By Shahar Ilan and Barak Ravid, Haaretz Correspondents and News
Agencies
The United States praised Israel on Thursday for showing "great
restraint" in the face of new rocket attacks from the Palestinian group
Hamas but added that Israel also has a right to defend itself.
Israel Air Force strikes on Thursday destroyed a Hamas security
headquarters and a car carrying one of the group's top commanders.
Israel had threatened a "severe" response to cross-border rocket
attacks that have persisted despite a troop and settler pullout from
Gaza in 2005.
State Department spokesman Sean McCormack urged restraint on all sides
but said Israel had the right to respond to rocket attacks from Hamas,
which he blamed for the latest upsurge in Palestinian violence.
"Israel has the right to defend itself and it has exercised great
restraint in the face of these rocket attacks," McCormack told
reporters.
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice spoke earlier to Palestinian
Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas as well as Prime Minister Ehud Olmert
about the latest violence.
"She wanted to talk to them directly and see how they saw the
situation," said McCormack. "We certainly want to see a reduction or an
end to the violence but let's remember how that violence started and it
started with these Hamas-led forces."
The current round of fighting began last Friday between rival
Palestinian factions Hamas and Abbas's Fatah. More than 40 Palestinians
have been killed in the most serious violence since the two groups
formed a unity government in March.
At a news conference with British Prime Minister Tony Blair, U.S.
President George W. Bush expressed concern over the violence in Gaza.
"We strongly urge the parties to work toward a two-state solution.
Looking forward to continuing to work on this issue," he said.
"I've instructed my secretary of state to be actively engaged," Bush
added.
"We understand the fright that can come when you're worried about a
rocket landing on top of your home," he added.
Rice has sought in recent months to revive stalled peace efforts
between the Palestinians and the Israelis, visiting the region almost
monthly to try and bring the two sides together.
Asked how the latest violence affected her ability to continue this
mission, McCormack said the United States remained "deeply engaged" and
Rice planned to visit the region in the near future. He did not provide
a date.
Likud Chairman Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday called on the government
to cut off the power and water supplies in the Gaza Strip in a
controlled fashion.
The opposition leader added that he supports a limited ground incursion
into the Qassam firing area, roughly four kilometers past the border.
Speaking from the Menachem Begin Heritage Center in Jerusalem, where
the Likud party was marking the 30th anniversary of the party's first
elections victory, Netanyahu said that the paralysis and helplessness
of the government "must leave this world".
"The government isn't doing anything," Netanyahu said, "Begin
understood that the government's top priority was the lives of its
citizens. This government doesn't realize that it must stop the
methodical bombing of citizens' homes."
"Everyone must imagine what would happen if his house was hit by a
Qassam," he added.
While Netanyahu was addressing his fellow Likud members in Jerusalem,
Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni spoke with German Foreign Minister Frank
Steinmeyer.
Livni said that if the international community does not put an end to
the Qassam firings, Israel will be forced to do so.
The foreign minister added that she expects that the European Union to
be involved in diplomatic efforts, condemn the Qassam firings and
identify with the residents of Sderot.
Original Source
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Netanyahu Cut Off Water Supply To Gaza
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