
Ben Gvir’s demand comes after Israel accused Hamas of violating the ceasefire brokered earlier this month
Israel’s National Security Minister Ben Gvir has called for the resumption of military operations in Gaza following alleged violations by Hamas of the ceasefire reached earlier this month.
According to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), militants fired an anti-tank missile and shot at Israeli troops operating in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip on Sunday. Israel responded with several airstrikes on what it called terror targets.
“I call on the prime minister to order the IDF to renew full-scale fighting in the Strip at full strength,” Gvir said in a statement on Sunday. “The false belief that Hamas will change its ways, or will even abide by the agreement it signed, is proving…to be dangerous to our security. This Nazi terrorist organization must be destroyed completely and the sooner the better.”
Israel and Hamas agreed to a tentative ceasefire in early October under US President Donald Trump’s 20-point peace plan.
The first phase called for Hamas to release all remaining Israeli hostages within 72 hours in exchange for Palestinian prisoners. On Monday, the group freed the last 20 living captives and returned the remains of 12 others. Hamas said it had met its obligations but faced difficulties retrieving all bodies due to Gaza’s devastation and continued Israeli control in some areas.
Israel has accused Hamas of not doing enough to return the remains of 16 captives, while the sides have traded accusations of ceasefire violations.
Later on Sunday, Prime Minister Netanyahu instructed the IDF “to take firm action against terror targets in the Gaza Strip,” according to a statement from his office. The statement did not clarify whether it meant the IDF would resume military operations in full.
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Senior Hamas official Izzat al-Risheq, also on Sunday, said in a statement that the group remains committed to the ceasefire, accusing the Israeli “occupation” of violating it and “seeking excuses for its crimes.” The group’s military wing denied involvement in the Rafah incident, saying it lost ties with factions in the area last March.
“We have no information about any incidents or clashes in Rafah, which is under [Israeli] occupation control,” the statement noted.