World

Israeli government faces widespread outcry over plan to expand Gaza military operation

Israel's security cabinet approved a plan to take control of Gaza City, a move expanding military operations in the shattered Palestinian territory that drew strong fresh criticism at home and abroad on Friday over its pursuit of the almost two-year-old war.

Netanyahu calls Germany's move to halt military equipment exports to Israel disappointing

International leaders, organizations condemn Israel's decision to take over Gaza City

8 hours ago
Duration 4:06
World leaders and the UN have criticized Israel's plan to seize Gaza City, warning it would worsen the humanitarian crisis.

Israel's security cabinet approved a plan to take control of Gaza City, a move expanding military operations in the shattered Palestinian territory that drew strong fresh criticism at home and abroad on Friday over its pursuit of the almost two-year-old war.

Germany, a key European ally, announced it would halt exports of military equipment to Israel that could be used in Gaza, a decision Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called disappointing. Britain and other European allies including France condemned the move and urged Israel to reconsider its decision to escalate the Gaza military campaign.

The prime minister's office said Netanyahu told German Chancellor Friedrich Merz that Israel's goal was to "free Gaza from Hamas" so a peaceful government could be established there, and that Israel does not intend to take it over.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney also weighed in Friday saying the plan is "wrong" and will put the lives of the remaining hostages at greater risk.

However, U.S. President Donald Trump's ambassador to Israel, Mike Huckabee, told Reuters that some countries appeared to be putting pressure on Israel rather than on the militant group Hamas, whose deadly attack on Israel in 2023 ignited the war.

In Israel, families of hostages held by militants in Gaza and opposition leaders blasted Netanyahu for a decision that they said would put hostages' lives at risk.

WATCH | Israel's security cabinet approves plan to occupy Gaza City: 

Israel's security cabinet approves plan to occupy Gaza City

10 hours ago
Duration 3:29
Israel's security cabinet has approved a plan by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the military occupation of Gaza City, despite growing criticism at home and abroad.

Far-right allies in Netanyahu's coalition have been pushing for a total takeover of Gaza as part of his vow to eradicate Hamas militants, though the military has warned this could endanger the lives of the remaining hostages.

Opposition leader Yair Lapid called the decision to send Israeli forces into Gaza City a disaster, saying it defied the advice of military and security officials.

He accused far-right ministers Itamar Ben Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich of dragging Netanyahu into a prolonged campaign that would result in the deaths of hostages and soldiers.

Netanyahu told Fox News Channel's Bill Hemmer in an interview that aired on Thursday that the military intended to take control of all of Gaza.

Israel's cabinet expected to endorse Gaza City plan

The announcement from the prime minister's office early on Friday comes after Thursday's security cabinet meeting said the military would take Gaza City but did not say if Israeli forces would take all of the enclave.

Israel's cabinet is expected to endorse the Gaza City plan.

"This is going to increase the problems and suffering of civilians," 63-year-old Mahmoud Al-Shawish told CBC News freelance videographer Mohamed El Saife on Friday.

WATCH | Netanyahu says Israel plans to take control of Gaza: 

Israel intends to take full control of Gaza, Netanyahu says

21 hours ago
Duration 2:42
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu says Israel intends to take full military control of Gaza and push a new offensive, despite mounting international criticism over the war’s human toll and growing hunger crisis.

Qaz'at Porter, who lives in Gaza City, said Palestinians in Gaza are all too familiar with being forcibly displaced, something that's happened several times during the war.

"This decision is difficult for us, we've been displaced multiple times. Each person at least five or six times," he told CBC News.

"Our houses are gone, and we don't know where to seek shelter."

Alaa Al-Junaid, 40, echoed that sentiment saying the move by the Israeli government is no surprise.

"It's the norm. It stopped making a difference to the people," Al-Junaid said, calling on the international community to "have mercy on us."

Gaza City is 'Heart of Gaza'

The Israeli military has said that it controls around 75 per cent of Gaza. Amir Avivi, a retired Israeli brigadier general, estimated that if the military did take Gaza City, it would give Israel control of about 85 per cent of the strip.

"Gaza City is the heart of Gaza. It's really the centre of government. It has always been the strongest, and even in the eyes of Hamas, the fall of Gaza City is pretty much the fall of Hamas," said Avivi. "Taking over Gaza City is a game changer."

Israeli media have said 900,000 people now live in Gaza City, including many who have been displaced by the military.

A Palestinian boy carries a stroller at the site of an airstrike.
A Palestinian boy carries a stroller from the site of a morning Israeli strike on a house in Gaza City early Friday. (Mahmoud Issa/Reuters)

Before the war, Hamas's most powerful fighting units were believed to operate in northern Gaza, including Gaza City.

In the Fox News interview, Netanyahu said Israel did not want to keep the Gaza Strip but to establish a "security perimeter" and to hand over the territory to Arab forces.

There are 50 hostages still held in Gaza, of whom Israeli officials believe 20 are alive. Most of those freed so far emerged as a result of diplomatic negotiations. Talks toward a ceasefire that could have seen more hostages released collapsed in July.

Condemnation abroad

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen was among foreign leaders urging Israel to reconsider its decision to advance into Gaza City.

Regional power Saudi Arabia, which has said it could not normalize ties with Israel without the establishment of a Palestinian state, condemned any move to occupy Gaza.

Asked in an interview with Reuters about criticism of Israel's decision to escalate the war, Huckabee, the U.S. ambassador, questioned why some countries were "once again" placing "all the pressure on Israel" instead of on Hamas.

WATCH | Severe malnutrition in Gaza prompts widespread international concern: 

'There's nothing,' says starving man in Gaza

2 days ago
Duration 1:18
This Palestinian man says he has lost nearly half his body weight because there’s no food in Gaza amid the Israel-Hamas war. Salim Asfour, 85, says he's too weak to walk the 20 kilometres to get aid and worries about sending his children. Warning: This video shows images of severe malnutrition.

Huckabee said Trump was frustrated that Hamas is unwilling to reach "any kind of reasonable settlement," adding the president insists the militant group cannot remain in power and must disarm.

Israel had already come under mounting pressure at home and abroad over the war in Gaza, including over the humanitarian disaster in the enclave. In recent weeks, Britain, Canada and France said they could recognize a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly next month.

Domestic pressure

Netanyahu has said there will be no end to the war until Hamas is disarmed. Opinion polls have shown that a majority of Israelis believe he should end the war immediately in a diplomatic agreement that would see the release of remaining hostages.

The Hostages Families Forum, which represents many families of captives in Gaza, said the pursuit of occupying Gaza means abandoning the hostages all while ignoring public support to immediately end the war in a deal that releases the hostages.

It said in a statement the security cabinet had chosen to "embark on another march of recklessness, on the backs of the hostages, the soldiers and Israeli society as a whole."

"I think it's a death sentence to all the hostages that are still being held there. And it's the wrong decision to do it at this time," Danny Bukovsky, a hotelier in Tel Aviv, said of the announcement that Israeli forces would move into Gaza City.

A full occupation of Gaza would reverse a 2005 decision in which Israel withdrew thousands of Jewish settlers and its forces, while retaining control over its borders, airspace and utilities.

With files from CBC News and Mohamed El Saife