The Jerusalem Post

Iran blamed for rockets from Gaza,

‘They want to make everyone realize they are a player and should be taken seriously with respect’

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

Israel is pointing a finger at Iran for being behind the most serious escalation on it’s southern front in four years.

Less than a month after Iran’s Revolution­ary Guard Corps fired 32 rockets toward Israel’s northern Golan Heights, the Iranian-funded Islamic Jihad along with Hamas fired some 180 Iranian-made 120-mm. mortar shells and 107-mm. rockets toward communitie­s in southern Israel.

It was the largest salvo fired from the Gaza Strip since the end of Operation Protective Edge in 2014. In response, Israel carried out the most extensive retaliatio­n since 2014, striking 65 Hamas targets across the entire Gaza Strip, including a dual-purpose tunnel dug one kilometer into Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula and then 900 meters into Israeli territory.

According to IDF Spokesman Brig.-Gen. Ronen Manelis, the tunnel was meant not only to carry out attacks against Israel but also to smuggle weaponry into the blockaded coastal enclave.

Despite Israel’s intelligen­ce superiorit­y and blockades imposed by the IDF and Egypt, Hamas and other terrorist groups in the Strip have restocked their supplies of weapons in the four years since the last round of fighting between Israel and Hamas.

The mass-produced Iranian mortar shells used in Tuesday’s salvos were also used by Islamic Jihad in an attack in January and in a barrage 12 mortar shells fired toward an army outpost in November.

Israel has intercepte­d Iranian weapons destined for the Strip several times, including just months before the outbreak of Operation Protective Edge, when it stopped the Klos C commercial ship which had set out from Iran and was carrying Syrian-made long-range rockets.

Before the salvos, less than 10 projectile­s had been fired from the Hamas-run Strip into Israeli territory in 2018. The previous year saw 31, mainly during the month of December after US President Donald Trump recognized Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and announced his intention to move the US Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. In 2016 some 15 were fired, and another 21 were launched toward Israel in 2015.

With an estimated 180 projectile­s fired into Israel in one 24-hour period, that makes the total amount of projectile­s fired into Israel more than the total of rockets and mortars fired from the Hamas-run Gaza Strip since 2014.

Speaking on a conference call organized by the Israel Project, Brig.-Gen. (res.) Yossi Kuperwasse­r, the former director-general of the Strategic Affairs Ministry and former head of the research division in Military Intelligen­ce, said that the “relatively short” round of violence on Tuesday was in a way “encouraged by the Iranians.”

Tuesday’s violence was “another reflection of Iran’s frustratio­ns and tensions which is trying to show it can cause trouble and instabilit­y,” he said, pointing to Hamas’s involvemen­t with the “Great March of Return” and how Hamas’s Yahya Sinwar has boasted about his close ties to Hezbollah and Iran, including IRGC Quds Force commander Maj.-Gen. Qassem Soleimani.

“Iran doesn’t want stability here. They want to make everyone realize that they are a player, and that they should be taken very seriously with a lot of respect, and in this way deter people from putting more pressure on them; but it isn’t working.”

 ?? (Amir Cohen/Reuters) ?? DAMAGE TO the entrance of a shed, caused by a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip, is seen in a kibbutz on the Israeli-Gaza border yesterday.
(Amir Cohen/Reuters) DAMAGE TO the entrance of a shed, caused by a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip, is seen in a kibbutz on the Israeli-Gaza border yesterday.

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