The precision weapon Israel used in Sunday
night’s Rafah strike was designed and manufactured in the United
States, according to investigations by CNN and The New York Times, the results of which were published on Wednesday.
Two senior Hamas terrorists responsible for Judea and Samaria terror operations were killed in the precision strike
on a compound in Tal as-Sultan in northwest Rafah. According to the
Hamas-run Gaza Health Ministry, dozens of noncombatants were killed and
wounded.
Both news outlets analyzed video footage
of munition debris from the scene of the attack, determining that the
fragments belonged to a GBU-39 bomb, a 250-pound precision-guided glide
bomb made by Boeing Integrated Defense Systems, which carries around 37
pounds of AFX-757 high explosive.
According to the Times, U.S.
officials have been urging Israel to increase use of the GBU-39 bombs in
Gaza because they can reduce civilian casualties, being more precise
and better adapted to urban environments than larger bombs such as the
2,000-pound bombs that Israel also uses but that President Joe Biden
said earlier this month he was pausing delivery of to the Jewish state.
“The Israelis have said they used 37-pound bombs,” U.S. National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby
said on Tuesday. “If it is in fact what they used, it is certainly
indicative of an effort to be discreet and targeted and precise.”
Kirby also said said the press briefing
that the Biden administration has made no policy changes in the wake of
Rafah strike, noting that the investigation into the incident was
ongoing.
“As a result of this strike on Sunday, I
have no policy changes to speak to. It just happened,” Kirby told
reporters. “The Israelis are going to investigate it. We’re going to be
taking great interest in what they find in that investigation. And we’ll
see where it goes from there.”
Israeli officials reportedly told the Biden administration that shrapnel may have ignited a fuel tank, starting a fire that engulfed tents housing displaced Gazans.
On Tuesday afternoon, IDF Spokesperson
Rear Adm. Daniel Hagari told reporters that “our munition alone could
not have ignited a fire this size. … We used the smallest munition that
our jets can use.
“The fire that broke out was unexpected
and unintended. This was a devastating incident that we did not expect.
We’re investigating what caused this fire,” Hagari said, stressing that
the strike targeted a “closed” terrorist structure almost a mile from
the Al-Mawasi humanitarian zone.
“There may have been weapons in the area.
Our signals intelligence intercepted phone calls reinforcing this
possibility that weapons stored in a nearby compound caught fire,” said
Hagari.
He assured reporters that the
“investigation will be swift, comprehensive and transparent. Our war is
against Hamas, not the people of Gaza. This is why we convey deep sorrow
over this loss of life.”
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