menu-control
The Jerusalem Post Logo - Bring them home now
accessibilty

Gaza

The Gaza Strip, often referred to simply as Gaza, is a small coastal territory in the Southern Levant that is north of Egypt's Sinai, East of the Mediterranean Sea, and South-West of Israel. 

The long-standing ruler of the Gaza Strip is Hamas, which is recognized as a terrorist organization by most Western states and international governmental organizations. Under Hamas, Gaza has been in a state of conflict with Israel. Several other terrorist organizations reside in Gaza and take part in the hostilities, including the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, the Al-Aqsa Martyr's Brigade, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, ISIS offshoots and others. 

Gaza is home to 1.5 million Palestinians, largely Sunni Muslim, some who identify as refugees or descendants of refugees from territory now belonging to Israel. Gaza has a very young population, but is very impoverished due to mismanagement, corruption, conflict, and the redirection of taxes and financial aid to warfare. 

Due to the conflict between Gaza and Israel, the territory has been under blockade since 2007, though it shares one border and crossing, Rafah, with Egypt. A significant amount of smuggling occurs on this border, often through tunnels.

Gaza is surrounded by defensive structures created by the Israel Defense Forces to counter Gazan terrorist attacks. This includes a sensor fence that rings the perimeter, an underground barrier to prevent and detect tunneling, and a naval barrier to prevent naval frogman infiltration.

Rockets fired from Gaza have presented a major strategic challenge to Israel. Military infrastructure runs through Gaza's cities, including rocket infrastructure. Launch sites, munitions storage, command & control centers, bunkers and more can be found throughout Gaza, much of it underground. In the past, Hamas leaders have claimed that 500 kilometers of tunnel systems are laced throughout the Strip. 

Gaza was part of the British Mandate after the territory was relinquished by the UK from the Ottoman Empire after World War I. After the Mandate dissolved, it was seized during Israel's War of Independence by Egypt, and ruled by the Egyptian puppet All-Palestine Government. During the 1967 Six-Day War, Israel captured the territory, and it was not returned along with other Egyptian holdings after the two made peace in the 1970s. 21 Israeli settlements were established within Gaza, but in 2005, Israel unilaterally withdrew from the Strip. In 2006, the Palestinians held legislative elections, but when Hamas won, there was a civil war, and Hamas seized full control of Gaza.

 From the disengagement onwards, Hamas and other terrorist organizations increased terrorist attacks against Israelis, and several operations have been fought to quell Gazan attacks, including 2008's Cast Lead, 2011's Pillar of Defense, 2014's Protective Edge, and 2021's Guardian of the Walls.

Read More
Less
European Union flags flutter outside the EU Commission headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, January 18, 2018.

EU staff members protest Israel's war in Gaza

By REUTERS
 US PRESIDENT Joe Biden speaks on the phone with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, last week.

Israel-Hamas war day 215: What's going on in Gaza?

 Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei gestures before he votes during parliamentary elections in Tehran, Iran, March 1, 2024.

Tehran helped plan Hamas's October 7 massacre, Iran expert claims

 UNRWA COMMISSIONER-GENERAL Philippe Lazzarini concludes a briefing on the humanitarian situation in the Palestinian territories, at the UN in Geneva, last week.

The UNRWA probe ignores the key issue - opinion

 SIX MONTHS into the Israel-Hamas war, internal divisions have reemerged, as over 100 hostages still remain in Hamas captivity.

Mo Husseini's viral post on Israel-Hamas conflict offers a nuanced perspective

By ANDREW SILOW-CARROLL/JTA
 Hamas terrorists

Hamas will weigh options amid Rafah operation - analysis

 Palestinians react after Hamas accepted a ceasefire proposal from Egypt and Qatar, in Rafah, in the southern Gaza Strip, May 6, 2024. In Israel, protesters block a highway demanding the immediate release of hostages.

Hamas accepts hostage deal, Israel sends team to Cairo, continues Rafah op.

 PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu addresses the UN General Assembly in New York City, on Friday.

Claim Netanyahu sabotaged hostage talks is a complete lie — PMO

 Evacuation map published by IDF for residents of eastern Rafah. May 6, 2024

IDF begins evacuating civilians from eastern Rafah northward

 (L-R) Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu; Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar

Israel-Hamas war day 213: What's going on in Gaza?

 The flag of Palestine in the match of the Qatar national team in the 2022 World Cup

A Palestinian state will exist with or without Israel's approval - opinion

By Dr. Ronit Levin-Schnor
Demonstrators protest for the release of Israeli hostages held hostage by Hamas terrorists in the Gaza Strip, in Jerusalem. April 27, 2024.

Can Israel conduct a prisoner exchange and ceasefire simultaneously?

By 103FM VIA MAARIV ONLINE
 A truck carrying humanitarian aid bound for the Gaza Strip drives at the inspection area at the Kerem Shalom crossing, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, in southern Israel, March 14, 2024.

COGAT: Int'l orgs told us too much aid was sent to northern Gaza

(From left-to-right) IDF soldiers Ruben Marc Mordechai Assouline, Ido Testa, Michael Ruzal, and Tal Shavit, who were killed in the Hamas rocket attack on the Kerem Shalom area. May 5, 2024

Four soldiers killed in Hamas rocket barrage toward Kerem Shalom, aid crossing closed

 Film director Jonathan Glazer poses with his Oscar for Best International Feature Film at the 96th Academy Awards in Hollywood on March 10.

Israel-Palestinian truce needed before the Jewish people lose humanity, conscience