
Israel's Chief of the General Staff Eyal Zamir has declared that the troops' pullback line in Gaza is the new border between Israel and the Palestinian territory.
During a visit to forces in northern Gaza on Sunday, he said the so-called "yellow line" was the new border, a forward defensive line for Israeli border communities and also an attack line.
The yellow line represents a new division of territory in the Gaza Strip and extends between 1.5 and 6.5 kilometres into the coastal area. Israel thus controls slightly more than half of Gaza where more than 2 million Palestinians live.
Before the new border was drawn, the Gaza Strip was around 41 kilometres long and between 6 and 12 kilometres wide.
"We will respond with full force to any attempt to threaten our forces," Zamir said, adding Israel would not allow Hamas to re-establish itself in the Gaza Strip.
Under a ceasefire agreed with the Islamist group, the Israeli army has withdrawn behind the yellow line, which gets its name from yellow concrete blocks and signs on the pullback line.
latest_posts
- 1
German foreign minister heads to China to talk rare-earth exports - 2
Building an Individual Brand: Illustrations from Forces to be reckoned with - 3
Famous Kitchen Finishing Styles For 2024 - 4
Fireball sightings are surging across the US — here's what's really going on - 5
7 Countries Where Newcomers Feel Most Welcome, and 3 Where They Often Don’t
Shas threatens to oppose 2026 state budget over haredi food-voucher exclusion
The biggest black hole breakthroughs of 2025
Planet-eating stars hint at Earth's ultimate fate
Teen drug use remains low, but survey finds small rise in heroin and cocaine use
Young Muslims in Germany feel left out of Mideast debate, experts say
James Webb Space Telescope finds strongest evidence yet for atmosphere around rocky exoplanet: 'It's really like a wet lava ball'
Images of Bangladeshi motorcyclists sleeping at petrol pumps are AI-generated
In blow to Lula, Brazil Congress revives controversial environmental bill
Cheetah, Hammerhead Shark, and 38 Other Animals in Danger of Extinction Receive New International Protections from U.N.













