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Israel kills at least 8 in Gaza attacks
Middle East Desk Report

GAZA—Israeli forces killed at least eight Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip on Tuesday, a day after a suicide bombing in Israel claimed by the Islamist group. Six of the Hamas men were killed by an air strike on a security post in southern Gaza and two other armed members of the movement were shot dead by Israeli soldiers near the border with Egypt.
The Israeli military said it was responding to Palestinian rocket attacks on southern Israel. Israeli sonic booms shook windows in Gaza City, fraying nerves and raising fears of an intensive Israeli military campaign in retaliation for Monday’s bombing in the desert town of Dimona.
A senior member of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s party, Tzachi Hanegbi, urged the Israeli government to step up its fight against Hamas, which took over the Gaza Strip in June, by assassinating the group’s political leaders. A Hamas security officer said its members were ordered to take “all necessary precautions,” including turning off cellular phones that could be tracked by Israeli drones that routinely fly over the Gaza Strip.
Hamas’s armed wing claimed responsibility for the Dimona bombing, which killed an Israeli woman, a Hamas source in the Gaza Strip told Reuters. It was the first such attack claimed by the group since 2004. The bomber and another attacker, shot by police before he could detonate his explosives belt, were also killed. The Hamas source said the two men came from the West Bank town of Hebron.
Despite the suicide attack, Israeli and Palestinian negotiators held talks hours later in a reaffirmation of U.S.-backed efforts to achieve a statehood deal. Hamas, which opposes Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas’s peace talks with Israel, called the Dimona bombing retaliation for Israeli raids. Describing the latest air strike, Hamas officials said men in the security position had been holding afternoon prayers when missiles struck.
Israel assassinated top Hamas leaders Ahmed Yassin and Abdel Aziz al-Rantissi in the Gaza Strip in 2004, killings that Hanegbi said had a “direct effect on the motivation of the Hamas leadership to continue to carry out suicide attacks.” The Israeli military has since largely refrained from targeting Hamas’s political wing but has struck repeatedly against the Islamist movement’s field commanders. “(Hamas’s political leaders) have evidently forgotten the bitter fate (of Yassin and Rantissi) and therefore we should add the current leaders of the organization to that list,” Hanegbi said. “There is no difference between those who wear a suicide suit and a diplomat’s suit,” he said. “Both are carrying out ... war crimes and we should exact the full price not only from the minor squads in the field but also from those who send them.”
Commenting on Hanegbi’s remarks, Taher al-Nono, a spokesman for Gaza-based Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh, said: “The threats are part of continuing Israeli terrorism and crimes aimed at achieving political gains”. Israeli security forces were on high alert Tuesday, sending beefed-up patrols to public areas such as shopping malls, bus stations and train depots a day after the first Palestinian suicide attack in more than a year. An Israeli airstrike targeted a Hamas police station in a Gaza town, killing six people and wounding six, Hamas security officials and a health official said. Earlier, two Hamas militants were killed in clashes with Israeli troops targeting rocket squads in Gaza.
On Monday, a Palestinian militant group said the attackers took advantage of the recent breach of the Egypt-Gaza border to go to Egypt and then sneak through the porous frontier with Israel. But Israeli authorities were questioning claims the bombers entered Israel from Egypt.
Israeli security officials were also investigating whether the bombers came from the West Bank city of Hebron, a militant hotbed. Intelligence reports suggested more than one militant cell had tried to infiltrate Israel, generating confusion over who actually carried out the attack.
The suicide attack on the southern town of Dimona killed a 73-year-old Israeli woman, critically wounded her husband, and injured 10 others. Police were out in higher numbers at entrances to cities, shopping malls and bus and train stations. Overnight, border police arrested 240 Palestinians who had entered Israel illegally to work, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said.

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