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Pressure Against Israel to Build After Air-Strike Kills 11 Civilians


An Israeli missile ripped through a two-story home in a residential area of Gaza City on Sunday, killing at least 11 civilians, including four young children and an 81-year-old woman, in the single deadliest attack of Israel’s offensive against Islamic militants.

The bloodshed was likely to raise pressure on Israel to end the fighting, even as it pledged to intensify the offensive by striking the homes of wanted terrorists. High numbers of civilian casualties in an offensive four years ago led to fierce criticism and condemnation of Israel.

In all, 73 Palestinians, including 37 civilians, have been killed in the five-day onslaught. Three Israeli civilians have also died from Palestinian rocket fire.

President Barack Obama said he was in touch with players across the region in hopes of halting the fighting, while also warning of the risks of Israel expanding its air assault into a ground war.

“We’re going to have to see what kind of progress we can make in the next 24, 36, 48 hours,” Obama said during a visit in Thailand.

On the ground, there were no signs of any letup in the fighting as Israel announced it was widening the offensive to target the military commanders of the ruling Hamas group.

The Israeli military carried out dozens of airstrikes throughout the day, and naval forces bombarded targets along Gaza’s Mediterranean coast. Many of the attacks focused on homes where militant leaders or weapons were believed to be hidden.

Palestinian militants continued to barrage Israel with rockets, firing more than 100 on Sunday, and setting off air raid sirens across the southern part of the country. Some 40 rockets were intercepted by Israel’s U.S.-financed “Iron Dome” rocket-defense system, including two that targeted the metropolis of Tel Aviv. At least 10 Israelis were wounded by shrapnel.

Israel’s decision to step up its attacks in Gaza marked a new and risky phase of the operation, given the likelihood of civilian casualties in the densely populated territory of 1.6 million Palestinians. Israel launched the offensive Wednesday in what it said was an effort to end months of intensifying rocket fire from the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.

In the day’s deadliest violence, the Israeli navy fired at a home where it said a top wanted terrorist was hiding. The missile struck the home of the Daloo family in Gaza City, reducing the structure to rubble.

Frantic rescuers, bolstered by bulldozers, pulled the limp bodies of children from the ruins of the house, including a toddler and a 5-year-old, as survivors and bystanders screamed in grief. Later, the bodies of the children were laid out in the morgue of Gaza City’s Shifa Hospital.

Among the 11 dead were four small children and five women, including an 81-year-old, Gaza health official Ashraf al-Kidra said.

More than a dozen homes of Hamas commanders or families linked to Hamas were struck on Sunday. Though most were empty — their inhabitants having fled to shelter — at least three had families in them. Al-Kidra said 20 of 27 people killed Sunday were civilians, mostly women and children.

Sami Abu Zuhri, a Hamas spokesman, said that “the Israeli people will pay the price” for the killing of civilians.

Israel sought to place the blame on terrorists, saying they were intentionally operating in places inhabited by civilians. The military has released videos and images of what it says are militants firing rockets from mosques, schools and public buildings.

“Hamas is using the Gaza population as human shields,” said Brig. Gen. Yoav Mordechai, the chief Israeli spokesman. “They are exploiting crowded residential urban areas.”

He acknowledged, however, that it was not clear whether the terrorist targeted in Sunday’s attack was killed, despite earlier claims of success. “I still don’t know what became of him,” Mordechai told Channel 10 TV.

The prospect of mounting civilian casualties could quickly change the momentum of Israel’s operation. Israel launched the offensive on Wednesday with a lightning airstrike that killed Hamas’ military chief. Since then, it has carried out a blistering campaign of more than 1,200 airstrikes, targeting suspected rocket storage and launching sites.

Israel also struck two high-rise buildings housing media outlets, damaging the top-floor offices of the Hamas TV station, Al Aqsa, and a Lebanese-based broadcaster, Al Quds TV, seen as sympathetic to the Islamists. Six Palestinian journalists were wounded, including one who lost a leg, the Gaza press association said.

Foreign broadcasters, including British, German and Italian TV outlets, also had offices in the buildings.

Lt. Col. Avital Leibovich, an Israeli military spokeswoman, said the strikes targeted Hamas communications equipment on the rooftops. She accused the group of using journalists for cover.

Israeli officials expressed readiness to take the offensive even further with a ground invasion of Gaza. Israel has mobilized thousands of forces and columns of armored vehicles along the border ahead of a possible incursion.

“The Israeli military is prepared to significantly expand the operation,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared at the start of the weekly Cabinet meeting.

The threats come at an important crossroads — with a fateful choice between further escalation or agreeing to a cease-fire with Hamas.

Obama and British Foreign Secretary William Hague cautioned against a potential Israeli ground invasion of Gaza.

Obama blamed Palestinian militants for starting the round of fighting by raining rockets onto Israel and said the U.S. supported Israel’s right to protect itself. “Israel has every right to expect that it does not have missiles fired into its territory,” Obama said.

Hague also said Hamas “bears principal responsibility” for initiating the violence, but made clear the diplomatic risks of an Israeli escalation. “A ground invasion is much more difficult for the international community to sympathize with or support,” he said.

A ground operation would carry grave risks, given the likelihood of heavy casualties on both sides. The Israeli offensive into Gaza four years ago left hundreds of civilians dead, drawing fierce international condemnation and war crimes accusations.

Israel says its intelligence and technology have been perfected since then to minimize civilian casualties. But Gaza’s crowded urban landscape makes it all but impossible to avoid them altogether, as Sunday’s attack in Gaza City illustrated.

“In this case, you can’t avoid collateral damage if they position the rockets in densely populated areas, in mosques, school yards,” said Israeli Vice Premier Moshe Yaalon. “We shouldn’t be blamed for the outcome.”

Avihai Mandelblit, a recently retired chief advocate general in the Israeli military, said that from a legal perspective, “there’s no immunity to anyone if you put weapons inside of civilian infrastructure.”

But he acknowledged the sight of dead civilians could create a public relations debacle for Israel. “As more civilians will get hurt, the legitimacy clock is going to click faster to end this operation,” he said.

Obama said he had been in touch with Netanyahu as well as the leaders of Egypt and Turkey as international attempts to broker a cease-fire continued. Egypt, which often serves as a mediator between Israel and Hamas, has taken a leading role in the efforts.

Israeli TV stations said an Israeli envoy traveled to Cairo on Sunday, and was returning to Israel with details of cease-fire proposals. Channel 2 TV, citing American diplomats, said Netanyahu’s personal envoy, Yitzhak Molcho, would be headed to Washington in the coming days.

Hamas officials said their supreme leader, Khaled Meshaal, also held talks with Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi, and that Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu was to visit Gaza on Tuesday.

Israel and Gaza’s militant Hamas rulers remain far apart on any terms for a halt to the bloodshed.

Hamas is linking a truce deal to a complete lifting of the border blockade on Gaza imposed since Islamists seized the territory by force. Hamas also seeks Israeli guarantees to halt targeted killings of its leaders and military commanders. Israeli officials reject such demands.

They say they are not interested in a “time-out,” and want firm guarantees that militant rocket fire into Israel will end. Past cease-fires have been short lived.

(AP)



12 Responses

  1. Let the fun begin. These dumb arabs only understand one thing, and that is force. They are a bunch of miserable cockroaches and they all deserve to die. I say level Gaza and then talk peace

  2. Too bad. What goes around comes around. Where were the liberal reporters when a 24 year old pregnant mother of 3 was killed, leaving her children yesomoim & her husband critically injured? Where was the outcry then? HYPOCRITES. They should all drop dead.

  3. The relatives of those killed have a right to be upset that their elected Hamas government subjected them to this. They should insist on a recall.

  4. #3
    Very well said. I would change your statement of “what goes around comes around”…..Israel NEVER deliberately target civilians whereas the Hamas animals don’t differentiate one bit between a soldier or civilian. Jewish blood is all they want. And as you said, they were VOTED in, so they’re all in this together. Good luck to them all. They can all drop dead together.

  5. To No. 3:

    No they all “deserve to die” any more than the innocent families of right wing zealots in Judea and samaria who have murdered innocent Palestinians. The large percentage of the residents of Gaza are totally apolitical and simply are trying to survive in a miserable existance created by the Hamas terrorists.

  6. We need to remember:
    1) arab children can grow up to be arab terrorists.
    2) arab adults can be arab terrorists or supporters.
    3) arab seniors have, and continue to, support their children to become arab terrorists.
    NO TEARS FOR THEIR DEAD.

  7. Gaza must be destroyed and leveled once and for all they sell never be rebuild shame on the world that like to tell Jew how she must behave but if the Arabs fire at the Jews it is ok shame on all the nations and there so called leaders

  8. This reminds me of the joke:

    What do you call a car with 5 lawyers going over a cliff?

    A great start!

    Same here. They got whatever the number was. Its a good start. GET RID OF MORE!

  9. One of the biggest mistake Israel is doing in its PR is the inability to stress loud and clear that it does not targeting civilians and not murdering innocents, rather those cowards who are using human shields in any form, they are the murderers. Once these wicked cowards will understand that and the world will understand that, there will be no questions anymore and the Israelis are going to save their own civilian and soldiers life.

  10. Sorry, #6. Not the same thing at all. As noted by another commenter, Hamas was elected democratically and won by a landslide. There’s no way to argue that most of the people in Gaza are apolitical.

    The Germans elected Hitler ym”sh democratically, and paid for that when the Allies carpet-bombed Berlin and other areas of Germany at the end of WWII. No one then argued that civilians were being killed.

    If the people in Gaza elected this thugocracy, then they cannot plead innocent now. It’s not as though Hamas has ever made a secret of its ideology.

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