What’s happened: Tuesday saw a major call-up of reserve soldiers in preparation for Israel’s expected offensive into Gaza City.
- Tens of thousands reported for duty as they are expected to relieve regular soldiers in the West Bank and along the northern border, who will prepare to enter Gaza in the coming weeks.
- Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said about the upcoming operation, “Now we are facing the decisive stage.” Directing his comments to reservists, he said, “I know that you have paid a heavy price – at work, with studies and at home. We are fighting a stubborn and just war without peer. We do not forget for a moment what they did to us on October 7, the beheadings, the women who were raped, the babies who were burned and the hostages who were taken into the tunnels in Gaza. We are working to bring them all back.”
- Speaking to reservists on emergency call-up orders, IDF Chief of Staff Zamir told them, “We are going to increase and enhance the strikes of our operation, and that is why we called you. The IDF does not offer anything less than decisive victory. We will not stop the war until we defeat this enemy.”
- As call-ups increase, so too has opposition to the upcoming offensive. Protesters demanding a deal for the release of hostages converged on Jerusalem this morning, where some set fire to rubbish bins and at least one car and others mounted the rooftop of Israel’s National Library.
- The IDF announced yesterday that it had successfully eliminated Hazem Awni Naeem in a joint operation with the Shin Bet on August 28. Naeem was a senior Hamas terrorist who had, among other acts, held in captivity the three female Israeli hostages Emily Damari, Romi Gonen, and Naama Levy.
- A Houthi missile launch triggered sirens all over central Israel this morning. The missile was successfully intercepted by Israeli missile defence. Last Thursday, an Israeli operation in Sanaa eliminated several senior Houthi officials including the Houthi Prime Minister Ahmed al-Rahawi.
- Also on Tuesday, Israel successfully launched a new satellite into space, Ofek 19. President Herzog, who attended the launch, hailed it as a significant Israeli technological accomplishment. “We are not only a Start-Up Nation, we are a Space Nation.” Israel’s space program effectively began with the launch of Ofek 1 in 1988. The new satellite, Ofek 19, will orbit the earth once every 90 minutes and is expected to be fully operational, providing high-resolution intelligence to the Israeli security services in both day and night, by sometime next week.
Context: With preparation for the ground offensive into Gaza City underway, the operation is expected to begin in mid-September. The operation will involve at least four divisions.
- In the initial stage, the IDF hopes to prompt civilians to move out of Gaza City into the Al-Mawasi region on the southern beach area of the Strip, where temporary accommodation is to be provided. There are an estimated 800,000 people in the city at present.
- The pace of operation will depend on the rate at which the civilian population vacates the area.
- According to reports in the Arab media, there is concern that Hamas might move living hostages and disperse them across Gaza City to serve as human shields for Hamas strongholds.
- Israel Hayom reports that the operational plan which was approved is different from the original one, which Chief of General Staff Eyal Zamir had warned was a “strategic trap.” The current plan was formulated by Southern Command and is reportedly much more sensitive to the challenges facing the IDF as it enters a densely populated area. According to the report, “the IDF believes Gaza City to be strewn with IEDs and underground networks that will pose a major threat to the troops. The top IDF brass said the mission could be accomplished, but in a bid to protect the troops the operation is planned to be slow and accompanied by intensive firepower.”
- The latest estimates of the cost of the Gaza operation at around 25 billion shekels (about £5.5 billion). It is not clear if cuts will be made across government or if the deficit will be extended.
- The long time-scale for the launch of the operation leaves open the possibility of a ceasefire and hostage deal that might avert it. Israel’s position on a hostage deal remains ambiguous, with leading figures close to the Prime Minister insisting on a comprehensive deal that would release all hostages, while Minister for Strategic Affairs Dermer reportedly told mediators that Israel has not entirely ruled out a partial deal. A partial deal would reportedly include a time-limited ceasefire and the release of ten out of the twenty hostages believed to still be alive.
- Amid military preparations the government continues to clash with the judiciary. A unanimous decision by the Supreme Court ordered the government to respond by September 14 whether it will convene the Appointments Committee in order to carry out its decision to dismiss the Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara. The decision does not actually force the government to do so, though it still leaves that possibility open after September 14. In the meantime, Baharav-Miara remains in her post, though the Government only invites her to meetings where the presence of the Attorney General is a legal requirement.
Looking ahead: The French President Emmanuel Macron will host a high-level international conference in New York together with the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to advance the cause of a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Macron called on the Trump administration to reverse its decision denying visas to senior officials from the Palestinian Authority, including the PA President Mahmoud Abbas. The conference was originally scheduled for June but was be postponed because of the Twelve Day War with Iran.


