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Warplanes,
rockets end Gaza lull
Middle East Desk Report
GAZA CITY—Israeli warplanes hit Hamas-run Gaza Thursday after militants
rattled the Jewish state with rocket fire, ending a five-day lull and
threatening efforts to push forward Middle East peace talks.
The violence flared within hours of an Israeli operation on Wednesday in
the West Bank town of Bethlehem where undercover special forces killed
four Palestinian militants, including two senior commanders.
Militants in the Hamas-run territory fired a dozen rockets into the
Jewish state during the night, Israeli warplanes struck targets in
northern Gaza early in the day and gunmen fired another dozen rockets
afterwards, according to the army and the militant groups.
There were no casualties, but the renewed tit-for-tat attacks put at
risk international efforts to broker a more permanent deal to end the
violence and the isolation around the impoverished territory.
They also come a day before the Israelis and Palestinians are to meet
with a US general to resume peace talks that Palestinian president
Mahmud Abbas suspended amid a week of strikes in Gaza that left more
than 130 people dead. In a rare harshly-worded statement, the
Palestinian presidency accused Israel of “barbaric crimes.”
“These barbaric crimes reveal the truce face of Israel, which speaks
loudly about peace and security all the while committing murders and
executions against our people,” it said. But Israeli Defence Minister
Ehud Barak vowed to keep hitting militants.
“Yesterday in Bethlehem we proved again that Israel will pursue and hit
all assassins with blood on their hands. No matter how much time has
passed, Israel will be waiting for them,” he said.
And the Jewish state said it held Hamas, which violently seized control
of Gaza in June, responsible for the rocket fire, even though the
radical Islamic Jihad group claimed the salvoes.
“Hamas controls the Gaza Strip and they are accountable for every active
aggression against Israel,” said government spokesman Mark Regev. “We
will not allow Hamas to sub-contract out terrorism.”
Both Hamas and Islamic Jihad, a radical group that has claimed most of
the rocket fire and suicide attacks against Israel over the past several
years, vowed revenge after the Bethlehem deaths.
Israel, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad had been observing a tacit truce in and
around the Gaza Strip since early Saturday as Egypt seeks to work out a
more permanent deal.
Egypt has been holding talks aimed at ending Israeli strikes on Gaza,
rocket fire into Israel and a lifting of a crippling regime of Israeli
and international sanctions on the coastal strip, one of the world’s
most densely-populated places where most people depend on aid.
The violence in and around the Gaza Strip, where Hamas seized power in
June after routing forces loyal to Abbas, has cast a shadow over peace
talks between Israel and the Palestinians that were revived at a US
conference in November.
Since then, at least 351 people, most of them Gaza militants, have been
killed in violence between the two sides.
On Friday, Barak and Palestinian prime minister Salam Fayyad are to meet
with US Lieutenant General William Fraser, appointed in January to
oversee compliance with the 2003 international roadmap peace blueprint.
Ahead of the meeting to restart stalled peace negotiations, a diplomatic
source familiar with the talks told AFP Israel had not been carrying out
promised commitments on the ground.
“Israel is not living up to its commitments to do what it can to
facilitate the lives of the Palestinians in the West Bank,” the source
said. US President George W. “Bush has explicitly referred to issues of
outposts and roadblocks but things haven’t really been moving on the
ground.”
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