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Israel to unleash new operations in Gaza
Middle East Desk Report
JERUSALEM—Israel’s security cabinet on Wednesday agreed to press on with
military raids and “targeted killings” in Gaza but did not order a
large-scale assault in response to a wave of Palestinian rocket attacks.
A government statement said the security forces had been told to prepare
and present a plan for a broader operation.
Hours later, more Israeli tanks and armored vehicles rolled into
northern Gaza, joining forces already there, witnesses said. Israeli
soldiers killed two gunmen from the governing Hamas movement in clashes,
Palestinian hospital officials said.
Some cabinet members had wanted Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to
approve tougher action to halt rocket salvos aimed at towns and villages
that border Gaza. A large-scale offensive, however, holds political
risks for Olmert, whose popularity plummeted in opinion polls after
Israel failed in the recent Lebanon war to crush Hezbollah guerrillas.
The statement said the security cabinet decided to continue operations
against rocket-launching squads and targeted killings of those involved
in “terror activities.” It also called for continued cooperation with
Cairo to prevent the smuggling of weapons into Gaza from neighboring
Egypt.
Olmert, aware of the international scrutiny of Israel’s operations in
Gaza, last week appeared to rule out a massive assault, saying rockets
could not be halted in “one fell swoop.” The increasingly sophisticated
weapons, generally made in metal workshops, killed two Israelis in the
past week.
Militants say the missiles are a response to Israeli army assaults,
including artillery shelling on November 8 that killed 19 civilians in
the northern Gaza town of Beit Hanoun. Israel said it made a targeting
error. Public Security Minister Avi Dichter repeated his call for a
large offensive in Gaza at the security cabinet meeting, political
sources said. But military chief Lieutenant-General Dan Halutz shot this
down, asking what would happen after a major push. “There has to be a
(diplomatic) horizon,” Halutz said without elaborating, according to one
source.
Separate political sources said some Israeli officials had mooted the
idea of an internationally brokered deal to end the fighting and
possibly allow deployment of foreign peacekeepers in Gaza, but
discussion was at a very early stage.
Israel is watching whether thousands of international troops arrayed
across southern Lebanon can keep the peace in the wake of last summer’s
war. In the fresh fighting in Gaza, the army said one soldier was
wounded when he was hit by an anti-tank rocket near Beit Hanoun.
Several other Palestinians were wounded, including two schoolgirls who
were hit by Israeli gunfire in Beit Hanoun, hospital officials said.
Militants have fired 100 homemade rockets at Israel since the shelling
of Beit Hanoun two weeks ago. |