Houston Chronicle

Scores die, thousands hurt as Gaza tensions boil over

Deaths in Palestinia­n protest ratchet up as U.S. opens embassy in Jerusalem

- By David M. Halbfinger

JERUSALEM — Across the Gaza Strip on Monday morning, loudspeake­rs on minarets urged Palestinia­ns to rush the fence bordering Israel, where they were met by army snipers. At least 58 were killed and thousands injured, local officials said — the worst day of carnage there since Israel invaded Gaza in 2014.

Hours later, a beaming Ivanka Trump helped unveil a stone marker etched with her father’s name on the new U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem, keeping his campaign promise to officially acknowledg­e Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. An audience of 800 religious conservati­ves and rightwing politician­s from both countries sang “Hallelujah.”

“What a glorious day,” exulted Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The two scenes, only an hour’s drive apart, illustrate­d the chasm dividing Israelis and Palestinia­ns more than at any moment in recent history.

For generation­s, both sides of the conflict have been locked in competing, mutually negating narratives, with only sporadic flickers of hope for peace despite the efforts of a long list of presidents and secretarie­s of state.

Now, with the militant

movement hanging on to control of Gaza, and Netanyahu backed by President Donald Trump, neither side is even listening to the other, and the Palestinia­ns have lumped the United States together with Israel as an overt adversary.

Responsibi­lity for the violence Monday rested “squarely with Hamas,” said Raj Shah, a White House spokesman, for “intentiona­lly and cynically provoking” Israel by urging Palestinia­ns to storm the border fence. “Israel has the right to defend itself,” he said.

In Gaza, Khalil al-Hayya, deputy chief of Hamas, blamed the United States for inciting the violence by moving the embassy to Jerusalem, reversing decades of U.S. policy and defying internatio­nal consensus. “The American administra­tion bears responsibi­lity for all consequenc­es following the implementa­tion of this unjust decision,” he said.

The two sides were in equally different worlds when speaking of how the embassy opening would affect the moribund peace process.

Palestinia­ns, who hope to see the eastern part of Jerusalem as the capital of a Palestinia­n state, see the embassy move as an abdication of any vestige of U.S. impartiali­ty in determinin­g the region’s future. Since Trump announced the move in December, Palestinia­n leaders have flatly rejected the idea of peace talks under American auspices.

But Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and adviser, predicted that “when there is peace in this region, we will look back upon this day and will remember that the journey to peace started with a strong America recognizin­g the truth.”

Netanyahu spoke of peace with “all our neighbors” at the embassy dedication, praising Trump and his team as truthtelle­rs for acknowledg­ing what he called the fact that Israel’s capital was an “eternal, undivided” Jerusalem.

“A peace that is built on lies will crash on the rocks of Middle Eastern reality,” Netanyahu said.

With evangelica­l pastors preaching and Sheldon Adelson, the influentia­l Jewish Republican donor who had pressed Trump to move the embassy, in the front row, the only reference to the Gaza violence came when Kushner said that “those provoking violence are part of the problem and not part of the solution.”

For Israelis, the day was one many had dreamed of for generation­s. Regardless of their politics, it seemed unjust that the internatio­nal community refused to see Jerusalem as their capital — a position they saw as a denial of the city’s Jewish history.

Focal point of anger

For Palestinia­ns, the embassy move’s timing on the 70th anniversar­y of Israel’s independen­ce — the eve of the day they commemorat­e the expulsion or flight of hundreds of thousands of Palestinia­ns from their homes in what became Israel — became the focal point of demonstrat­ions along the Gaza fence for two months leading up to it.

By midafterno­on east of Gaza City on Monday, the scene at the fence resembled a pitched battle — a chaotic panorama of black smoke, wailing sirens, streams of tear gas and recurring gunfire. Emergency workers with stretchers carried off a stream of injured people, many with leg wounds, some having been shot in the abdomen. A number were teenagers.

A voice on a loudspeake­r urged the crowd forward: “Get closer! Get closer!”

The charge was often led by women dressed in black, waving Palestinia­n flags and urging others to follow. “We don’t want just one or two people to get closer,” said an elderly woman clutching a shoulder bag and a flag. “We want a big group.”

Some in the crowds were planting or hurling explosives, Israel said, and many were flying flaming kites into Israel: At least one kite outside the Nahal Oz kibbutz, across the fence from Gaza City, ignited a wildfire.

After midday prayers, the atmosphere grew even more charged when officials from Hamas and other militant factions addressed the worshipper­s, urging them into the fray and claiming — falsely, to all appearance­s — that the fence had been breached and that PalestinHa­mas ians were flooding into Israel.

Hamas officials vowed that the protests would continue, but also hinted at the possibilit­y of a military strike at Israel by the group’s military wing, the Qassam brigades, a response that could bring about another Gaza war.

Israel said no Palestinia­ns had crossed the fence, but said it had repulsed several unsuccessf­ul attempts by Hamas to have armed fighters slip across into Israel and wreak havoc — which Israel has maintained all along has been the true military objective of Hamas.

One Israeli soldier wounded

At least three separate squads of armed fighters “tried to use the commotion and smoke and dynamics of the riots as concealmen­t, and then launched an attack on the fence,” said Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus, a spokesman for the Israel Defense Forces.

One Israeli soldier was wounded by shrapnel from what was believed to be an explosive device, he said, and a variety of explosives were hurled at the Israelis by Palestinia­ns. There had been “numerous shots” fired at Israeli soldiers, the army said.

The attempts to breach the fence expanded from five locations in previous protests to 13, Conricus said, calling Monday’s action an “unpreceden­ted level of violence.”

Israel responded with gunfire and tear gas, and Israeli jets struck five targets in a Hamas military training facility in the northern Gaza Strip, and two other Hamas military positions in the area were hit by an aircraft and a tank.

Israel has made clear throughout the protests that it holds Hamas responsibl­e for any violence emanating from Gaza, and Conricus made no apologies for the body count. “Hamas is killing Gaza,” he said. “We, on the other hand, are defending our homes.”

One clear loser, veterans of Israeli-Palestinia­n talks said, was peace in the region, which seemed ever more distant.

“Israel claims all of Jerusalem, and is doing their best to ensure it remains that way,” said Aaron David Miller, a former Middle East negotiator in Republican and Democratic administra­tions.

“And the Trump administra­tion is validating that in a way no other administra­tion has.”

The U.S. Embassy, he said, is the new symbol of that partnershi­p.

 ?? Mohammed Abed / AFP / Getty Images ?? Palestinia­ns run for cover from tear gas Monday as Israeli forces opened fire near the border between Israel and the Gaza Strip. The protests began weeks ago over an economic blockade.
Mohammed Abed / AFP / Getty Images Palestinia­ns run for cover from tear gas Monday as Israeli forces opened fire near the border between Israel and the Gaza Strip. The protests began weeks ago over an economic blockade.
 ?? Sebastian Scheiner / Associated Press ?? President Donald Trump's daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner attend the opening ceremony of the new U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem.
Sebastian Scheiner / Associated Press President Donald Trump's daughter Ivanka and son-in-law Jared Kushner attend the opening ceremony of the new U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem.
 ?? Khalil Hamra / Associated Press ?? A Palestinia­n man falls on the ground Monday after being shot by Israeli troops during a protest at the Gaza Strip's border with Israel. Protesters threw stones and flaming kites at the troops.
Khalil Hamra / Associated Press A Palestinia­n man falls on the ground Monday after being shot by Israeli troops during a protest at the Gaza Strip's border with Israel. Protesters threw stones and flaming kites at the troops.
 ?? Menachem Kahana / AFP/Getty Images ?? With U.S. Ambassador David Friedman on hand, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the opening of the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem “a glorious day.”
Menachem Kahana / AFP/Getty Images With U.S. Ambassador David Friedman on hand, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called the opening of the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem “a glorious day.”

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