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Israel launches a deadly series of attacks on Gaza

A woman cries while sitting on the rubble of her house, destroyed in an Israeli strike, in the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza Strip on Tuesday. Israel on Tuesday unleashed its most intense strikes on the Gaza Strip since a January ceasefire.
EYAD BABA
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AFP via Getty Images
A woman cries while sitting on the rubble of her house, destroyed in an Israeli strike, in the Nuseirat refugee camp in central Gaza Strip on Tuesday. Israel on Tuesday unleashed its most intense strikes on the Gaza Strip since a January ceasefire.

Israel launched a wave of deadly attacks against Gaza Tuesday, a move that appears to have put an end to the fragile ceasefire that came into effect almost two months ago and aimed at ending almost 16 months of war.

The estimated number of casualties fluctuated in the early hours following the airstrikes as rescue workers sought to find victims. In a release on its official Telegram channel, the Gaza Ministry of Health said hospitals in the Gaza Strip have received 254 people who died in intensive Israeli airstrikes. More than 440 had injuries.

Health officials said, "a number of victims are still under the rubble, and efforts are underway to recover them."

Israel's Defense Minister Israel Katz said the attacks were launched because Hamas was refusing to release more hostages, after freeing 33 in the initial six-week phase of the ceasefire plan reached in January.

"Last night, we resumed fighting in Gaza due to Hamas' refusal to release the hostages and its threats to harm [Israeli] soldiers and Israeli communities. If Hamas does not release all the hostages, the gates of hell will open in Gaza, and Hamas' murderers and rapists will face the IDF with unprecedented force. We will not stop fighting until all the hostages return home and all war objectives are achieved," Katz said in a statement.

White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told Fox News that the Trump administration had been consulted by the Israelis about the strikes.

"As President Trump has made it clear — Hamas, the Houthis, Iran, all those who seek to terrorize not just Israel, but also the United States of America, will see a price to pay. All hell will break loose," Leavitt said.

The series of attacks appeared to end the current ceasefire that took effect on Jan. 19, 2025, pushed through by the outgoing U.S. administration of president Joe Biden and by the incoming administration of President Trump.

Under that ceasefire deal, the two sides agreed to an initial phase of six weeks in which Hamas released 33 of hostages, both living and dead, held since its attack on Israel in October 2023. In return, Israel released close to 2,000 Palestinian prisoners and detainees who had been held in Israeli prisons. That phase ended at the beginning of March, but the second phase — In which talks designed to end the war were due to begin — did not start.

Instead, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced earlier this month that Trump's Middle East envoy Steven Witkoff had proposed a new plan in which Hamas would release around half of the remaining hostages in exchange for an extension of the ceasefire, during which talks would start for a lasting solution to the crisis. Hamas rebuffed the new proposal, and Israel blocked all aid from entering the Gaza Strip in an effort to force Hamas to agree.

Copyright 2025 NPR

James Hider
James Hider is NPR's Middle East editor.