Lucy WilliamsonCenter East correspondent, Gaza
From an embankment overlooking Gaza Metropolis, there isn’t any hiding what this battle has completed.
The Gaza of maps and recollections is gone, changed by a monochrome panorama of rubble stretching flat and nonetheless for 180 levels, from Beit Hanoun on one facet to Gaza Metropolis on the opposite.
Past the distant shapes of buildings nonetheless standing inside Gaza Metropolis, there’s nearly nothing left to orient you right here, or establish the neighbourhoods that when held tens of hundreds of individuals.
This was one of many first areas Israeli floor troops entered within the early weeks of the battle. Since then they’ve been again a number of instances, as Hamas regrouped round its strongholds within the space.
Israel doesn’t permit information organisations to report independently from Gaza. At the moment it took a bunch of journalists, together with the BBC, into the realm of the Strip occupied by Israeli forces.
The transient go to was extremely managed and supplied no entry to Palestinians, or different areas of Gaza.
Navy censorship legal guidelines in Israel imply that navy personnel had been proven our materials earlier than publication. The BBC maintained editorial management of this report always.

Requested concerning the stage of destruction within the space we visited, Israeli navy spokesman Nadav Shoshani stated it was “not a aim”.
“The aim is to fight terrorists. Virtually each home had a tunnel shaft or was booby-trapped or had an RPG [rocket-propelled grenade] or sniper station,” he stated.
“When you’re driving quick, inside a minute you may be within a lounge of an Israeli grandmother or little one. That is what occurred on October 7.”
Greater than 1,100 folks had been killed within the Hamas assaults on Israel on 7 October 2023, and 251 others taken hostage.
Since then, greater than 68,000 Gazans have been killed, in line with the Hamas-run Well being Ministry there.
The our bodies of a number of hostages had been discovered on this space, Lt Col Shoshani stated, including that of Itay Chen, returned to Israel by Hamas this week. Searches are persevering with for the lacking our bodies of one other seven hostages.
The Israeli navy base we travelled to is a number of hundred metres from the yellow line – the non permanent boundary set out in US President Donald Trump’s peace plan, which divides the areas of Gaza nonetheless managed by Israeli forces from the areas managed by Hamas.
Israel’s military has been steadily marking out the yellow line with blocks on the bottom, as a warning to each Hamas fighters and civilians.
There aren’t any demarcations alongside this a part of the road but – a soldier factors it out to me, taking bearings from a small patch of sand between the gray crumbs of demolished buildings.
EPAThe ceasefire is nearly a month previous, however Israeli forces say they’re nonetheless combating Hamas gunmen alongside the yellow line “nearly every single day”. The piles of bronze-coloured bullet casings mark the firing factors on the embankments going through Gaza Metropolis.
Hamas has accused Israel of violating the ceasefire “lots of of instances”, and Gaza’s Hamas-run Well being Ministry says greater than 240 folks have been killed in consequence.
Col Shoshani stated that Israeli forces had been dedicated to the US-led peace plan, however that they might additionally make it possible for Hamas now not posed a menace to Israeli civilians, and would keep so long as mandatory.
“It’s totally clear to everybody that Hamas is armed and making an attempt to manage Gaza,” he stated. “That is one thing that might be labored out, however we’re removed from that.”
Moose Campbell/ BBCThe following stage of the US-led plan requires Hamas to disarm and hand over energy to a Palestinian committee overseen by worldwide figures together with President Trump.
However relatively than surrender its energy and weapons, Col Shoshani stated, Hamas was doing the other.
“Hamas is making an attempt to arm itself, making an attempt to say dominance, assert management over Gaza,” he instructed me. “It is killing folks in broad daylight, to terrorise civilians and ensure they perceive who’s boss in Gaza. We hope this settlement is sufficient stress to verify Hamas disarms.”
Israeli forces confirmed us a map of the tunnels they stated that troopers had discovered beneath the rubble we noticed – “an unlimited community of tunnels, nearly like spider’s net” they stated – some already destroyed, some nonetheless intact, and a few they had been nonetheless trying to find.
What occurs within the subsequent stage of this peace deal is unclear.
The settlement has left Gaza in a tense limbo. Washington is aware of how fragile the state of affairs is – the ceasefire has faltered twice already.
The US is pushing exhausting to maneuver on from this unstable stand-off to a extra sturdy peace. It has despatched a draft decision to UN Safety Council members, seen by the BBC, which outlines a two-year mandate for a global stabilisation power to take over Gaza’s safety and disarm Hamas.
However particulars of this subsequent stage of the deal are skinny: it is not clear which nations would ship troops to safe Gaza forward of Hamas disarmament, when Israel’s troops will withdraw, or how the members of Gaza’s new technocratic administration might be appointed.
President Trump has outlined his imaginative and prescient of Gaza as a futuristic Center Japanese hub, constructed with international funding. It is a far cry from the place Gaza is right this moment.
Largely destroyed by Israel, and seen as an funding by Trump, the query isn’t just who can cease the combating, however how a lot say Gazans could have in the way forward for their communities and lands.



















































