How the Israel-Hamas conflict has unfolded in maps, graphics and videos

Map of Israel and Gaza

It has been more than a week since Hamas militants crossed into Israel on a murderous rampage, killing more than 1,300 people and taking hostages — the start of a bloody and unpredictable new chapter in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The Israeli military has responded by pummeling the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip with airstrikes, killing 3,000 Palestinians, and massing troops along the border in preparation for a ground offensive. Israel called upon 1.1 million Palestinians who live in northern Gaza to leave the area, a directive that the United Nations said was “not feasible” and “could transform what is already a tragedy into a calamitous situation.”


Damaged areas

since Oct. 12

Population by municipality

Sources: Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics,

U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

(OCHA), damage analysis of Copernicus Sentinel-1

satellite data by Corey Scher of CUNY Graduate Center

and Jamon Van Den Hoek of Oregon State University

Damaged areas

since Oct. 12

Population by municipality

Sources: Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, U.N. Office for the

Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), damage analysis of

Copernicus Sentinel-1 satellite data by Corey Scher of CUNY

Graduate Center and Jamon Van Den Hoek of Oregon State University

Damaged areas

since Oct. 12

Population by municipality

Sources: Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), damage analysis of Copernicus Sentinel-1

satellite data by Corey Scher of CUNY Graduate Center and Jamon Van Den Hoek of Oregon State University

Damaged areas

since Oct. 12

Population by municipality

Sources: Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics, U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian

Affairs (OCHA), damage analysis of Copernicus Sentinel-1 satellite data by

Corey Scher of CUNY Graduate Center and Jamon Van Den Hoek of Oregon State University

The conflict has brought fear, destruction and uncertainty for millions in the region. Here’s how the events have been unfolding.

President Biden announces Gaza aid deal

Israel pounded Gaza with more airstrikes on Thursday, as President Biden said Egypt would allow up to 20 trucks with aid through the Rafah border crossing.

Day 12 Wednesday, Oct. 18

U.S. says Israel ‘not responsible’ for hospital blast

In a statement Wednesday, White House spokeswoman Adrienne Watson said the current U.S. assessment, based on “overhead imagery, intercepts and open source information,” found that Israel was “not responsible” for the blast at the al-Ahli Hospital in Gaza.

Clashes across West Bank left several Palestinians dead. Protests erupted also outside the U.S. Embassy in Beirut and in Amman, Jordan.

Palestinian, Israeli leaders trade blame for hospital attack

An attack on the al-Ahli Hospital in central Gaza City has killed hundreds of people, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry. Palestinian officials say an Israeli airstrike hit the hospital courtyard where displaced Gazans were taking shelter; the Israel Defense Forces blamed the Palestinian Islamic Jihad militant group, saying “a barrage of rockets” was passing near the hospital when it was hit.

100,000 still remain in Gaza City and the north

The U.N. agency for Palestinian refugees estimates that 1 million people have been displaced across the Gaza Strip. Approximately 100,000 still remain in Gaza City and the north despite Israel’s evacuation directive.

Evacuations in southern Lebanon

The Israeli Defense Ministry on Monday released a list of 28 communities along the northern border of Lebanon to begin evacuating to state-funded accommodations. The communities are mostly within 1.2 miles of the Lebanese border.

Israel has long been enemies with Lebanon-based militant group Hezbollah and the two sides have intermittently shelled each other. Skirmishes between the two have been routine for decades, but tensions have been high since the Israel-Gaza war that began Oct. 7. The Israel Defense Forces said earlier Monday that it had struck Hezbollah military infrastructure in Lebanon overnight in retaliation for an attack on Israeli territory Sunday.

Troops spotted near the border

As a ground invasion looms, Israeli troops and armored vehicles were seen in multiple locations near the northern and eastern borders with Gaza on Saturday and Sunday.

Several vehicles amassed in the southern Israeli city of Ashkelon. Tanks were also spotted in Nahal Oz, an Israeli town near Gaza City.

Gaza residents flee south

The main roads running north to south were crowded for a second day Saturday after the Israeli military called for civilians to move south of the Wadi Gaza wetlands through designated streets. Many fled on foot.

But some civilians refused to leave northern Gaza, fearing that escape routes are too dangerous. Hamas’s media office said airstrikes hit cars as they headed south from Gaza City, killing 70 people.

Israel calls for evacuations

Israel told the 1.1 million people living in northern Gaza to move south within 24 hours, a warning the United Nations called impossible “without devastating humanitarian consequences.” Included in the directive was Gaza City, the strip’s most densely populated area.

The call came as Israel continued to pummel the strip with bombs and the death toll surged past 1,500. The United Nations said an estimated 600,000 people are displaced to the southern half of Gaza, though this number is likely an undercount.

With exits to Israel and Egypt closed, Gazans have nowhere to go. A mass evacuation “could transform what is already a tragedy into a calamitous situation,” the United Nations said.

Preparing for a ground assault

Israeli tanks deployed at the border with Gaza on Oct. 12, while an army helicopter flew near the northern border with Lebanon. (Video: Reuters)

Israeli tanks deployed to the border with Gaza, and reservists arrived for duty at the Julis military base near Ashkelon.

Meanwhile, the Israeli bombardment of Gaza continued.

Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari, a spokesman for the IDF, said in a televised briefing that Israel would no longer allow Hamas to exist next door.

“Unlike other operations, we are collapsing the governance and sovereignty of the Hamas organization,” he said.

Deep underground, in the northern Israeli city of Haifa, medics lined up hospital beds and braced for the possibility of a wider regional escalation. After rocket fire from Syria earlier in the week, Israel launched missile strikes on two of the nation’s main airports, authorities in Damascus said.

Israeli strikes on Gaza intensified, many concentrated in heavily populated areas in the north. The death toll surpassed 1,100 people, and more than 263,000 people were displaced across the strip. The United Nations announced 11 workers were killed.


Explosions or airstrikes in northern Gaza

Explosion near

Mashroo Amer

wal Isra’a

Note: Not all events are included due to data availability.

Sources: U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian

Affairs (OCHA), Israel Defense Forces, Maxar Technologies,

Google Earth

Explosions or airstrikes in northern Gaza

Explosion near

Mashroo Amer

wal Isra’a

Destroyed

al Gharbi mosque

Note: Not all events are included due to data availability.

Sources: U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian

Affairs (OCHA), Israel Defense Forces, Maxar Technologies, Google Earth

Explosions or airstrikes in northern Gaza

Explosion near

Mashroo Amer wal Isra’a.

Destroyed

al-Gharbi mosque

Airstrikes destroyed several

mosques in west Gaza.

Bombing significantly damaged

hospitals in Gaza City.

Destroyed residential

buildings near As Sabra.

International Eye Hospital

Note: Not all events are included due to data availability.

Sources: U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), Israel Defense Forces,

Maxar Technologies, Google Earth

Explosions or airstrikes in northern Gaza

Explosion near

Mashroo Amer

wal Isra’a

Airstrikes destroyed several

mosques in west Gaza.

Bombing significantly damaged

hospitals in Gaza City.

Islamic

University

of Gaza

International Eye Hospital

Some of the most devastating strikes Israel has carried out in Gaza

Palestinian authorities said Gaza’s only power plant had run out of fuel and was no longer operating.

Israel provides Gaza with power in two ways. Gaza’s power plant runs on imported diesel fuel. There are also 10 direct power lines from Israel to Gaza. Now, both sources were cut off.


Where Gaza gets its electricity

The Gaza Strip has a total daily power supply of 195 MWs.

Israel supplies 120 megawatts daily to Gaza, which are delivered through direct power lines.

Gaza’s power plant supplies 65 to 75 daily megawatts. The fuel that powers this plant is purchased from Israel and enters Gaza through the Karem Shalom crossing.

FROM GAZA’S

POWER PLANT

Where Gaza gets its electricity

The Gaza Strip has a total daily power supply of 195 MWs.

Israel supplies 120 megawatts daily to Gaza, which are delivered through direct power lines.

Gaza’s power plant supplies 65 to 75 daily megawatts. The fuel that powers this plant is purchased from Israel and enters Gaza through the Karem Shalom crossing.

Where Gaza gets its electricity

The Gaza Strip has a total daily power supply of 195 MWs.

Israel supplies 120 megawatts daily to Gaza, which are delivered through direct power lines.

Gaza’s power plant supplies 65 to 75 daily megawatts. The fuel that powers this plant is purchased from Israel and enters Gaza through the Karem Shalom crossing.

Where Gaza gets its electricity

Israel supplies 120 megawatts daily to Gaza, which are delivered through direct power lines.

Gaza’s power plant supplies 65 to 75 daily megawatts. The fuel that powers this plant is purchased from Israel and enters Gaza through the Karem Shalom crossing.

Total daily power

supply: 195 MWs

Scenes of more destruction

Bodies in Israel were still being found. After 2½ days of intense fighting in Kfar Azza — one of the first towns attacked — soldiers escorted journalists through scenes of utter ruin. Homes were burned, cars were smashed, and the air smelled of death.

Israeli commanders said they had gained control of the border around Gaza, but Hamas continued to fire rockets into Israel, even as IDF airstrikes targeted militant infrastructure and command posts. The military said it had carried out more than 2,000 strikes across Gaza since Saturday, killing hundreds of Palestinians.

Israel pledged to focus its fire on Hamas fighters and abide by international law. Two members of Hamas’s political office were killed.


Explosion in northern Gaza

al-Gharbi mosque in northern Gaza

al-Sousi mosque near Rimal

Residential buildings near As Sabra

Source: Maxar Technologies

Explosion in northern Gaza

al-Gharbi mosque in northern Gaza

al-Sousi mosque near Rimal

Residential buildings near As Sabra

Source: Maxar Technologies

al-Gharbi mosque

in northern Gaza

Explosion in northern Gaza

Residential buildings

near As Sabra

al-Sousi mosque near Rimal

Source: Maxar Technologies

But mosques, hospitals, residential buildings and international aid groups were also hit.

A ‘complete siege’ of Gaza

Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant ordered a “complete siege” of Gaza, saying Israel would cut off supplies of power, food and gas.

Gazans have lived for 16 years under an Israeli blockade supported by Egypt and are heavily dependent on Israel for electricity and other basic services. Cutting off gas and power could leave many residents not only without electricity, but also without clean drinking water, proper sanitation and health care.

Israel ordered a ‘complete siege’ of Gaza. Here’s what that looks like.

U.N. human rights chief Volker Turk would a day later condemn the siege, saying that depriving civilians of “goods essential for their survival is prohibited under international humanitarian law.”


The two main sources of electricity in Gaza are Israel’s electricity company, which supplies power through 10 lines, and the Gaza power plant, which frequently runs at partial capacity because of its reliance on inefficient diesel fuel. Gaza has not been able to obtain electricity

from Egypt for several years.

Wastewater treatment plant

Wastewater pumping station

Electricity feed from Israel

Electricity feed from Israel

The two main sources of electricity in Gaza are Israel’s electricity company, which supplies power through 10 lines, and the Gaza power plant, which frequently runs at partial capacity because of its reliance on inefficient diesel fuel. Gaza has not been able to obtain electricity from Egypt for several years.

Electricity feed

from Israel

Wastewater

treatment plant

Wastewater

pumping station

Electricity feed

from Israel

Electricity feed

from Israel

The two main sources of electricity in Gaza are Israel’s electricity company, which supplies power through 10 lines, and the Gaza power plant, which frequently runs at partial capacity because of its reliance on inefficient diesel fuel. Gaza has not been able to obtain electricity from Egypt for several years.

Electricity feed

from Israel

Wastewater

treatment

plant

Wastewater

pumping

station

Electricity feed

from Israel

Electricity feed

from Israel

The two main sources of electricity in Gaza are Israel’s electricity company, which supplies power through 10 lines, and the Gaza power plant, which frequently runs at partial capacity because of its reliance on inefficient diesel fuel. Gaza has not been able to obtain electricity from Egypt for several years.

Wastewater

treatment plant

Wastewater

pumping station

Electricity feed from Israel

Electricity feed from Israel

As airstrikes on Gaza continued, fleeing Palestinians saw their last hope erased. Strikes near the Rafah crossing with Egypt, the last route out of the territory, closed the checkpoint indefinitely, leaving civilians with nowhere to go.

Fighting continues, death toll rises

Fighting continued with militant holdouts inside Israel as the country formally declared war on Hamas. Hezbollah, the Lebanese militant group that is allied with Hamas, fired dozens of rockets into northern Israel.

The Israel Defense Forces launched a punishing campaign of airstrikes on Gaza, displacing thousands of people in the first 24 hours.

Israeli soldiers on Oct. 8 stand at the site of a damaged police station that was seized by Hamas gunmen in the southern town of Sderot. (Video: Reuters)

In Israel, the death toll continued to rise. More than 250 bodies were recovered at the site of a trance music festival held just three miles away from the Gaza border. Survivors described tired festivalgoers running for their lives in a wide-open field as militants gunned them down.

Early Saturday morning, under the cover of thousands of rockets, Hamas militants breached Israel’s high-tech “smart wall” and went on a killing rampage in small towns across southern Israel.


Cameras, radar and sensors

Underground

concrete barrier

Underground

sensors to detect

militant tunnels

Cameras, radar and sensors

Underground

concrete barrier

Underground

sensors to detect

militant tunnels

Cameras, radar and sensors

Underground sensors

to detect militant

tunnels

Underground

concrete barrier

Cameras, radar and sensors

Underground sensors

to detect militant

tunnels

Underground

concrete barrier

Cameras, radar and sensors

Underground sensors

to detect militant

tunnels

Underground

concrete barrier


Israel’s perimeter fence

and access-restricted area

Sand barriers to

slow intruders

300–100 M

Access permitted

only to farmers

on foot

The new border fence

has an underground

concrete barrier to an

undisclosed depth.

Israel’s perimeter fence

and access-restricted area

Sand barriers to

slow intruders

100–300 M

Access

permitted

only to farmers

on foot

The new border fence

has an underground

concrete barrier to an

undisclosed depth.

Israel’s perimeter fence

and access-restricted area

100–300 M

Access permitted

only to farmers

on foot

Sand barriers to

slow intruders

The new border fence

has an underground

concrete barrier to an

undisclosed depth.

Israel’s perimeter fence

and access-restricted area

100–300 M

Access permitted

only to farmers

on foot

Sand barriers to

slow intruders

The new border fence

has an underground

concrete barrier to an

undisclosed depth.

How Hamas breached Israel’s ‘Iron Wall’

The ambush took Israeli forces by surprise. Officials said the attackers overran more than 20 communities. It took the military 10 hours to arrive in some towns. By that point, hundreds of civilians were already dead. Militants are believed to have taken more than 100 hostages into Gaza.

Maps and videos show how the deadly surprise attack on Israel unfolded

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