2 Press Reports:
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Israel admits vulnerability to guerilla warfare
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TEL AVIV, Nov 23: Israel acknowledged on Thursday it was vulnerable in its
conflict with the Palestinians, saying it could not defend itself completely
against bomb attacks.

The army tightened security after a car bomb exploded near a bus in the
northern city of Hadera on Wednesday, killing at least two people and
wounding about 60. It was the second big car bombing in eight weeks of
clashes with Palestinians.

But officials acknowledged they could never make Israel completely immune to
bombings, and that the Jewish state was more vulnerable than at any time for
seven years because of a breakdown of cooperation with the Palestinian
Authority.

"This is not a hermetic system. It is possible to penetrate, it is possible
to pass," said Israeli police chief Yehuda Wilk. "I can't say definitely
that it is possible to prevent the next terrorist attack."

His remarks were echoed by a senior security source.

"If there is no cooperation in fighting terrorism it will continue. There is
no way to stop it," the source said.

"The only system that worked for the past seven years was that if we had
information (about planned attacks), we gave it to the Palestinians and they
were the only ones who could make arrests (on their territory). Now we
cannot do that and it is very hard to stop an attack after it is launched."

GUERILLA WARFARE: Guerilla warfare and bombings have become the
Palestinians' most potent weapons since they began an Intifada, or uprising,
two months ago to press demands for full independence for the West Bank and
Gaza Strip, captured by Israel in 1967.

Israel says it has prevented numerous attacks because of its military
intelligence and by making pre-emptive strikes against Palestinians it
accuses

of preparing or carrying out raids.

It has increased the number of police and soldiers on the streets,
reinforcing patrols with rifle-carrying paramilitary troops in busy areas
and at shopping malls. It has also sealed off Palestinian-controlled towns
and cities.

But Wednesday's car bomb in Hadera, and the one that killed two Israelis in
Jerusalem on November 2, highlighted the inability to provide complete
protection.

"You can never be foolproof against terrorism if you are a democracy with
open borders. The best you can do is minimise the number of attacks," said
Efraim Inbar, head of the Begin-Sadat Centre for Strategic Studies at
Israel's Bar-Ilan University.

He said such attacks dealt a big blow to Israeli morale in a conflict in
which there are few obvious gains for the Israelis but the Palestinians have
a clear cause to fight for.

"The Palestinians have more fire in their belly, are willing to suffer more
to achieve their goals," Inbar said.

"Israel is more a state interested in living comfortably. Unless the
leadership makes proper sense of this situation, the population will have
difficulty accepting the price."

Palestinian President Yasser Arafat has allowed members of the Hamas and
Islamic Jihad out of Palestinian prisons since the Intifada started.

The Israeli government says this amounts to giving a "green light" for
"terrorism" and makes Arafat ultimately responsible for attacks in Israel.
Arafat denies such accusations and Palestinian leaders denied any
involvement in the car bomb attacks in Jerusalem on November 2 or in Hadera
on Wednesday.

Israel says it has exercised restraint during the conflict, despite
accusations by the U.N. Security Council that its army has used excessive
force.

The security source said Israel might yet abandon that policy and unleash
all-out force to halt guerrilla attacks.-Reuters

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Many of us saw the picture of the courageous young Palestinian with the rock
Vs the Israeli tank.  May God rest his soul....


Palestinian Mothers Face Dilemma
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By GREG MYRE
.c The Associated Press


GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) - A wiry, fearless 13-year-old, Fares Udah
literally became the poster child of the Palestinian uprising last month
when
a photographer captured him with his arm cocked, ready to unleash his
harmless stone at the menacing barrel of an Israeli tank.

The image was on newspaper front pages worldwide, and Fares reveled in his
role as the most famous rock-chucker at the Karni crossing point between
Israel and the Gaza Strip, a scene of daily confrontations.

Yet one woman was not entirely impressed - his mother.

``I would go three times a day to find (my son) and bring him home,'' said
Enaam Udah, 41, a mother of nine. ``But he would always go back.''

Palestinian women, who tend to play a traditional role of homemaker to very
large families, rarely make the headlines in the current Mideast conflict,
yet find themselves in a dilemma.

Their boys' participation in the clashes leaves the women deathly afraid of
receiving a heartbreaking call from a hospital.

Yet their sons embrace the Palestinian political struggle at a young age,
and
keeping them away from the adrenaline rush of the confrontations is often a
practical impossibility when there are a half-dozen or more kids to look
after. The mothers also identify with a Palestinian political struggle they
see as legitimate.

Israelis say Palestinian parents and political leaders cynically encourage
the children to take part, and publicize the resulting deaths and injuries
to
create the impression of a David vs. Goliath struggle. People as prominent
as
Sweden's Queen Silvia have questioned how Palestinian parents could allow
their children to flirt with death.

That charge strikes Palestinian women as unfair, though they don't have an
easy answer.

``We don't send our sons to an easy death,'' said Udah. ``But if this is
fated by God, then I cannot change that.''

Three days after young Fares found fame, his 17-year-old cousin, Shadey
Udah,
was shot dead by Israeli troops at the Karni crossing.

When Fares learned of his cousin's death, ``he crossed his heart and
promised
to fight the Israelis every day,'' said his mother, whose objections to his
participation in the clashes went unheeded.

Nine days later, on Nov. 8, Fares was fatally shot in the neck.

Udah broke down and wept uncontrollably as she began recounting Fares' death
at a press conference in Gaza City attended by the mothers of five
Palestinians killed by Israeli fire. None could tell her tale without a
stream of tears.

After losing a child, would any of the women allow their remaining sons near
the clashes?

Sayda Utla, whose 25-year-old son Mohammed was killed while attempting to
rescue an injured child, said she would not keep her remaining four sons
away.

``I'm still willing to allow my children to participate in the liberation
struggle,'' she said defiantly.

Udah said another son was giving her the slip and going to the front lines
despite her objections.

Dr. Eyad Sarraj, the only psychiatrist in Gaza during the first Palestinian
uprising in 1987-93, works with people traumatized by conflict. He says
Palestinian mothers who have lost sons often react in a familiar pattern.

``Instead of expressing grief, they initially express great pride in the
actions of their children,'' he said. ``In order to protect themselves from
shock and grief, they identify completely with the national cause.''

Palestinian men, Sarraj says, are increasingly attracted to the idea of
martyrdom, which in Islam promises a direct trip to heaven.

``The power of the martyr is an overwhelming symbol now,'' said Sarraj.
``Many youths have seen their fathers humiliated by the Israelis, and they
see the Palestinian Authority as helpless. Only the martyr has an image of
strength and power, someone who conquers death.''

In run-down Gaza City, one of the few green spaces has been designated as
``martyrs' park,'' and serves as the unofficial gathering place for
mourners.
A pile of wreaths surround the statue of the ``unknown soldier'' and a list
of the martyrs has been attached to the base.

Turn on Palestinian television, and videotape of teen-agers and young men,
crumpled by Israeli gunfire, plays over and over, accompanied by wailing
songs dedicated to the fallen.

Young boys heading off to the clashes sometimes write their names on the
back
of a photo of themselves and stuff it in their pockets in order to be easily
identified if they are shot. The photo is chosen with care - it's the one
they would want on their posthumous poster.

At the press conference, the Palestinian mothers denounced Israeli soldiers
as heartless killers for nearly two hours. Yet afterward, Sayda Utla quietly
said she had a message to convey to Jewish mothers who have lost sons in the
conflict.

``I appeal to Israeli mothers to go out and cry to the whole world,'' she
said, ``to show that there is no difference between Jewish and Palestinian
mothers.''
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