Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

IDF hits over 100 terror targets as ground operation expands in Gaza City

Soldiers located numerous weapons, including rifles and grenades, and also discovered an explosive device hidden among the rubble by Hamas terrorists.

Airstrike in Gaza
Smoke rises from the Hamas-controlled Al-Ghafri Tower in Gaza City after it was hit by an Israeli airstrike, Sept. 15, 2025. Photo by Omar Mohammed/Flash90.

The Israel Defense Forces on Friday expanded operations in Gaza City, eliminating terrorists using tank fire, armed UAVs and airstrikes, while dismantling terrorist infrastructure and locating weapons in the area.

Among the Hamas assets destroyed were tunnel shafts, booby-trapped structures, sniper posts and buildings used by terrorists.

In one encounter, troops from the 162nd Division identified several terrorists roughly 200 meters from IDF positions and eliminated them through rapid targeting.

Soldiers located numerous weapons, including rifles and grenades, and also discovered an explosive device hidden among the rubble by Hamas terrorists. The troops also dismantled over 20 military infrastructure sites, including observation posts.

Over the past 24 hours, the Israeli Air Force struck approximately 100 targets across Gaza, including underground military sites, weapons storage facilities and terrorist cells.

Meanwhile, the IDF continues operations in the northern Gaza Strip. During their activity, soldiers directed an IAF aircraft that killed Sim Mahmoud Yusuf Abu Alkhir, the deputy head of Military Intelligence in Hamas’s Bureij Battalion.

According to the IDF, the terrorist was involved in planning and carrying out attacks against both troops and Israeli civilian areas.

Before the strike, measures were taken to minimize collateral damage, including the use of precision munitions and aerial surveillance.

In the southern Gaza Strip, IDF troops continue advancing in the Khan Yunis and Rafah areas, eliminating terrorists who posed a threat and destroying dozens of Hamas assets.

Israel Defense Forces soldiers operate in the Gaza Strip, September 2025. Credit: IDF.
Israel Defense Forces soldiers operate in the Gaza Strip, September 2025. Credit: IDF.

On Thursday evening, the IDF announced that four soldiers had been killed in an IED blast in southern Gaza. The slain troops were identified as Maj. Omri Chai Ben Moshe, 26, from Moshav Tzafria; Lt. Ron Arieli, 20, from Hadera; Lt. Eran Shelem, 23, from Kibbutz Ramat Yohanan; and Lt. Eitan Avner Ben Itzhak, 22, from Har Bracha.

The death toll among Israeli troops since the start of the Gaza ground incursion on Oct. 27, 2023, now stands at 464, and at 910 on all fronts since the Hamas-led massacre on Oct. 7, 2023.

Defense Minister Israel Katz said on Wednesday that Israeli forces took down 25 “terror towers” in Gaza City at the start of major ground operations in the last Hamas stronghold the previous day.

Katz warned that if Hamas does not release the remaining 48 hostages and lay down its weapons, then “Gaza will be destroyed and turned into a monument to the rapists and murderers of Hamas.”

IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir held a situational assessment in the Strip on Tuesday, where he praised soldiers and urged them “to intensify blows against Hamas and to decisively defeat the Gaza City Brigade.”

Zamir said forces were carrying out “the most moral and important duty—the return of all the hostages and the dismantling of Hamas’s military and governing capabilities.”

Many reservists were called up in the middle of the night for the surprise exercise, part of the military’s post-Oct. 7 testing of readiness.
The U.S. president said he would be willing to accept a 20-year freeze on Tehran’s nuclear program, but only with proper guarantees.
American forces hunted for Abu-Bilal al-Minuki for months over his killing of Christians, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said.
Those who mark “Nakba Day” are ignoring the real cause of the mass Arab migration in 1948, the Israeli Foreign Ministry said.
Skirmishes to Israel’s north continue despite the announcement of a 45-day extension of the ceasefire.
“The name of the arch-terrorist Izz al-Din al-Haddad came up again and again” when speaking with the freed abductees, the IDF chief said.