The IDF is demanding that Israel's political leadership reach a decision regarding the next steps of its ground offensive in Gaza Strip.
Meanwhile a senior IDF commander told Ynet that the army had warned the government about the full extent of the threat posed by Gaza tunnels, contradicting claims made by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon.
The comments came amid a violent 24 hours, which saw 10 IDF soldiers and numerous Palestinians killed. Earlier Tuesday, a number of target were hit in Gaza, including the home of Hamas leader Ismail Haniyeh and the Strip's main power station.
A high ranking military official spoke Tuesday with journalists about the next stages of the operation, saying that "the political leadership must decided now – either we push deeper (into Gaza) or we backtrack."
Indicating tensions between the IDF and Israel's political leadership, the senior official said "our responsibility is to lead the offensive to where it needs to go, not to where the public wants. This is not reality TV and rating is not a factor."
The top ranking official also sounded veiled criticism at government for choosing not to class the operation as a war, saying "regardless of what the political echelon calls it, for our soldiers this is a war."
As of the past week, tunnels have been at the heart of the IDF's offensive. However, it seems the operation's prize target might not be achieved and could even strain tensions between the military's top brass and political leadership.
The senior official said that, "by the end of the operation we won't be able to take out every tunnel and every shaft. We are taking out their ability to use the tunnels. (In this regard) we were surprised to find out the deep connection between Hamas's leadership and the tunnels."
However, a senior official in the military who spoke to Ynet had even harsher things to say on the issue, claiming that in contradiction to claims made by Netanyahu and his defense minister, the army had always known the full extent of the tunnels and the threat they posed.
"There has been no military intelligence briefing in the last two years that has not included detailed explanations," he said, "all of the data was presented to everyone – the prime minister, the defense minister and the cabinet ministers."
Similar claims were made by Nahum Barnea in his recent analysis of the Gaza operation.
The officer claimed the military presented the tunnels as "Hamas' flagship project," and said Netanyahu had even set up a special task force to deal with the threat, headed by his former National Security Advisor, Major-General (Res) Yaakov Amidror.
The officer also repeated the claim made by the senior official regarding the possibility of completely taking out Hamas' network of tunnels, saying there will never be a point when the IDF will say "there are no tunnels left." However, he did note there was a serious possibility of significantly neutralizing the majority of them in a number of days.