Death toll passes 900, latest clashes kill at least six
Israel vows to hit harder, Hamas sees victory
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Fire and smoke billowed as Israeli air strikes hit Gaza Strip town of Rafah bordering Egypt |
OCCUPIED JERUSALEM/GAZA CITY/DUBAI (Agencies, AlArabiya.net)
Israel on Monday vowed to hit Hamas with an "iron fist" if it does not stop firing its rockets against the Jewish state, as Hamas announced it was closer than ever to victory.
Israel will hit Hamas with an "iron fist" if the Islamist movement does not halt its rocket fire against the Jewish state, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert warned.
"We want to end the operation when the two conditions we have demanded are met: ending the rocket fire and stopping Hamas's rearmament. If these two conditions are met, we will end our operation in Gaza," Olmert said in a speech in the southern town of Ashkelon.
"Anything else will meet the iron fist of the Israeli people, who are no longer ready to tolerate the Qassams (rockets)."
In the meantime, the Hamas government in the Gaza Strip said it was closer than ever to victory in its war against Israel.
"We can assure our people that victory is now closer than ever," government spokesman Taher al-Nunu said in a statement. "The enemy is dithering and does not know what to do."
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Boosting forces " We can assure our people that victory is now closer than ever. The enemy is dithering and does not know what to do, " Hamas government spokesman Taher al-Nunu Israel was continuing Monday the end of the operation, which has claimed the lives of more than 900 Palestinians, on a complete halt to rocket fire and arms smuggling from Egypt into Gaza.
Israeli infantry units clashed with Hamas fighters across Gaza as Israel sent reservists to boost its ground forces and talks on ending the 17-day-old war plodded on in Egypt.
At least six people were reported killed as a result of Monday's clashes, medics said, which came after Israeli warplanes struck some 12 targets in Gaza overnight.
With the international pressure for a ceasefire mounting, Israeli forces might launch a full-scale attack on Hamas smuggling tunnels on Gaza's border with Egypt, and perhaps a wider urban operation.
In Egypt, which has been spearheading Western-backed efforts to end the Israeli offensive, talks were due to resume between Egyptian officials and Hamas even as Israel’s envoy delayed his visit. |
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Reservists called up Livni hints there is no end in sight Olmert, Defense Minister Ehud Barak and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni met late on Sunday and decided to tighten pressure on Hamas, Israeli media reported.
Livni told Army Radio that the Gaza offensive had "restored Israel's deterrence" and "created a new equation ... which says that when our citizens are attacked we respond with force," but declined to say when Israel would end its assault.
Israeli officials had suggested earlier on Sunday the war could be approaching an end, with the overnight bombing marking the lowest level of night-time bombing in Israel's 17-day-old war.
But late Sunday Israel sent reserve troops into Gaza in what Israeli media said could be a sign of intensifying operations as fighting raged on in the Hamas-ruled territory in defiance of a U.N. Security Council demand for a ceasefire.
Meanwhile, Israel's pointman for Gaza truce talks, Amos Gilad, delayed a planned visit in what Israeli radio speculated was meant as a pressure tactic on Hamas.
The reservists had been held back while Israeli leaders debated an all-out ground offensive on Gaza's towns and cities to try to destroy Hamas's ability to fire rockets into Israel.
Such a move would risk higher Israeli military casualties as well as even heavier losses among the 1.5 million Palestinians packed into the tiny coastal enclave with no escape route. |
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Defying Security Council Tunnels are used to smuggle weapongs but are also a vital conduit for food and medicine supplies
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Death toll passes 900, latest clashes kill at least six
Israel vows to hit harder, Hamas sees victory
|
Fire and smoke billowed as Israeli air strikes hit Gaza Strip town of Rafah bordering Egypt |
OCCUPIED JERUSALEM/GAZA CITY/DUBAI (Agencies, AlArabiya.net)
Israel on Monday vowed to hit Hamas with an "iron fist" if it does not stop firing its rockets against the Jewish state, as Hamas announced it was closer than ever to victory.
Israel will hit Hamas with an "iron fist" if the Islamist movement does not halt its rocket fire against the Jewish state, Prime Minister Ehud Olmert warned.
"We want to end the operation when the two conditions we have demanded are met: ending the rocket fire and stopping Hamas's rearmament. If these two conditions are met, we will end our operation in Gaza," Olmert said in a speech in the southern town of Ashkelon.
"Anything else will meet the iron fist of the Israeli people, who are no longer ready to tolerate the Qassams (rockets)."
In the meantime, the Hamas government in the Gaza Strip said it was closer than ever to victory in its war against Israel.
"We can assure our people that victory is now closer than ever," government spokesman Taher al-Nunu said in a statement. "The enemy is dithering and does not know what to do."
|
Boosting forces " We can assure our people that victory is now closer than ever. The enemy is dithering and does not know what to do, " Hamas government spokesman Taher al-Nunu Israel was continuing Monday the end of the operation, which has claimed the lives of more than 900 Palestinians, on a complete halt to rocket fire and arms smuggling from Egypt into Gaza.
Israeli infantry units clashed with Hamas fighters across Gaza as Israel sent reservists to boost its ground forces and talks on ending the 17-day-old war plodded on in Egypt.
At least six people were reported killed as a result of Monday's clashes, medics said, which came after Israeli warplanes struck some 12 targets in Gaza overnight.
With the international pressure for a ceasefire mounting, Israeli forces might launch a full-scale attack on Hamas smuggling tunnels on Gaza's border with Egypt, and perhaps a wider urban operation.
In Egypt, which has been spearheading Western-backed efforts to end the Israeli offensive, talks were due to resume between Egyptian officials and Hamas even as Israel’s envoy delayed his visit. |
|
Reservists called up Livni hints there is no end in sight Olmert, Defense Minister Ehud Barak and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni met late on Sunday and decided to tighten pressure on Hamas, Israeli media reported.
Livni told Army Radio that the Gaza offensive had "restored Israel's deterrence" and "created a new equation ... which says that when our citizens are attacked we respond with force," but declined to say when Israel would end its assault.
Israeli officials had suggested earlier on Sunday the war could be approaching an end, with the overnight bombing marking the lowest level of night-time bombing in Israel's 17-day-old war.
But late Sunday Israel sent reserve troops into Gaza in what Israeli media said could be a sign of intensifying operations as fighting raged on in the Hamas-ruled territory in defiance of a U.N. Security Council demand for a ceasefire.
Meanwhile, Israel's pointman for Gaza truce talks, Amos Gilad, delayed a planned visit in what Israeli radio speculated was meant as a pressure tactic on Hamas.
The reservists had been held back while Israeli leaders debated an all-out ground offensive on Gaza's towns and cities to try to destroy Hamas's ability to fire rockets into Israel.
Such a move would risk higher Israeli military casualties as well as even heavier losses among the 1.5 million Palestinians packed into the tiny coastal enclave with no escape route. |
|
Defying Security Council Tunnels are used to smuggle weapongs but are also a vital conduit for food and medicine supplies Israeli warplanes have repeatedly bombed the so-called Philadelphi corridor along Gaza's 15 km (nine mile) border with Egypt, sometimes using "bunker buster" munitions that explode underground and cause shockwaves to try to collapse the tunnels.
Israeli forces have demolished around 200 smuggling tunnels beneath the Gaza-Egypt border -- Hamas's main resupply route -- representing two-thirds of the total, military spokeswoman Avital Leibovich said.
Hamas, which also ignored the Security Council resolution, has vowed to keep on fighting. On Monday three rockets and mortars were fired into Israel without causing injuries, the army said.
Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal said his Islamist group would not consider a ceasefire until Israel ended its air, sea and ground assault and lifted its blockade of Gaza. |
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Diplomatic efforts ongoing Western and Israeli officials said diplomats were discussing a broad internationally assisted monitoring system to help Egypt stop weapons smuggling and intercept rocket shipments.
Visiting German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier told Livni Germany was ready to help Egypt combat smuggling by land and sea, Israeli officials said. Berlin has offered Egypt training and equipment, German diplomats said.
Egypt has spearheaded Western-backed efforts to end the fighting, calling for an immediate truce, opening Gaza's border crossings, preventing arms smuggling and relaunching Palestinian reconciliation efforts.
On Sunday, it ramped up pressure on Israel by summoning its ambassador to demand that the Jewish state comply with the Security Council resolution and open humanitarian corridors to relieve the besieged territory. |
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Death toll Protests against Israel have spiraled worldwide Backed by helicopter gunships, Israeli tanks pushed into eastern and southern parts of the city of Gaza on Sunday, attacking Hamas militants who fired anti-armor missiles and mortar bombs.
The Palestinian death toll since Israel's offensive began on Dec. 27 exceeded 900, many of them civilians, Gaza medical officials said. About 3,600 Palestinians have been wounded.
Thirteen Israelis -- three civilians hit by rocket fire and 10 soldiers -- have been killed, Israel says.
The conflict has sparked worldwide pro-Palestinian demonstrations, and US president elect Barack Obama said he is assembling a team of diplomats to start addressing the Middle East conflict once he is sworn in on Jan. 20.
Venezuela, which expelled Israel's ambassador over the war, said on Sunday it had sent a cargo plane to Egypt bearing 12.5 tons of medical supplies and other materials for Gaza's population.
President Hugo Chavez once again slammed Israel for "waging a Holocaust against the Palestinian people" in their 16-day offensive on Gaza, and said a second, 80-tonne humanitarian shipment would leave Venezuela for Gaza next week. |
http://www.alarabiy a.net/articles/ 2009/01/12/ 64040.html
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