A general view of the destroyed buildings is pictured at Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip on May 6, 2026. (Omar AL-QATTAA / AFP)
'We are tightening our grip on Hamas'

‘Now 60%’: Netanyahu admits Israel taking more territory in Gaza, despite ceasefire

PM confirms to cabinet the IDF is pushing past the Yellow Line demarcating the 53% of Gaza that Israel retained under US-brokered truce; IDF strikes in Strip allegedly kill 8

by · The Times of Israel

Israel has been expanding the territory it controls in the Gaza Strip during the ceasefire, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu acknowledged Sunday, pushing past the lines that were agreed upon in the US-brokered ceasefire that took effect last October.

At the start of the truce, the Israel Defense Forces controlled around 53 percent of the war-torn Palestinian enclave, with Hamas controlling the other 47%, in which nearly all of the Strip’s two million residents live. The army established the “Yellow Line,” demarcating the part of Gaza occupied by Israeli troops, and has been regularly firing at those who approach the line and are deemed a threat.

“In Gaza now, we already control not 50%, but 60%,” Netanyahu said at the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, confirming reports that Israel has taken more territory despite the ceasefire still being in effect.

Maps issued quietly by Israel in March showed a new restricted area beyond the 53%. The area, marked on the maps with an orange line, makes up an estimated 11% of Gaza’s territory beyond the Yellow Line. The areas cordon off nearly two-thirds of Gaza’s territory in total.

The military sent the maps to aid groups in Gaza in mid-March, saying the area between the orange line and the yellow line is a restricted zone to enable aid delivery, and that aid groups must coordinate their movements with the military. It says civilians are not affected.

The expanded zone has stirred fears from displaced Palestinians living there that they could be deemed targets by Israel. It has also stoked concerns that Israel may plan to hold the area permanently.

A Palestinian man rides on a cart pulled by a donkey near a concrete block marking the Yellow Line drawn by the Israeli military in Bureij, central Gaza Strip, on November 4, 2025. (Bashar Taleb / AFP)

“We are tightening our grip on Hamas,” Netanyahu said Sunday.

“We know exactly what our mission is, and our mission is one thing only — to ensure that Gaza will no longer pose a threat to Israel,” he said.

However, he did not pledge that Hamas will be destroyed as a military and governing organization, as he has many times since October 7, 2023.

Addressing the killing of the terror group’s military chief Izz al-Din al-Haddad on Friday, Netanyahu said that he promised “that all the architects of the massacre and all the architects of the kidnappings would be eliminated, every last one of them, and we are getting very close to completing that mission as well.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu leads the weekly cabinet meeting on May 17, 2026. (Screenshot/GPO)

Haddad helped plan the October 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack that killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and saw 251 abducted as hostages to Gaza, triggering the war. He took over as head of Hamas in Gaza after the May 2025 killing of Mohammed Sinwar, the brother and successor of Yahya Sinwar, who led the terror group in the 2023 onslaught.

Gaza strikes allegedly kill 8; IDF says Hamas commander killed

Meanwhile, Israeli strikes allegedly killed at least eight Palestinians in the Gaza Strip on Sunday, Hamas-linked health officials claimed.

Medics said an Israeli strike killed one Palestinian near a Hamas police post in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip. The military said it killed an operative who posed an immediate threat to forces operating in an area south of the enclave.

Separately, Gaza medics said another Israeli airstrike killed at least three people at a community kitchen near Al-Aqsa Hospital in Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza area. The IDF said the strike targeted a Hamas commander developing anti-tank missiles.

Gaza medical officials claimed three more Palestinians were killed, one in a shooting incident in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip and two others in an Israeli airstrike near a bakery in Deir al-Balah in central Gaza.

Additionally, the IDF announced Sunday that a Hamas commander was killed in an airstrike in the Gaza Strip the day before.

The IDF said that Bahaa Baroud, who served in Hamas’s operations division, had advanced many attacks against troops and Israeli civilians “in the immediate timeframe.”

“Baroud posed an immediate threat to IDF troops and was struck and eliminated in a precise aerial strike,” the military said.

Some 870 Palestinians have been killed in Israeli strikes since the ceasefire began in October, according to Hamas health ministry figures that do not distinguish between combatants and civilians. Four Israeli soldiers have been killed in Gaza during the same period.

Reuters and Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.