Exploding robots: Israel's latest hammer to level Gaza

Vast areas of the Strip are being flattened. Even trees are being destroyed, lest a Palestinian hide behind them. Increasingly, explosive-laden vehicles are being sent to do the damage.

A girl stands embracing a man as they inspect destroyed bulldozers and other heavy vehicles at the Jabalia municipality garage, which was hit by Israeli bombardment, in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip on April 22, 2025.
BASHAR TALEB / AFP
A girl stands embracing a man as they inspect destroyed bulldozers and other heavy vehicles at the Jabalia municipality garage, which was hit by Israeli bombardment, in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip on April 22, 2025.

Exploding robots: Israel's latest hammer to level Gaza

In early August, Israel’s Security Cabinet granted Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu approval to implement military plans aimed at securing full control over Gaza City and the northern Gaza Strip. This would mean displacing the north’s Palestinian residents, as seen in Rafah, Beit Hanoun, Beit Lahia, and eastern Khan Younis.

Israel’s Chief-of-Staff Eyal Zamir opposed the plan, in part due to a shortage of troops and their diminished readiness after nearly two years of continuous combat, and in part due to concerns that the operation could endanger the remaining Israeli hostages, but Netanyahu got his way as the plan got the green light.

In recent days, artillery barrages have intensified, flattening residential blocks in the Al-Zaytoun and Al-Sabra south-east of Gaza City, forcing residents to flee under fire. The army used its entrenched positions along the Netzarim axis on the southern edge of Al-Zaytoun to launch incursions, relying heavily on air and artillery bombardment.

Scorched earth

On Saturday, Israel bombed high-rise towers in Gaza City as part of its campaign to drive residents toward the Al-Mawasi area in the south. The military claimed Hamas used these buildings for intelligence-gathering. Among the buildings reduced to rubble was the 15-storey Al-Sousi residential tower in western Gaza, the Mishtaha Tower in the city having also been destroyed two days earlier.

Eyad BABA - AFP
Tents housing displaced Gazans.

Israel urged residents of Gaza City to relocate to what it described as the “Al-Mawasi humanitarian zone” in the southern Gaza Strip as forces advanced from the city’s northeastern perimeter, striking densely populated areas such as Jabalia al-Balad, Jabalia al-Nazla, Al-Saftawi, and Abu Sharikh.

Dozens of homes, residential and commercial buildings, and vital infrastructure were shelled repeatedly during daylight hours, as drones fired on civilian homes to force displacement. By night, troops deployed explosive-laden robots to level hundreds of houses and buildings. These robots were also employed in April 2024 to demolish and level residential districts.

The aim is clear: to flatten the terrain, erase buildings and infrastructure, and clear wide routes for ground forces to advance, while reducing the risk of ambush by Palestinian fighters. By blowing up houses and trees, the robots transformed entire areas into barren fields of rubble, denying militants any chance of concealment or movement.

Robotic bombs

Military experts say the machines used were originally US-made M113 armoured personnel carriers, used by Israel up to the 2014 Gaza War. After repeated strikes by locally-produced rockets forced their withdrawal from service, they were refitted to become remote-controlled explosive platforms, each carrying several tonnes of ordnance, able to wipe out everything within 50 metres, with partial destruction extending up to 150 metres. Shrapnel has been reported more than half a kilometre from the detonation site.

By blowing up houses and trees, the robots transformed entire areas into barren fields of rubble

In Jabalia and northern Gaza, the intensity forced hundreds of families to flee. Most sought refuge along the coast near Al-Sudaniya, rejecting Israeli leaflet calls to move south, which were seen as forced displacement. Montaser Dakka, 32, told Al Majalla that he fled west with relatives and neighbours, hoping to quickly return.

"Every night we hear the blasts of the robots, shaking the ground," he says. "I try to reach my home in Jabalia al-Nazla, but fire from drones and military vehicles drives me back. Each day, I see more destruction, streets and buildings erased. We now glimpse our homes only from afar, after entire neighbourhoods have been flattened."

Mahmoud al-Sultan, 28, who reached what was left of his home after days of displacement, describes a scene of total devastation. "The street has no landmarks left. Houses are nothing but tangled rubble. No trees, no buildings standing. It looks as if a nuclear bomb had exploded and erased all life. Even the soil is torn up by the blasts."

Just getting started

The Israeli military insists that its campaign remains in the preliminary phase, with the stated goal of imposing full control over Gaza. For nearly a month, operations have focused on razing the land and wiping out entire neighbourhoods—obliterating any chance for Gazans to resume life in their original communities, even if there is a negotiated end to the war. It continues its airstrikes and targeted assassinations against anyone it brands as "saboteurs and terrorists".

These strikes are often in the heart of densely populated districts of Gaza City. On 30 August, Israeli aircraft struck a residential apartment in Al-Rimal, crowded with displaced families. They used three precision-guided GBU bombs and seven people were killed—including women and children, whose bodies were torn apart. More than 25 were wounded, according to medical sources at Al-Shifa Hospital.

Within hours, the army declared it had eliminated a senior Hamas leader. The following day, it named Abu Ubaida, the long-serving spokesman of the Al-Qassam Brigades, revealing his identity as Hudhayfa Al-Kahlout and accusing him of orchestrating Hamas's propaganda and incitement campaigns. For two decades, Abu Ubaida had been the public voice of Al-Qassam—recognisable in his military fatigues and red keffiyeh, delivering fiery speeches that then echo across social media.

Hamas and the Brigades have been silent on Abu Ubaida, neither confirming nor denying the report. Israeli media, meanwhile, reported that the army had killed most of the Al-Qassam Military Council, leaving only the Gaza City Brigade commander, Ezzedine Al-Haddad, who is accused of helping plan the 7 October 2023 attacks. According to Israeli newspaper Maariv, he now tops Israel's most wanted list.

These claims align with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's repeated declarations that the eradication of Hamas and its military wing, together with the release of Israeli hostages, remain the war's central objectives. If these goals are met, will Israel end the war, or will it continue, extending the devastation and driving ever more Palestinians into forced displacement? Many increasingly fear the answer.

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