Two senior Israeli commanders and seven other soldiers have been killed by Hamas in a complex ambush in the Gaza City suburb of Shejaiya, an area that has seen intense urban fighting in recent days.
The latest Israeli combat deaths came amid fears of a rapidly escalating humanitarian crisis in Gaza as heavy winter rains and cool weather lashed the region and after reports by aid agencies of dwindling food stocks for the vast number of Palestinians who have been displaced to southern Gaza.
Lt Col Tomer Greenberg, a commander in the Golani Brigade, who had fought against Hamas during its attack on the southern Israel border communities on 7 October, was killed during a failed attempt to rescue four injured soldiers.
In one of the most lethal incidents for Israeli soldiers during the two-month long war in Gaza, Greenberg and several of his senior officers were killed in fighting involving improvised explosive devices, while they were fired on from buildings.
Among the dead, announced by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) on Wednesday, were another colonel, three majors, and several members of a combat rescue force.
A notice in Hebrew posted by the Golani Brigade described the ambush which occurred near Shejaiya’s market.
“While carrying out searches to clear buildings in the heart of the Shejaiya Kasbah, considered a crowded area overflowing with terror targets, there was a large explosion in one of the building and several soldiers from the 13th battalion were wounded.”
According to accounts of the battle, the soldiers were approaching a building when they first came under fire from an upper storey, initiating a fire fight in which they were struck by grenades and an explosive charge severely injuring four who were cut off from the rest of the soldiers.
As soldiers went to help the first group, amid fears they may be dragged into a tunnel, a second blast hit them. A third group also trying to approach to evacuate the wounded was also hit by an explosion.
The ambush came despite daily claims by the IDF that it is close to having operational control of key Hamas strongholds in the north of Gaza.
Greenberg had risen to public prominence after the 7 October attack, describing in an interview how he had rescued two infant twins whose parents had been killed by Hamas in Kfar Aza.
Referring to the soldiers who were killed on Tuesday, the Israeli minister Benny Gantz said Israel was paying “a heavy, painful, and difficult price”.
The ambush came amid unconfirmed media reports that Israel had started to pump seawater into some of Hamas’s tunnel system.
Asked about the claims, made in the Wall Street Journal, US President, Joe Biden, declined to directly answer, referring only to assertions that there were no hostages in the areas targeted. “With regard to the flooding … I’m not at lib-, well. There are assertions being made that … there are no hostages in any of these tunnels. But I don’t know that for a fact,” he said.
Amid growing pressure for a ceasefire, the United Nations general assembly on Tuesday night passed by a large majority a resolution calling for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire in the Gaza Strip. One hundred and fifty-three countries voted in favour of the ceasefire, 10 countries voted against and 23 abstained or were absent.
It also came as Israel and the US on Tuesday displayed their sharpest public disagreement yet over the conduct and future of the war as the two allies became increasingly isolated by global calls for a ceasefire.
The dispute emerged while Israeli forces carried out strikes across Gaza, crushing Palestinians in homes.
Biden said he told the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, that Israel was losing international support because of its “indiscriminate bombing” and that Netanyahu should change his government, which is dominated by hard-right parties.
The UN general assembly resolution calling for a humanitarian ceasefire is largely symbolic, but serves as an important barometer of world opinion. None of the major powers joined Israel and the US in their opposition to the ceasefire.
Biden’s comments came as Jake Sullivan, the White House national security adviser, heads to Israel this week to discuss with Netanyahu a timetable for the war – and what happens if Hamas is defeated. The defence secretary, Lloyd Austin, will then travel to Israel next week for a visit the Pentagon said aims to show US support for Israel but also to press the need to avoid more civilian casualties in Gaza.
The war ignited by Hamas’s 7 October attack in Israel has already brought unprecedented death and destruction to the impoverished coastal territory, with much of northern Gaza obliterated, more than 18,000 Palestinians killed, according to Gaza authorities, and over 80% of the population of 2.3 million pushed from their homes.
The US has urged Israel to do more to reduce civilian casualties since it launched its ground invasion of southern Gaza at the beginning of the month. But the toll has continued to mount at seemingly the same dizzying rate.
The health care system and humanitarian aid operations have collapsed in large parts of Gaza, amid Israel’s blockade of the territory and intense airstrikes and fighting, and aid workers have warned of starvation and the spread of disease among displaced people in overcrowded shelters and tent camps.