By Julie Stahl
CNSNews.com Jerusalem Bureau Chief
May 14, 2007
Jerusalem (CNSNews.com) - Israel cannot tolerate ongoing rocket attacks
on its southern communities, Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni said
on Monday.
She spoke one day after government ministers decided to step up
operations against attacks from the Gaza Strip. They will not launch a
full-scale military invasion, however.
The violence isn't all directed at Israel: Clashes among Palestinian
factions -- Hamas and Fatah -- continued in Gaza on Monday, despite a
truce mediated overnight by Egypt.
Two Palestinians were reported killed on Monday, bringing the total
number of dead to seven since renewed violence between Hamas and Fatah
erupted over the weekend.
The clashes, sparked by the assassination of a senior Fatah militant,
are the worst since Hamas and Fatah formed a unity government in March.
The fighting has sparked fresh fears of a Palestinian civil war.
Also on Monday, Palestinian Authority Interior Minister Hani Al-Qawasmi
resigned. His ministry is responsible for overseeing the security
forces.
Most P.A. forces are loyal to P.A. Chairman Mahmoud Abbas while the
Executive Force in Gaza is committed to Hamas.
Abbas reportedly deployed thousands of extra troops in the Gaza Strip
recently, raising tensions between forces loyal to Abbas and those
loyal to Hamas.
"Hamas is not able to restore law and order in the place they're the
strongest," said a senior Western official who asked not to be named.
Hamas can't keep the peace in Gaza and can't even keep their own men
from shooting people in the street, he said.
The new round of inter-Palestinian violence is bound to further
complicate attempts to revive Israeli-Palestinian talks. The U.S. has
called for the P.A. to clamp down on rocket attacks from the Gaza Strip
- one of the "benchmarks" established as part of the effort to bring
the two sides back to the negotiating table.
According to the army, eight rockets were launched at Israel from the
Gaza Strip over the weekend, and on Monday Palestinian gunmen opened
fire at army bulldozers working along fence separating Israel and the
Gaza Strip.
In the past, Hamas and Fatah have sometimes settled their rivalries by
turning their anger against Israel.
Livni told the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee on Monday
that terror elements are getting stronger inside the Gaza Strip.
Israel's message to the world, she said, is that Israel cannot accept
such a security situation.
Livni said it would take a mixture of military, economic and diplomatic
pressure to change the situation, but she did not elaborate.
Israel's security cabinet met to discuss the Gaza Strip on Sunday but
the ministers reportedly put off a decision on a full-scale ground
invasion.
Experts say it is only a matter of time before Israel needs to launch a
massive ground operation to deal with the weapons stockpiles and
terrorist infrastructure in Gaza. Some say it is better to do it now
before Hamas and other terror groups have more time to improve their
military capabilities and obtain more weapons.
But analysts believe that Olmert may be hesitant to do so. Olmert, they
say, would rather be remembered as a peacemaker than a warmonger. (A
recently released government report into last summer's
Israeli-Hizballah war laid the blame for the war's failure squarely on
Olmert's shoulders.)
Defense Minister Amir Peretz (who was also blamed for wartime mistakes)
said on Sunday evening that Israel needed to "target the people who are
causing the escalation." He said once the army decides on "harsh
action," it will be "decisive action."
Orignal
Source
|
|
||||
|
Shabbat Times
About Us
Daily Updates
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
||||
|
|
||||

![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)