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Did Israeli leaders undermine military in Gaza? A rift becomes public.

The deaths of five Israeli soldiers in the northern Gaza Strip last week emphasized once again the steep cost Israeli families are paying for the war against Hamas. What was especially jarring – to the public and military commanders – was that the soldiers died in an area that had already been largely cleared of Hamas operatives.

As the Israeli army has turned its focus to southern Gaza, Hamas fighters have resurfaced in the north. As generals send soldiers back into these zones for a second and third time, and military deaths rise, questions are being raised about what critics say is an incomplete war strategy.

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Since last fall, the United States, having learned its own lessons, has urged Israel to envision a political endgame for the military campaign against Hamas in Gaza. The government’s continued refusal to do so is creating a widening rift with the military.

Two key members of Israel’s war Cabinet have now vented these frustrations in public in a direct challenge to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, laying bare what analysts say is a growing rift between military leaders and the hard-right government over the lack of a postwar vision.

The army thinks politicians have “squandered military achievements,” says Professor Chuck Freilich, a researcher at Tel Aviv University.

“You never use only military power to achieve a national goal,” says Amos Yadlin, a former head of military intelligence. “The military cannot operate without political objectives.”

A somber procession of uniformed soldiers carried the casket of the young paratrooper captain, Roy Beit Yaakov, to his final resting place in Jerusalem’s Mount Herzl military cemetery, as a rabbi read out the prayers for the dead.

The officer, along with four other soldiers, was killed May 15 in a friendly-fire incident while fighting in the northern Gaza Strip, emphasizing once again the steep cost Israeli families are paying for the war against Hamas.

What was especially jarring – to the Israeli public and to Israel Defense Forces commanders – was that these soldiers died in an area that had already been largely cleared of Hamas operatives after months of fierce fighting in the north and center of the strip.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Since last fall, the United States, having learned its own lessons, has urged Israel to envision a political endgame for the military campaign against Hamas in Gaza. The government’s continued refusal to do so is creating a widening rift with the military.

But as the IDF has turned its focus to the south, most recently Rafah, billed as Hamas’ last major stronghold, fighters from the militant group have resurfaced in areas from which the army has withdrawn. This is forcing Israeli generals to send soldiers back into these zones for a second and third time, accentuating frustration over the growing number of military deaths and raising questions about the effectiveness of what critics say is an incomplete strategy.

Two key members of Israel’s war Cabinet, both retired generals, have now vented these frustrations in public in a direct challenge to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Israel’s prosecution of the war, in which more than 35,000 Palestinians have been killed, is coming under intensified international scrutiny. On Monday, the International Criminal Court’s chief prosecutor said he was seeking arrest warrants against leaders of both Hamas and Israel.

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