 9-month-old baby as well as toddlers and children who witnessed their parents being murdered in cold blood – are being held against their will in the Gaza Strip. Hamas is the problem in Gaza, not Israel's actions to eliminate this terrorist organization."[547][548]
- ^ By December 2023, the percentage of buildings damaged or destroyed in Gaza exceeded Dresden and Cologne during World War II and approached the level of destruction seen in Hamburg.[556][558]
- ^ In northern Gaza, including Gaza City, the number of buildings damaged or destroyed is as high as 80 percent.[561]
- ^ In October 2024, The New York Times estimated 168,000 buildings in Gaza had been damaged or destroyed.[562]
- ^ A conservative estimate for U.S. funding for Israel's military operations and related U.S. operations in the area sets the figure for the fiscal year between 7 October and 30 September at $22.76 billion.[653]
References
- ^ Abraham, Yuval (3 April 2024). "'Lavender': The AI machine directing Israel's bombing spree in Gaza". +972 Magazine. Retrieved 12 June 2024.
as many as 37,000 Palestinians as suspected militants
- ^ "How Israel is using 'Lavender' and 'Daddy' to identify 37,000 Hamas operatives". The Economic Times. 9 April 2024. Retrieved 12 June 2024.
The "Lavender" system is designed to identify individuals suspected of being part of Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), even targeting those with lower ranks for potential aerial bombardments. In the initial stages of the conflict, the military heavily relied on Lavender, leading to the system labeling up to 37,000 Palestinians as militants, along with their residences, for potential airstrikes.
- ^ "Gaza Strip". The World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency. 22 May 2024. Retrieved 8 June 2024.
- ^ "How Hamas secretly built a 'mini-army' to fight Israel". Reuters. 13 October 2023. Archived from the original on 13 October 2023. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
- ISBN 978-1-03-201227-8. Archivedfrom the original on 21 January 2022. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
- ^ "Israel's massive mobilization of 360,000 reservists upends lives". The Washington Post. 10 October 2023. Archived from the original on 30 October 2023. Retrieved 13 October 2023.
- Al Jazeera. 3 February 2025.
- ^ "Gaza death toll exceeds 47,500 as more bodies found under rubble". Anadolu Agency. 3 February 2025.
- ^ van der Merwe, Ben (4 April 2024). "Israel–Hamas war: Gaza's morgue network has effectively collapsed – how are they recording their dead?". Sky News. Retrieved 18 May 2024.
- ^ Al Jazeera. 16 March 2025.
- ^ a b c "Israel–Gaza war in maps and charts: Live tracker". Al Jazeera. 9 October 2023.
- ^ AFP. 6 February 2025.
- ^ "Analysis: Hamas has been hit hard by Israel, but is not out in Gaza". Al Jazeera. 29 January 2025.
- ^ "Hostilities in the Gaza Strip and Israel – reported impact". UN OCHA. 29 May 2024. Retrieved 30 May 2024.
- ^ ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 24 September 2024.
- ^ "In subtle parting shot at government, IDF chief calls for external probe into Oct. 7 failures". The Times of Israel. 21 January 2025. Retrieved 21 January 2025.
- The Print. Reuters. 25 January 2025. Retrieved 25 January 2025.
- ^ Nakhoul, Samia; Pamuk, Humeyra; Landay, Jonathan (6 June 2024). "Diminished Hamas switches to full insurgent mode in Gaza". Reuters. Retrieved 6 June 2024.
- ^ "Hamas Toll Thus Far Falls Short of Israel's War Aims, U.S. Says". The Washington Post. 21 January 2024.
- ^ .
- PMID 31822891.
- ^ Geneva Declaration Secretariat (2008). Global Burden of Armed Violence (PDF) (Report). Geneva Declaration Secretariat. p. 4.
The ratio of people killed in war to those dying indirectly because of a conflict is explored in the chapter on indirect deaths (INDIRECT CONFLICT DEATHS). Studies show that between three and 15 times as many people die indirectly for every person who dies violently.
- PMID 38976995.
In recent conflicts, such indirect deaths range from three to 15 times the number of direct deaths. Applying a conservative estimate of four indirect deaths per one direct death to the 37,396 deaths reported, it is not implausible to estimate that up to 186,000 or even more deaths could be attributable to the current conflict in Gaza. Using the 2022 Gaza Strip population estimate of 2,375,259, this would translate to 7.9% of the total population in the Gaza Strip.
- ^ Sridhar, Devi (5 September 2024). "Scientists are closing in on the true, horrifying scale of death and disease in Gaza". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 November 2024.
- ^ "About 10 percent of the Gaza Strip's population killed, injured, or missing due to the Israeli genocide". Euro-Med Human Rights Monitor. 25 July 2024. Retrieved 20 October 2024.
- ^ "In northern Gaza, acute malnutrition doubled in a month: UNICEF". Al Jazeera. 15 March 2025.
- ^ Rowlands, Lyndal; Varshalomidze, Tamila; Rasheed, Zaheena; Quillen, Stephen; Gadzo, Mersiha; Najjar, Farah (20 November 2024). "Eighty-five patients at risk as Kamal Adwan Hospital under Israeli attack: Director". Al Jazeera.
The hospital's director, Dr Hussam Abu Safiya, has been giving us regular updates on the situation there. Here are his latest comments to Al Jazeera: An elderly man has died of starvation in the northern Gaza Strip.
- ^ Najjar, Farah (8 July 2024). "Another child dies of starvation in Gaza". Al Jazeera. Retrieved 28 July 2024.
- ^ Siddiqui, Usaid (16 August 2024). "WATCH: Father loses daughter to malnutrition amid blockade and dire living conditions". Al Jazeera. Retrieved 16 August 2024.
- ^ Mohamed, Edna; Jamal, Urooba (1 June 2024). "Child dies of malnutrition and dehydration: Report". Al Jazeera.
- ^ Haq, Sana Noor; Dahman, Ibrahim; Sabbah, Abdul Qader; Salman, Abeer (6 March 2024). "Newborns die of hunger and mothers struggle to feed their children as Israel's siege condemns Gazans to starvation". CNN.
- ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
- ^ Uras, Umut; Milisic, Alma (20 October 2024). "Statistics bureau says 5 employees killed since October 2023". Al Jazeera. Retrieved 20 October 2024.
According to the organisation, between October 7, 2023 and October 15, 2024: 16,300 people have been imprisoned.
- ^ "Martyrs". Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics. Archived from the original on 8 February 2024. Retrieved 3 June 2024.
- ^ a b "Israeli army raids Balata refugee camp 4 times in 24 hours". Anadolu Agency. 28 July 2024. Retrieved 28 July 2024.
Simultaneously with its onslaught on the Gaza Strip, the Israeli army intensified operations in the West Bank, resulting in 592 deaths and approximately 5,400 injuries, according to official Palestinian data.
- ^ "Israeli forces arrest young man in occupied West Bank". Al Jazeera. 11 January 2025. Retrieved 11 January 2025.
In parallel with Israel's war on Gaza since October 7, 2023, the Israeli army has expanded its raids in the West Bank, while settlers have escalated their attacks there as well, resulting in 847 Palestinians killed, 6,700 wounded, and 14,300 arrested since, according to official Palestinian data.
- ^ הבקשה של פיקוד הדרום בלילה שלפני הטבח - והסירוב | פרסום ראשון
- ^ a b Fabian, Emanuel; Pacchiani, Gianluca (1 November 2023). "IDF estimates 3,000 Hamas terrorists invaded Israel in Oct. 7 onslaught". The Times of Israel. Archived from the original on 1 November 2023. Retrieved 1 November 2023.
- ^ a b "Death toll rises in Israel's war on Lebanon". Al Jazeera. 4 December 2024.
Israeli attacks on Lebanon have killed 4,047 people and wounded 16,638 others, Lebanese Health Minister Firass Abiad said in a televised address.
- ^ Rowlands, Lyndal; Regencia, Ted; Jamal, Urooba; Uras, Umut; Adler, Nils (15 October 2024). "Lebanon says 41 killed in Israeli attacks on Monday". Al Jazeera. Retrieved 15 October 2024.
The newest figures bring the overall death toll since Israel on September 23 launched an intense air campaign in Lebanon to 1,356.
- ^ "وزير خارجية لبنان: نصر الله قبِل وقف إطلاق النار مع إسرائيل قبل اغتياله". Al Jazeera Arabic (in Arabic). 3 October 2024. Archived from the original on 7 October 2024. Retrieved 3 October 2024.
- ^ "Death toll update: Three civilians including woman and her son killed in Israeli airstrikes on the vicinity of Aleppo international airport". Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. 31 December 2023. Archived from the original on 14 January 2024. Retrieved 31 December 2023.
- ^ "Including child and Syrian Red Crescent volunteer: Israeli str-ikes on crossings between Syria and Lebanon leave seven persons de-ad". Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. 27 November 2024. Retrieved 27 November 2024.
- ^ a b c "New Tally Puts Oct 7 Attack Death Toll In Israel At 1,189". Barron's. Agence France-Presse. 28 May 2024. Archived from the original on 23 September 2024.
- ^ a b c d e "October 7 Crimes Against Humanity, War Crimes by Hamas-led Groups". Human Rights Watch. 17 July 2024. Archived from the original on 24 September 2024. Retrieved 24 September 2024.
- ^ "Report of the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and Israel - Advance unedited version (A/HRC/56/26)". Question of Palestine. 27 May 2024.
ISF had likely applied the Hannibal Directive, resulting in the killing of up to 14 Israeli civilians.
- ^ a b Bisset, Victoria; Ledur, Júlia; Shapiro, Leslie (5 March 2025). "Monitoring the status of hostages still in Gaza after Hamas's attack". The Washington Post.
- ^ "75-year-old woman critically wounded in November rocket attack succumbs to her wounds". The Times of Israel. 12 January 2025. Retrieved 13 January 2025.
- ^ OCHAoPt). Archivedfrom the original on 12 October 2023. Retrieved 12 October 2023.
- ^ "3 Israelis killed, 8 wounded in West Bank terror shooting; IDF hunting for gunmen". The Times of Israel. 6 January 2025. Retrieved 6 January 2025.
- ^ a b Hasson, Nir (30 November 2023). "Israeli Soldiers Who Killed Jerusalem Terrorists Shoot Dead Civilian". Haaretz. Archived from the original on 1 December 2023. Retrieved 1 December 2023.
- ^ a b Friedson, Yael (25 January 2024). "East Jerusalem Resident Dies of Wounds Sustained in West Bank Attack Earlier in January". Haaretz. Archived from the original on 25 January 2024. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
- ^ Davies, Maia (1 October 2024). "Seven killed in shooting and knife attack in Tel Aviv". BBC News.
- ^ "Young boy killed, several bus passengers wounded in West Bank terror shooting". The Times of Israel. 18 December 2024.
- ^ Summers, Charlie (3 March 2025). "Man stabbed to death in suspected terror attack at Haifa bus terminal". The Times of Israel.
- ^ "Yahli Gur, 17-year-old injured in last week's Pardes Hanna terror ramming, dies of her wounds". The Times of Israel. 5 March 2025.
- ^ Fabian, Emanuel (15 May 2024). "Defense Ministry contractor succumbs to wounds sustained in southern Gaza mortar attack". The Times of Israel.
- ^ "Israeli contractor mistakenly killed by IDF troops in Gaza, army says". The Times of Israel. 28 January 2025.
- ^ "Drone explodes in central Tel Aviv, killing man and wounding several others". The Times of Israel. 19 July 2024.
- ^ "Seven murdered in Jaffa terror shooting, many more wounded". The Jerusalem Post. 1 October 2024.
- ^ a b Michaelis, Tamar (8 September 2024). "Three Israeli civilians shot dead at Allenby Crossing between West Bank and Jordan". CNN.
- ^ "35-year-old man dies of injuries day after Hadera terror stabbing". The Times of Israel. 10 October 2024.
- ^ Avni, Idan (2 October 2024). "tragdia beafula: nisim zarka nifter bemamad bemehalech mitkafat hatilim me'iran" טרגדיה בעפולה: ניסים זרקה נפטר בממ״ד במהלך מתקפת הטילים מאיראן [Tragedy in Afula: Nissim Zarka died in the MMD during the missile attack from Iran]. Israel Hayom (in Hebrew). Retrieved 9 October 2024.
- ^ "83-year-old woman killed in Herzliya terror stabbing; attacker is ex-Shin Bet informant". The Times of Israel. 27 December 2024.
- ^ "Man faints, dies, following siren in central Israel". Israel National News. 21 December 2024.
- ^ "'It's not the damage, it's the terror': Israeli settlers run riot after ceasefire deal". The Guardian. 23 January 2025.
- ^ a b Fabian, Emanuel (8 October 2023). "Authorities name 715 soldiers, 66 police officers killed in Gaza war". The Times of Israel. Archived from the original on 8 October 2023. Retrieved 29 May 2024.
- ^ Fabian, Emanuel (3 November 2024). "IDF soldier killed by grenade explosion in Gaza; Military Police probing circumstances". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 9 November 2024.
- ^ "IDF suicide rate rises amid ongoing war and mass reservist call-ups". The Times of Israel. 2 January 2025.
- ^ "Amid multi-front war: IDF sees 891 soldiers killed, 38 suicides over 2 years". The Jerusalem Post. 2 January 2025.
- ^ "2 soldiers killed, 8 wounded as crane collapses on troops in Gaza due to strong winds". The Times of Israel. 6 February 2025.
- ^ Benson, Pesach (22 January 2024). "13,572 Israelis injured since Oct. 7". Jewish News Syndicate. Retrieved 24 May 2024.
- ^ "More than 13,500 Israelis 'wounded from the war' since October 7, 2023: Report". Al Jazeera. 31 December 2024. Retrieved 31 December 2024.
The Israeli Broadcasting Corporation has reported that the rehabilitation department of Israel's Defence Ministry receives about 1,000 new people each month who have been "wounded from the war". Since October 7, 2023, more than 13,500 Israelis have been injured and admitted for treatment at the rehabilitation department, the broadcaster reported in a post on social media. Of those wounded, 51 percent are under the age of 30 years and 43 percent of the total are dealing with "psychological reactions", the broadcaster said.
- ^ "Suicides soar among Israeli soldiers since Gaza war began". Al Jazeera. 2 January 2025. Retrieved 2 January 2025.
According to figures released by the army, at least 891 Israeli soldiers have been killed and 5,569 others wounded since the outbreak of the war on Gaza.
- ^ Ragad, Abdelali; Irvine-Brown, Richard; Garman, Benedict; Seddon, Sean (24 November 2023). "How Hamas built a force to attack Israel on 7 October". BBC News. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
- ^ "Who are Hamas's allies in Gaza? From Islamic Jihad to Marxist militants". The National. 15 November 2023. Retrieved 19 November 2023.
- .
The only normative definition we have, codified at the United Nations Genocide Convention of 1948, accurately describes the current situation in Palestine ... describes exactly what is happening in Gaza today
This compounded the impact of a 15-year ongoing Israeli blockade that amounts to illegal collective punishment
The blockade is a form of collective punishment in violation of international law.
Israel and Egypt maintain a blockade around Gaza aimed at preventing attacks by militants there, though the measure has been condemned by rights groups as a form of collective punishment.
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It allows the Israeli military to use any force necessary to prevent Israeli soldiers from being captured and taken into enemy territory [...]. Some officers [...] understand the order to mean that soldiers ought to deliberately kill their comrade in order to stop him from being taken prisoner [...]. However, the orders failed to distinguish between soldiers being captured and civilians.