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Israel Steps Up Offensive Against Hamas in Gaza | Israel Steps Up Offensive Against Hamas in Gaza |
(about 4 hours later) | |
JERUSALEM — Israel began an intensive aerial offensive in Gaza early Tuesday, bombing more than 50 targets, including at least four homes that the military said belonged to militants, after about 80 rockets were fired out of Gaza on Monday, reaching deep into southern Israel. Military officials said additional reservists were being called up in anticipation of a possible ground assault. | |
As the airstrikes and rocket fire continued on Tuesday, the Israeli military said that its targets had included what it called a “terror command center embedded within civilian infrastructure” utilized by a militant in the southern Gazan town of Rafah. Nine people were lightly wounded in an airstrike on a house in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, according to Ashraf al-Qedra, a spokesman for the Health Ministry in the Palestinian coastal enclave, which is dominated by Hamas, the Islamic militant group. | |
The air campaign comes after three weeks of escalating confrontation, with rocket attacks from Gaza against southern Israel, and Israeli airstrikes on targets it has described as concealed rocket launchers, training sites and weapons manufacturing facilities associated with Hamas and other militant groups. It also comes against the backdrop of broader Israeli-Palestinian tensions following the kidnapping and murder of three Israeli teenagers in the West Bank last month and what appeared to be a grisly revenge killing of a Palestinian teenager in Jerusalem last week. | |
Al Aksa radio, run by Hamas, reported that residents received warnings a few minutes before the houses were bombed. Hamas’s military wing said in an emailed statement that the bombing of the houses was “a serious escalation” that “will oblige us to enlarge our attacks deeper into Israel.” | |
Early on Tuesday, the Israel Defense Forces announced on Twitter that they had “commenced Operation Protective Edge in Gaza against Hamas in order to stop the terror Israel’s citizens face on a daily basis.” | |
According to a statement from his office, the Israeli defense minister, Moshe Yaalon, said that “Hamas is leading this current confrontation to a place in which it aspires to exact a heavy price from our home front.” | |
“In the last few hours we have attacked with force and struck dozens of Hamas’s assets,” Mr. Yaalon added, saying that the military was “continuing its offensive effort in a manner that will exact a very heavy price from Hamas.” He said the campaign was likely to last more than a few days. | |
In a conference call with reporters, Lt. Col. Peter Lerner, a spokesman for the Israeli military, said there would be “a gradual increase in the pressure we are putting on Hamas.” | |
Colonel Lerner said that Israel was “watching to see what the reaction is with Hamas, to see how they respond to our steps.” His comments echoed those of other officials and experts, who have suggested that the initial blitz was meant as a warning in the hope that Hamas would rein in its fire to avoid a ground invasion. Referring to such a development, Colonel Lerner said, “I don’t see that happening immediately.” | |
The hostilities erased an Egyptian-brokered cease-fire that ended eight days of fierce cross-border fighting in November 2012. That came after a devastating, three-week military offensive waged by Israel with air and ground forces against militant groups in the winter of 2008-9. | |
Israeli experts often describe Israel’s periodic campaigns in Gaza in terms of “mowing the grass,” a kind of routine maintenance with the limited goals of curbing rocket fire, destroying as much of the militant groups’ infrastructure as possible and restoring deterrence. | |
“This sort of maintenance needs to be carried out from time to time, perhaps even more often,” Yoav Galant, a former commander of Israel’s southern district, including the area around Gaza, told Army Radio. | |
In Sderot, an Israeli town about a mile from the border with Gaza that was first hit by rockets 13 years ago, residents in an open-air market ran with their shopping bags to find shelter behind a truck or by a wall when an incoming rocket alert sounded, then went back to buying groceries. | |
Limor Porin, 42, a mother of two, said she had come to shop alone after leaving her children at home close to a fortified room. | |
“The family needs to eat,” she said, as the loud booms from Gaza shook the town. “Life is stronger than fear.” | |
Away from the market, the streets were empty as most people opted to stay indoors. | |
Israel has banned gatherings of more than 300 people and ordered kindergartens, summer camps and schools to close for the day in a 25-mile radius around Gaza. The military estimates that there are some 10,000 rockets, both homemade and imported, in Gaza. During the last round of fighting in 2012, several reached Tel Aviv. | |
The latest round of tensions along the border with Gaza began with the kidnapping of three Israeli teenagers in the West Bank on June 12. Israel blamed Hamas for their abduction and conducted a broad clampdown against Hamas’s infrastructure in the West Bank, raiding scores of institutions and arresting hundreds. The three teenagers were later found dead. | |
At around the same time, an airstrike killed a Palestinian as he rode a motorcycle in the northern Gaza Strip. Israel said the man, who was also employed as a Hamas police officer, had been involved in numerous rocket attacks against Israel. Later in June, two more people suspected of being militants were killed in an Israeli airstrike as they rode in a car. No militant group in Gaza has claimed them as members, but they were buried wrapped in the black flags of the radical Salafi movement. | |
At first, radical Islamic groups that are not necessarily under Hamas’s control increased the rocket fire against Israel. By Monday, however, Hamas was taking responsibility for the attacks, which have put tens of thousands of Israelis on alert and sent them rushing into safe rooms and bomb shelters. More than a dozen rockets crashed into open ground near the southern city of Beersheba, about 25 miles from Gaza. The Israeli military said its missile defense system had intercepted several rockets over the port city of Ashdod, north of Gaza on the Mediterranean coast, and over the southern town of Netivot. One soldier was injured by shrapnel from a rocket near the Gaza border, according to the military. | |
The Israeli airstrikes turned more deadly on Sunday and Monday, with Hamas vowing to avenge the deaths of six of its fighters, its heaviest losses in months. Five of the militants were apparently killed in a tunnel two days after the Israeli Air Force struck it. The military said that the tunnel had been intended for use against Israeli forces. When Hamas militants entered the tunnel on Sunday night, it either collapsed or exploded. | |
Asked about the repercussions of carrying out such an operation during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, Colonel Lerner said Hamas had created “an unacceptable, unbearable reality” for one million Israelis in the range of the rockets fired Monday. Gaza residents should understand, he said, that “this is the type of Ramadan Hamas has brought on them.” | |
Ismail Haniya, the Gaza-based deputy chief of the Hamas movement, called early Tuesday for the Palestinians to strengthen internal unity to confront the Israeli military offensive. | |
Hamas recently entered into a reconciliation pact with the more moderate Palestinian Authority leadership based in the West Bank, which has been urging calm. Intended to heal a seven-year split between Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza, the pact has resulted in a new government, but little else, so far. | Hamas recently entered into a reconciliation pact with the more moderate Palestinian Authority leadership based in the West Bank, which has been urging calm. Intended to heal a seven-year split between Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza, the pact has resulted in a new government, but little else, so far. |