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In a calculated pivot from short-term offensives, Israel's security cabinet has embraced a sweeping, long-range war doctrine that reimagines the Gaza battlefield not as a target—but as territory to be reshaped. The approved plan, reportedly authored by military chief Lt Gen Eyal Zamir, outlines a military occupation and demographic shift aimed at not only dismantling Hamas, but surgically altering Gaza’s future power structure.
Forget the old playbook of bombing campaigns followed by ceasefires. This is a ground game now, with Israel signaling its intent to take and hold land, manage humanitarian aid through private intermediaries, and carve buffer zones deep into Gaza’s geography. Critics see echoes of past occupation models. Supporters call it a blueprint for decisive control. Either way, the game has changed.
The plan's most incendiary element isn’t just the military push—it’s the deliberate movement of Gaza’s 2.1 million people. Displacement under the pretense of protection has ignited fury across aid organizations, which have refused to take part in what they describe as a manipulation of humanitarian logistics to serve political ends.
By sidelining the UN and installing private Israeli-controlled channels for aid, the government seeks to bypass Hamas’s grip on supplies. But this move risks isolating the very communities it claims to help. The strategy suggests that Israel is betting on leverage through control—of land, food, movement, and, most controversially, survival.
While Netanyahu touts this as a path to defeating Hamas and recovering hostages, families of those still held captive aren’t buying it. A growing chorus accuses the government of prioritizing land acquisition over lives, suggesting the hostages have become bargaining chips in a broader political project.
The Hostages and Missing Families Forum has become a symbol of public dissent, amplifying fears that the deeper Israel pushes into Gaza, the further away the captives drift from rescue. With zero recoveries since operations resumed in March, frustration is mounting.
As war reshapes maps, kitchens in Khan Younis and Rafah face a harsher truth: they’re almost out of food. The two-month blockade, intensified by the offensive, has dried up warehouses and shut down bakeries. Humanitarian groups are warning that civilians are being forced into militarized zones to chase aid—placing them in the line of fire.
Meanwhile, the Israeli cabinet maintains its strategy is both legal and necessary. It claims Hamas is exploiting aid routes, and that circumventing them through private channels will prevent further abuse. The UN counters that the move violates core humanitarian principles and serves a broader goal: submission by starvation.
With tens of thousands of reservists now summoned and fresh offensives imminent, Israel is preparing for a long haul. This isn’t a campaign with a clear exit. It’s a territorial recalibration dressed as military necessity. The goal: collapse Hamas not just militarily, but structurally—by cutting its access to people, resources, and legitimacy.
But this vision comes with an enormous cost. Gaza’s civilian population, already displaced multiple times, is being squeezed between scorched-earth tactics and diminishing international lifelines. Whether this plan succeeds or backfires may define not only the outcome of the conflict—but the moral boundaries of modern warfare.
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