The Israeli Air Force, which killed dozens of Palestinians in Rafach, did not break the "red line", which could change the US policy, the White House said.
According to The Hill, representatives of the administration at a press briefing on Tuesday named the photos from Rafah "tearing heart", "tragic" and "terrible". However, this did not lead to a change in politics because the blow was a large scale of larger, not a larger operation.
"We still do not believe that the big land surgery in Rafach is justified. We do not want to see the Israelis break rafhi in large units in large territories. We still follow this position, but we do not see it at this time," the White House spokesman Jon Kirby told reporters.
He added that no changes in policy through the Air Force will not take place on Sunday.
"It just happened. The Israelites will investigate this. We will closely monitor the course of this investigation. And we will see what conclusions it will lead to," Kirby said.
Earlier this month, President Biden warned that he would stop the supply of Israeli weapons, including bombs and artillery shells, if he has long been promised invasion of Rafa.
The White House urged Israel not to introduce troops in the Rafah without a clear plan for the safe evacuation of the civilian population, as the war has already led to the death of tens of thousands of Palestinians. About a million refugees settled in Rafach after the fighting in the north gases. Last week, national security counselor Jake Sullivan noted that there is no mathematical formula to evaluate Israeli actions in Rafah, but officials will pay attention to the number of casualties and destruction, as well as the accuracy and proportionality of operations.
However, on Tuesday, administration representatives stated that the Sunday Air Force, which became the largest deadly incident in Rafah from the beginning of Israel's offensive, did not meet the White House warning.
"We still believe that the actions in the Rafah, which are carried out by the Israeli military, are limited in scale,"-said the deputy spokesman of Pentagon Sabrin Singh.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the incident in Rafach a "tragic occasion" and noted that Israel "carefully investigates this issue and learns lessons from him." Israeli officials explained to the United States that the fragments of a purposeful blow to high -ranking leaders Hamas got into the fuel tank near the displaced person's camp.
This tragedy emphasized the concern of the international community regarding the military operations of Israel, and occurred only a few days after the Supreme Court of the United Nations issued a resolution on the termination of military operations in Rafah Israel.
The White House calls on Israel to make every effort to avoid victims among civilians and humanitarian workers in gas, where dozens of Palestinians do not have access to food, water and medicines.
Kirby said on Tuesday that "the lack of casualties among civilians is the right number of casualties among civilians," but admitted that innocent people often die during the war.
"There is no measure or quota here. As we said repeatedly, the right number of casualties among civilians is zero," he said.