Analysis from Forensic Architecture reveals that the Israeli military has unilaterally pushed this demarcation westward. By December, the occupation zone encompassed 58% of the Gaza Strip, up from 53% just months prior. These boundaries are not merely lines on a map; they function as free-fire zones where the military treats any movement as a hostile act. The Associated Press reports that at least 77 Palestinians have been killed near these fluid, ill-defined borders since January.
Expanding the Matrix of Control
Beyond simple troop presence, the infrastructure of the zone is hardening. Seven new military outposts have emerged, some built over former cemeteries. What began as rudimentary earthworks now features asphalted roads, electricity grids, and communication towers. Eyal Weizman, head of Forensic Architecture, argues these are no longer provisional measures but permanent instruments of state control. This physical expansion aligns with the ambitions of Israel’s settler movement, which is actively lobbying for civilian housing within the buffer zone—a strategy Defense Minister Israel Katz has signaled by declaring that Israel intends to maintain a permanent presence in the territory.

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