http://www.judeoscope.ca/breve.php3?id_breve=2976

 


Islamic Jihad: We are firing rockets in bid to sabotage Gaza truce





 





The Iranian-backed militant group Islamic Jihad is firing Qassam rockets at
Israel with the intention of sabotaging the month-long Gaza truce and
provoking Israeli retaliation, members of the group said Wednesday.

"That's one of the main reason for resuming [rocket] attacks," said Abu
Ahmad, a spokesman for the group.

Meanwhike two rockets fired at Israel Wednesday evening landed south of
Ashkelon. There were no injuries or damages in either incident.





An Islamic Jihad rocket attack Tuesday evening on the nearby Negev town of
Sderot seriously wounded two 14-year-old boys and triggered the Israeli
decision to resume targeting the rocket squads.

In the wake of the Tuesday night strike on Sderot, Prime Minister Ehud
Olmert and Defense Minister Amir Peretz on Wednesday morning instructed the
Israel Defense Forces to resume pinpoint operations targeting rocket
launching cells in Gaza. 

A short time later, another Qassam rocket struck an open area north of the
western Negev town, causing no damage or injuries. 

The decision by Olmert and Peretz essentially adopts the defense minister's
proposal to alter the policy of restraint in the wake of ongoing fire on
southern Israel.

"A directive has been given to the defense establishment to take pinpoint
action against the rocket-launching squads," Olmert's office said in a
statement, a day after two teenage boys were wounded, one of them
critically, by a Qassam rocket that struck the western Negev town of Sderot.

The two met with senior military and intelligence officials to discuss the
escalation of rocket fire across the Gaza border on Wednesday morning. 

According to the Prime Minister's Office statement, the IDF has also been
instructed to uphold the cease-fire in general. "In parallel, Israel will
continue to maintain the ceasefire and work with the Palestinian Authority
so that immediate steps are taken to halt the Qassam firings."

Government spokeswoman Miri Eisin said Israel would do its best to preserve
the truce, even while attacking rocket-launching cells. "Israel has shown
restraint," she said. "Israel will continue to be restrained, and we will
only take pinpointed action against the launching cells."

Deputy Defense Minister Ephraim Sneh said following the decision that the
military option cannot completely solve the Qassam rocket problem, and that
diplomatic and economic steps were needed in the Gaza Strip, according to
Israel Radio.

Responding to decision, Saeb Erekat, a senior aide to PA Chairman Mahmoud
Abbas, said maintaining the cease-fire was in the Palestinian national
interest, calling on Palestinian militants to stop firing Qassam rockets. 

"I also urge Israel to refrain from attacking the Palestinians and to be
committed to the ceasefire," he said. "Our past experience taught us that
violence begets violence and bullets beget bullets."

Hamas government spokeswoman Ghazi Hamad denounced the decision to 
"continue their aggression against our people," but added: "We still believe
that this agreement is alive, and both sides should respect this agreement
because it is (in) the interest (of) our people."

Islamic Jihad, however, threatened to increase the rocket fire in response
to the decision.

"Stop the attacks in the West Bank and Gaza Strip immediately or expect more
rockets on Sderot and on Ashkelon and beyond," warned a leaflet issued by
Saraya al-Quds, the military arm of Islamic Jihad. 

"There will be no truce with the Israeli enemy at the expense of the blood
of our people," the al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades also threatened, the
semi-official, semi-independent armed wing of President Mahmoud Abbas'
opposition Fatah party.

A senior aide to Abbas warned the Israeli decision would "negatively affect"
the outcome of Saturday's meeting between Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert.

"What was decided in Israel will create an atmosphere that is not
encouraging," Nabil Amr told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa. 

Peretz and senior IDF officials had called on Olmert to suspend the policy
of restraint and let the army fire at Qassam rocket-launcher cells that can
be identified during or shortly after operation.

"We cannot continue to restrain ourselves," Peretz told Olmert on Tuesday
night. "We cannot let Jihad continue to do what it wants; we must take
immediate action against the Qassams."

Peretz has been vocal in recent days about his dissatisfaction with the
policy of restraint. He agrees with IDF officials who support identifying
missile-launcher cells and destroying them during or immediately after a
launch. Peretz believes the risk to Palestinian civilians is low if the IDF
operations are confined to unpopulated areas used by terror cells, and that
this would not end the cease-fire. 

Military sources admitted that the cell responsible for Tuesday's missiles
could not be located due to inclement weather. Military officials had warned
since close to the beginning of the cease-fire that failure to respond to
the attacks would cost Israeli lives.

Opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu (Likud) told Israel Radio on Wednesday
that the Israel Defense Forces must immediately reoccupy key areas of the
Gaza Strip, including the Philadelphi Route along the Gaza-Egypt border, in
order to prevent the ongoing Qassam rocket fire and arms smuggling.

"[The government] must take control of the areas from which Qassams are
fired - this is not the entire Gaza Strip, it is not even a small part of
the Gaza," said the former prime minister. "But it is a defined area. We
know the Qassam [range] radius, and where they are firing them." 

"[The government] must stop [arms] smuggling, by taking control of key
areas," he said. When asked if this includes the Philadelphi Route,
Netanyahu responded "definitely," although he said the military presence
there would not necessarily be permanent.

Netanyahu also called on the government to work to bring about the fall of
the Hamas-led Palestinian Authority government, and "halt all negotiations
and all gestures, until a complete end to the terrorism."

"The way to overthrow the Hamas government is to strangle it," he said.
"They were under a strangle-hold that almost brought about their collapse,
you saw them in a civil war. And this strangle-hold was an economic one -
they couldn't pay salaries."

"What has the government done?" he said, referring to the decision to
transfer $100 million to PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas. "The government has
opened the flow of money - not just from Israel, [although] $100 million is
a lot of money - but also the flow of hundreds of millions of dollars from
the Europeans, saving the Hamas government." 

"That is a fundamental error, and an additional error is to declare a
unilateral cease-fire that essentially allows them to fire at us and
demonstrates weakness," he said.

National Infrastructures Minister Benjamin Eliezer echoed the defense
minister's sentiment, telling Israel Radio: "We cannot restrain ourselves
anymore. We've restrained ourselves, and it's good that we did, because the
entire world saw that we did above and beyond [what was called for], but we
cannot turn an entire town, excuse me, into a graveyard."

The former defense minister stressed, however, that he would only recommend
the IDF resume targeting Qassam rocket cells, saying the military should not
reoccupy parts of Gaza.

Qassam wounds two 14-year-old boys, one critically
Two boys, both 14, were injured on Tuesday night when a Qassam rocket landed
in the street near where they were walking. Both were treated by Magen David
Adom paramedics and taken to Barzilai Medical Center in Ashkelon. 

A total of eight Qassams were fired at Israel Tuesday, the most in a single
day since the cease-fire was declared about a month ago. 

Late Tuesday night, hospital officials said that Adir Ghasad was in surgery
and in critical condition, while Matan Cohen was in moderate to serious
condition and in danger of losing his leg.

The hospital's director Dr. Shimon Sherf told Israel Radio on Wednesday
morning that Ghasad's condition had stabilized.

"He arrived in very serious condition, in critical condition, [and] was
barely able to maintain blood pressure," said Sherf. "He was full of
shrapnel from head to toe, and after a lengthy surgery ... we were able to
stabilize him. He is currently in recovery and maintaining blood pressure,
and I hope he will make it through this trauma."

A Barzilai Hospital official told Israel Radio later Wednesday that Ghasad's
life was no longer in any immediate danger, and he would be transferred to
the intensive care unit.

"The second boy [Cohen] is stable, he is on a respirator, and he is
maintaining blood pressure," said Sherf. "He has shrapnel in soft tissue in
various parts of his body. Other than the amputation of four toes ... his
condition is relatively stable." Cohen's condition is listed as moderate to
serious.

According to the hospital official, Cohen will be transferred to Soroka
Medical Center for observation.

Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for firing the missiles from the Gaza
Strip at the western Negev town.

The incident was the most serious since a cease-fire was put into place,
although more than 60 rockets have been fired during this period. 

The IDF did not respond to the Qassams, observing the policy of restraint
set by Olmert.

Another Sderot resident was slightly injured earlier this week by a Qassam. 

One of the Qassams fired at Israel Tuesday landed in the industrial area in
south Ashkelon, close to a strategic infrastructure installation. Another
rocket landed south of the city. Four Qassams landed in open areas in the
vicinity of Sderot, while another landed inside the city. Eight people were
treated for shock as a result of that missile, which also damaged buildings
and cars. 

A mortar landed near an IDF base near the Gaza border, across from the
center of the Strip.

Palestinian sources said that a Palestinian farmer in the northern Gaza
Strip was shot by IDF soldiers. Ismai'il Ghaban, 27, was on land owned by
his family, north of Beit Lahia, when he was reportedly shot in the neck and
the knee. IDF sources say he was shot while causing damage to the border
fence. Palestinians have recently dismantled large parts of the border fence
in the area to sell the metal for scrap. IDF soldiers are permitted to shoot
anyone damaging the fence.

A resident of Sderot who lives near where the two teenagers were hit Tuesday
night described what happened when the missile fell in the street outside.
"I was at home, my daughter was on the second floor and suddenly started
screaming," Shimon Peretz related. 

"I went downstairs and saw the boys. I got my neighbor, he's a medic, and
performed first aid on them and then I called for an ambulance. I can't
describe the moment when the children were screaming and panicking. Just
this morning two Qassams fell here with no warning."

A friend of the two injured boys adds: "I heard the 'red alert,' I was at
home, and then I heard a loud noise and suddenly saw my friends lying on the
ground, one was lying there with no foot." He added that the home of one of
the boys, Matan Cohen, had been hit previously by a Qassam.

Angry residents gathered at the site. Some people were in shock, others
expressed anger at the government's impotence and at its failure to protect
Sderot's inhabitants.

Two teenage girls who were in shock were evacuated by ambulance after
refusing to return to their homes. The families of the two boys,¬ the Cohens
and the Ghasads, ¬ went to Barzilai to be with the injured, as did many
friends of the families.

The residents expressed anger at Olmert's failure to visit Sderot and see
the true situation of the city. One mother shouted that she cannot go to
work because she has to stay at home with her children due to their great
anxiety. 

 

 



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