The Daily Telegraph

Israel on brink of all-out war with Hamas as Gaza ignites

- By Raf Sanchez in Nahal Oz

ISRAEL and Hamas were last night engaged in their most serious fighting in Gaza since the 2014 war, prompting fears that the two sides were hurtling towards a fourth all-out conflict in 10 years. Palestinia­n gunmen killed an Israeli soldier on the Gaza border yesterday, prompting Israel to respond with air strikes which killed at least three Hamas fighters.

A fourth Palestinia­n man was shot dead by Israeli troops during demonstrat­ions at the border.

The soldier’s death is the first time an Israeli serviceman has been killed by Hamas since the 2014 conflict.

The military said he was shot dead by “a terrorist squad” who opened fire from the southern Gaza Strip.

Hamas fired three rockets into Israel later in the evening, according to the Israeli military. Two of the rockets were intercepte­d by Israel’s Iron Dome missile defence system. Hamas said in a statement late last night that Israel would “face the repercussi­ons after choosing to bomb Gaza”.

The UN sounded the alarm as the fighting escalated and urged both sides “to step back from the brink”.

“Those who want to provoke Palestinia­ns and Israelis into another war must not succeed,” said Nickolay Mladenov, the UN envoy for the Israeli-palestinia­n conflict. Benjamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, convened an emergency meeting of his generals and security ministers at the defence ministry in Tel Aviv in response.

Tzachi Hanegbi, an Israeli minister, said the “gloves are coming off ”.

“The situation is that Hamas has repeatedly ignored our warnings, both private and public,” Mr Hanegbi said.

The escalation comes after months of growing tensions in Gaza as Palestinia­ns mounted large, and often violent, demonstrat­ions and Israeli forces opened fire on both armed militants and unarmed demonstrat­ors.

Around 140 Palestinia­ns have been killed since late March.

In recent weeks, Palestinia­ns have shifted their focus to sending burning kites and helium balloons over the Israeli border fence and into the farmland beyond.

The kites and balloons have started more than a thousand fires and torched more than 7,000 acres of fields, according to Israel’s military.

Israel’s government initially saw the airborne tools of arson as a mere irritant and a less dangerous alternativ­e to the rockets often fired by Hamas and other Islamist factions in Gaza. But after weeks of unrelentin­g fires, and growing political pressure from Israelis living near the border, the government has now declared the balloons to be an unbearable provocatio­n that must be met firmly.

Israel has responded by partly closing the main crossing for goods into Gaza. Only food and basic medicine are being allowed through and the closure has put fresh strain on Gaza’s already crumbling economy.

“We all rely on diesel to run our generators. If no fuel is allowed in everything in Gaza will stop,” said Naael al-ghazali, a 44-year-old restaurant owner in Gaza City. Human rights groups have called the closures “collective punishment”.

Israeli forces have targeted young Palestinia­n men with air strikes as they launch the balloons from Gaza. The decision means some of the world’s most sophistica­ted drones and warplanes have fired towards people inflating condoms or white “I love you” balloons.

Communitie­s such as Nahal Oz, an Israeli kibbutz a mile from Gaza, have been living on high alert since demonstrat­ions along the fence began in late March. Residents have worried about Palestinia­ns surging through the border and spent sleepless nights in bomb shelters.

However, the fire kites and balloons, which have come nearly every day for more than 100 days, have added a new constant tension.

Most of Nahal Oz’s farmland is outside the kibbutz but residents grow a small patch of wheat inside every year for a ceremony during Shavuot, the Jewish harvest festival. The kibbutz managed to keep the wheat

‘Those who want to provoke another war must not succeed’

patch safe from fires for weeks but just before the ceremony was due to begin a kite drifted over and set it aflame. Had the kite arrived even a few minutes later, children would have been standing in the wheat for the start of the festival.

“We’ve had a lot of miracles in the last three months here but eventually our luck will end,” said Nadav Peretz, a resident who fought the fires with a hose while wearing a flower crown for the festival. “These kites and balloons look happy and peaceful but it’s terror. Sooner or later someone is going to get killed.”

Volunteers from the kibbutz have joined forces with profession­al firefighte­rs and park rangers to fight the daily flames. Most fires are now contained within 15 minutes.

“What Hamas is trying to do is to make life here impossible. We are trying to make it possible and to deny them victory,” said Shmulik Friedman, the fire chief for southern Israel.

While there have been rumours of an Egyptian-brokered deal to stop the balloons, the fires continued yesterday.

“We are preparing these balloons to burn the Zionists’ forests and military sites, despite the threat of the Israeli army to target and assassinat­e us,” said one masked Palestinia­n man.

Mr Peretz and his partner Eli Dudaei moved to the kibbutz last year with the goal of starting a family away from their hectic past life in Tel Aviv.

Both men are deeply involved in communal life on the kibbutz – which now includes firefighti­ng – and are determined to stay.

“Last year, 14 babies were born on the kibbutz, more than anyone can remember,” said Mr Dudaei. “This is our answer to all the terror and all the threats.”

 ??  ?? A fireball engulfs part of Gaza City as the Israeli bombardmen­t went on yesterday
A fireball engulfs part of Gaza City as the Israeli bombardmen­t went on yesterday
 ??  ?? A helium balloon with burning material attached to its string floats down to land in Israeli territory
A helium balloon with burning material attached to its string floats down to land in Israeli territory
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