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Benjamin Netanyahu warned that Israel faced a “long and difficult war”, as its forces continued to wage gun battles with Palestinian militants on Sunday morning following the unprecedented multi-pronged attack by Hamas that stunned the country.

More than 200 Israelis were killed on Saturday, 1,800 were injured and a “significant” number were taken hostage, an Israeli military spokesman said, after hundreds of militants on paragliders, motorbikes and boats stormed into the country from the Gaza Strip in a surprise attack that inflicted Israel’s worst death toll in decades.

Israel responded with a huge bombardment of Gaza which continued overnight, levelling multistorey buildings, as well as hitting targets in Lebanon after the Iran-backed Hizbollah militant group fired mortars towards Israel.

Israel also cut off the supply of electricity, fuel, and goods into Gaza, which it and Egypt have subjected to a crippling economic blockade since Hamas took control in 2007.

Officials in Gaza said on Sunday morning that 256 people had been killed by Israeli strikes on the coastal enclave and that 1,788 had been wounded.

Speaking after a meeting of the Israeli security cabinet finished early on Sunday, the Israeli prime minister said Israeli forces had destroyed the “vast majority of the enemy forces that infiltrated our territory”, and that it had now begun the “offensive phase”.

“[This] will continue with neither limitations nor respite until the objectives are achieved,” he said.

However, on Sunday morning, 24 hours after the attack began, Israeli forces were still battling militants, and an official said that fighting was continuing in eight places in Israel, including at a military base in Zikim.

In a sign of the potential for the conflict to spiral into a regional conflagration, Israel’s military said that its artillery had also struck areas in Lebanon after Hizbollah said that it had fired mortars towards Israel “in solidarity” with the Palestinian people.

Richard Hecht, a spokesman for Israel’s armed forces, said the military was looking into the incident but that it had not been an “all out” attack from Lebanon, and urged Hizbollah, which has a strong presence in southern Lebanon, not to enter the fighting. “I don’t think they will. But if they do, we are ready,” he said.

Saturday’s surprise attack, which was launched on the Jewish holiday of Simchat Torah and caught Israel’s military off-guard, poses a serious challenge for Netanyahu’s far-right government, which came to power last year with hardliners in important posts pledging to bolster security.

“[Saturday was] one of the most difficult days in our history,” said Zvika Haimovich, former commander of the Israel Air Defence Forces.

“There is no question this was well planned for many, many weeks if not more, well co-ordinated between the terrorist organisations in Gaza — and in my assumption not only in Gaza. I would not be surprised if [Hizbollah and the Iranians] were involved as well.”

Israeli officials said that militants in Gaza had fired more than 3,500 rockets at Israel during their initial barrage on Saturday, but that most casualties had been caused by close combat and “executions” by Hamas militants.

As international efforts began to de-escalate the conflict, the UN security council was due to meet later on Sunday.

The secretary-general António Guterres, condemned the attack by Hamas and urged “all diplomatic efforts to avoid a wider conflagration”, while the UN peacekeeping force had been deployed along Israel’s border with Lebanon to “maintain stability and help avoid escalation”.

 

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