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In Israeli border town, rockets an audible reminder Hamas is unbeaten

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Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神
Israel's Iron Dome anti-missile system leaves contrails as it intercepts Hamas rockets overhead, in Sderot, Israel, Dec. 4, 2023. Hamas militants in Gaza continue firing rockets into Israel despite being targeted by more than 14,000 strikes during eight weeks of Israeli bombardment and a ground offensive.

The relentless fire of Israeli artillery provides the noisy soundtrack in this largely emptied front-line Israeli town, its scenes of grassy suburbia located barely a half-mile 鈥 as the rocket flies 鈥 from the northeast corner of the Gaza Strip.

But despite more than eight weeks of intense Israeli bombardment of Hamas targets in Gaza, and a ground incursion that has left most of the now-decimated northern strip under Israeli control, there is another, parallel soundtrack over Sderot that surprises many here.

Every day Hamas, the Islamist militant group that rules Gaza, proves it can still launch rockets into Israel, with several hundred fired so far since the collapse of a weeklong cease-fire last Friday. And every day, missiles of Israel鈥檚 Iron Dome short-range air defense system fly into the air to knock the rockets out with a burst and puff of smoke that rains debris down on Sderot and other Israeli towns.

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For years the Israeli border town of Sderot has been the target of Hamas rockets. With the town largely emptied since Hamas鈥 Oct. 7 attack, and rockets still flying despite Israel鈥檚 massive offensive, achieving safety appears a long way off.

鈥淲e thought when the IDF [Israel Defense Forces] go to Gaza, and go inside and destroyed terrorists, there is no rockets,鈥 says Yaron Sasson, the spokesperson for Sderot who wears a pistol tucked into his belt. 鈥淏ut they still shoot rockets at Sderot, at Tel Aviv, Ramat Gan, Be鈥檈r Sheva, all the area.鈥

Israel has vowed to 鈥渄estroy鈥 Hamas after it mounted an attack Oct. 7 that overran more than 20 Israeli communities, leaving 1,200 people dead and 240 taken hostage, Israel says. In Sderot alone, rampaging Hamas fighters killed 50 people that day.

With Israel still reeling from its most traumatic losses since the Jewish state鈥檚 founding 75 years ago, politicians and the IDF alike are vowing to permanently remove Hamas as a threat. But continued rocket fire, two months into the war, underscores the challenge of finding and eliminating a potent and carefully hidden arsenal.

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神
The nose cone of an Israeli Iron Dome air defense missile lies on the road where it fell after targeting a rocket fired from Gaza by Hamas militants, in Sderot, Israel, Dec. 4, 2023.

鈥淚 think we know that we are at the middle of the beginning, and I think we know it鈥檚 going to take a long while,鈥 says an IDF reservist major in Sderot, who asked not to be named because he was not authorized to speak to the press. Ultimately, he adds, 鈥渁 lot is going to depend on the relationship between us and the Palestinians 鈥 it鈥檚 never going to be the same.鈥

Indeed, even by the violent high bar set by previous Israel-Hamas flare-ups, the level of destruction in the current conflict is staggering. Israel says it struck more than 14,000 targets in the first month of war alone, and has destroyed 500 of the 800 underground tunnel shafts it has so far discovered.

The result has been the pulverization of swaths of northern Gaza, and the deaths of some 15,900 Palestinians 鈥撀爐he majority of them women and children 鈥 according to officials of the Hamas-run health ministry. The United Nations and relief agencies warn of a deepening catastrophe for 2.2 million Gaza residents, most now squeezed into the south of the narrow coastal strip.

鈥淪till hundreds鈥 of rockets

But even as Israel now wages what it calls 鈥渁ggressive鈥 ground operations against the southern city of Khan Yunis, which the IDF says includes some of the fiercest close-quarter combat of the war, Hamas has continued to target Israel with rockets.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e still firing hundreds [of rockets] toward Israel, all over,鈥 an IDF spokesperson, Lt. Col. Richard Hecht, told journalists Tuesday, when asked by the Monitor about post-cease-fire Hamas rocket launches.

鈥淪o it鈥檚 still hundreds; they still hold that capability. And we are still hunting down that capability,鈥 he said.

Israel is finding 鈥渦nprecedented鈥 Hamas fortifications embedded in civilian areas, Lieutenant Colonel Hecht said, including schools used for shooting positions against advancing IDF troops. Israeli officials estimate that 5,000 Hamas fighters have been killed out of a prewar force of 30,000, in addition to 1,000 killed in Israel Oct. 7.

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神
A synagogue lies damaged by a rocket that came through its roof a day earlier, as two months into the war, Hamas militants in Gaza continue firing rockets, in Sderot, Israel, Dec. 4, 2023.

But on the eve of the cease-fire, which began Nov. 24, Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian of Iran said Hamas leaders assured him that the Palestinian fighters still had 90% of their 鈥渃apabilities, forces, and weapons.鈥 Iran has bankrolled Hamas as part of its anti-Israel and anti-Western 鈥淎xis of Resistance,鈥 and been instrumental in improving its war readiness.

Some of Hamas鈥 arsenal has been expended in Sderot, which has been targeted by 400 Hamas rockets since Oct. 7, with 250 of those slipping through Iron Dome defenses, says Mr. Sasson, the town spokesperson. The tempo has decreased, with a handful of rockets each day, but on Sunday a rocket tore through the roof of an empty synagogue.

To 鈥渓ive with bombs鈥

Located so closely to the border with Gaza, Sderot has long been in Hamas鈥 crosshairs. A display case in the municipal offices includes remnants of several Hamas rockets fired over the years.

Today Sderot remains largely a ghost town, with estimates of just 5,000 residents remaining out of a prewar population of 36,000. Those who have left 鈥 more than 30,000 people 鈥 are now spread across the entire country and living in 110 separate hotels.

鈥淭hey are traumatized. ... They want and they hope that soon they can come back to their homes in Sderot, but they want security,鈥 says Mr. Sasson, speaking as a drone buzzes overhead and Israeli artillery fire disturbs the birds. 鈥淭hey want to know there is no chance of a single rocket from Gaza. They want to know if their child goes to the swimming pool or onto the street, that they will not be injured or killed.鈥

That standard is far from being met for a woman who gave the name Diana, who says 20 years living in Sderot has meant learning to 鈥渓ive with bombs.鈥 Her low-slung family house is near the synagogue struck Sunday, across a street now strewn with broken glass and red roof tiles. She visited briefly Monday, to care for her cats.

鈥淲e have to be patient,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his is our home, and we have to fight for it. We [Jews] got this country because we need it, not because we want to push Palestinians out.鈥

Scott Peterson/Getty Images/海角大神
An Israeli woman who gave the name Diana stands beside her family home in Sderot, Israel, Dec. 4, 2023, near a synagogue that was struck the day before. She says 20 years living in Sderot has meant learning to 鈥渓ive with bombs.鈥

But Diana says she is a 鈥渞ealist鈥 and believes coexistence is unlikely with Hamas. 鈥淭hey say, 鈥楾here will come a time when Jews will not be here,鈥欌 she says.

Ensuring that that does not happen is the aim of the reservist major, who says the purpose of Israel鈥檚 offensive is to allow people to return home, 鈥渘ot to hold people in hotels for the next six months.鈥

鈥淧eople who live here don鈥檛 want to see a museum of destroyed houses; they want to see life,鈥 says the major. Continued Hamas rocket fire is 鈥渆xactly why there is no other choice鈥 than a ground offensive.

Ashkelon鈥檚 鈥渨ar routine鈥

Vying for the title of the most rocketed city in Israel is Ashkelon, just a few miles north of Sderot on the Mediterranean coast. Since Oct. 7, some 1,300 Hamas rockets have been fired at Ashkelon, with 200 of them falling in the city area.

Residents have learned to live with a new 鈥渨ar routine,鈥 says municipal spokesperson Dana Grinblat, adding that it has been an 鈥渁bsolute miracle鈥 that only two people died under rocket fire, considering that 25,000 of its 158,000 residents have no access to bomb shelters.

Ashkelon was targeted by 296 Hamas rockets Oct. 7, with 48 of them landing.

Sirens sounded again Tuesday morning, as a rocket landed on a residential building, wounding two people. It was one of more than 25 Hamas rockets to target Ashkelon since the cease-fire collapsed, nearly all destroyed by Iron Dome.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a little bit confusing,鈥 says Ms. Grinblat, about how Hamas continues to fire rockets, after so many weeks of Israeli bombardment. But she adds, 鈥淚t鈥檚 nothing like in the first weeks.

鈥淲e really hope that, after the war, we won鈥檛 need the shelters,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut I think that may be too optimistic.鈥

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