Thursday, July 24, 2025

IDF gains wasted: This is what happens if Israel meets Hamas’ withdrawal demands

Terror group demands IDF withdraw to the March 2 battle lines in exchange for a hostage deal, threatening to undo critical IDF gains in strategic corridors like Morag and Magen Oz; a withdrawal would compromise security, enable Hamas’ resurgence.
Should Israel agree to Hamas’s demand to withdraw to the March 2 lines as part of a hostage release deal, the IDF would abandon key strategic corridors secured at a heavy cost in recent months.

This includes the 12-kilometer (7.5-mile) Morag Corridor, stretching from the border near Kissufim to the sea, separating Rafah from Khan Younis, and the n ewer 10-kilometer (6.2-mile) Magen Oz Corridor, dividing east and west Khan Younis to target remaining Hamas strongholds, including the Al-Mawasi area with 800,000 displaced people and thousands of Hamas terrorists.

A withdrawal from the Morag Corridor would undermine IDF gains in Rafah, the only Gaza city under siege, allowing hundreds of thousands of Gazans, including Hamas operatives, to return without security checks. This could enable Hamas to rebuild its local brigade, despite the destruction of most terror tunnels in recent months. The retreat would also weaken the IDF’s buffer zone along the Gaza border, critical to preventing another October 7-style massacre.

The IDF has seized significant territory, up to 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) into northern Gaza, at the cost of dozens of soldiers’ lives and injuries, particularly in the Jabaliya and Beit Hanoun, areas overlooking Israeli communities like Sderot, Mefalsim and Alumim. A partial withdrawal would jeopardize plans for new outposts to secure the region. (Read More)