• Hamas says fighters clash with Israeli troops
  • UN overwhelmingly calls for aid truce
  • White House supports humanitarian pause
Israeli air and ground forces widened their attacks on Hamas in the Gaza Strip on Friday, the military said, and Hamas said its fighters were clashing with Israeli troops in areas near the border with Israel.
The United Nations General Assembly overwhelmingly backed a resolution drafted by Arab states calling for an immediate humanitarian truce and demanded aid access to the besieged territory and protection of civilians.
While not binding, the resolution carries political weight, reflecting the global mood. It passed to a round of applause with 120 votes in favor, while 45 abstained and 14 - including Israel and the United States - voted no.
In Gaza, local telecoms firms and the Palestinian Red Crescent Society said internet and mobile phone services were cut off.
"In the last hours, we intensified the attacks in Gaza," Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, the spokesman, told a televised news briefing after dark on Friday. Israel's air force was conducting extensive strikes on tunnels and other infrastructure, he said.
"In addition to the attacks carried out in the last few days, ground forces are expanding their operations tonight," he said, raising the question of whether a long-anticipated ground invasion of Gaza may be beginning.
Hamas militants were clashing with Israeli troops in Gaza's northeastern town of Beit Hanoun and in the central area of Al-Bureij, the militant group's armed wing said.
White House spokesman John Kirby said he had seen reports about Israel expanding its ground operations but would not comment on that.
Mark Regev, an adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, told MSNBC that Israel was starting its payback against Hamas and "Gaza will feel our wrath tonight"
Israeli ground forces had massed outside Gaza, where Israel has been conducting an intense campaign of aerial bombardment since a deadly Oct. 7 attack by Hamas.
A ground invasion would exacerbate what aid groups call a humanitarian crisis in the territory following days of aerial bombardment that Palestinian health authorities in Hamas-run Gaza say has killed more than 7,000 Palestinians.
Paltel, the largest telecommunications provider in Gaza said "all telecommunication services including landline, mobile, and internet have been lost in the Gaza Strip" due to a continuous intensive bombardment.
"Gaza is currently blacked out," it said.
The Red Crescent Society said it had completely lost contact with its operations room in Gaza and its teams operating on the ground, and Hamas-affiliated media published a statement from Gaza's Hamas-run government saying that rescue crews were unable to receive emergency calls.
While Israel announced a step up in operations, White House Spokesman Kirby said the US supports a pause in Israeli military activity in Gaza to get humanitarian aid, fuel and electricity to civilians there.
Kirby also said that if getting more than 200 hostages abducted by Hamas out of Gaza required a localized temporary pause, then the US supported that.
Israel had said it was preparing a ground invasion of Gaza, but has been urged by the US and Arab countries to delay an operation that would multiply the number of civilian casualties in the densely populated coastal strip and might ignite a wider conflict.
Concerns about a risk of a wider Middle East conflict have risen in recent days with the US dispatching more military assets to the region as Israel pummelled targets in Gaza and Hamas supporters in Lebanon and Syria.
Oil prices climbed about 3% to a one-week high on Friday on worries that tensions in Israel and Gaza could spread into a wider conflict that could disrupt global crude supplies.
Much of the infrastructure of Gaza, which has been living under blockade by Israel and Egypt since 2007, has been shattered by the Israeli bombing.
Power has been cut for days, crippling treatment facilities and depriving Gazans of fresh water, while half of its housing stock has been damaged and 20,000 residential units destroyed or rendered uninhabitable, according to the Hamas media office.
With Israel keeping up daily bombardments that laid waste to swathes of the densely populated strip, Palestinians said they received renewed Israeli military warnings to move from Gaza's north to the south to avoid the deadliest theatre of the war.
Gazans say making the journey south remains highly risky amid air strikes and that southern areas have also been bombed.
Many families have refused to leave their homes, fearing a repeat of the experience of previous wars with Israel when Palestinians who left homes and land were never able to return.
Strategically, Gaza operations may be complicated by the need to protect Israel's northern border with southern Lebanon and Syria, where Israeli forces have been engaged in days of sporadic cross-border fire.
Israel and its US ally have warned Hezbollah militants in Lebanon not to intervene and Washington has dispatched two aircraft carriers to the region to reinforce the message.
Israel's military has told international news organisations Reuters and Agence France Presse that it cannot guarantee the safety of their journalists operating in the Gaza Strip, under Israeli bombardment and siege for almost three weeks.