$3,500 stolen from B’klyn man
JERUSALEM — Israel on Tuesday targeted two senior commanders from the Palestinian militant group Islamic Jihad, killing one in the Gaza Strip and missing the second in Syria as it stepped up its battle against Iran and its proxies across the region.
The death of Bahaa Abu elAtta and his wife as they slept in their home in eastern Gaza set off the heaviest fighting in months between Israel and Islamic Jihad, an Iranian-backed militant group that is even more hard-line than Gaza's Hamas rulers. Gaza militants fired scores of rockets into Israel throughout the day, some reaching as far as Tel Aviv, while Israeli planes responded with a series of air strikes on Islamic Jihad targets..
“Whoever thinks that it is possible to hurt our citizens and evade our long arm is mistaken,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said.
He described Atta as a “ticking time bomb” and “the main instigator of terrorism” from Gaza, responsible for many rocket attacks on Israel and planning more.
He said the killing had been approved 10 days earlier, and that Israel had waited for the “optimal conditions” to hit him while minimizing civilian casualties. He said Israel was not interested in escalation but warned: “This could take time.”
Egypt, which frequently mediates between Israel and Gaza militants, was working to deescalate tensions, according to officials in Cairo.
In a possible sign the fighting could be brief, Hamas did not take part in Tuesday's rocket fire. Although larger and more powerful than Islamic Jihad, Hamas is also more pragmatic. With Gaza's economy in tatters, it appears to have little desire for another round of fighting with Israel.
Netanyahu has repeatedly said in speeches in recent weeks that Iran, Israel's archenemy, is becoming increasingly aggressive across the region and he vowed to strike back.
Iran has forces based in Syria, Israel's northern neighbor, and supports Hezbollah militants in Lebanon. In Gaza, it supplies Islamic Jihad with cash, weapons and expertise. Netanyahu has also claimed that Iran is using Iraq and faroff Yemen to plan attacks against Israel. Hamas also receives some support from Iran.
Israel frequently strikes Iranian interests in Syria, but Tuesday's strike in Damascus appeared to be a rare assassination attempt of a Palestinian militant in the Syrian capital.
Syria's state-run news agency said Israeli warplanes fired three missiles at the home of Akram al-Ajouri, a member of Islamic Jihad's leadership living in exile. Ajouri was not harmed, but his son and granddaughter were killed, the report said. The Israeli military had no comment.
The strike came at a sensitive time for the Israeli leader. After two inconclusive elections this year, Netanyahu heads a caretaker government and is fighting for his political survival ahead of a possible indictment on corruption charges.
After Netanyahu failed to cobble together a parliamentary coalition following an election in September, his chief rival, Benny Gantz, is now trying to form a government.
Despite their bitter rivalry, the two projected a message of unity Tuesday. Gantz, a former military chief who led a 2014 war against Gaza militants, said he had been consulted by Netanyahu ahead of the overnight air strikes and called it the “right decision.”
Both men have expressed support for a unity government between their parties to avoid yet another election. But both have demanded that they lead the government.
A pair of heartless muggers ambushed an elderly man outside his Brooklyn apartment, knocking him to the floor and stealing $3,500 in cash, cops said Tuesday.
The 75-year-old victim was about to walk into his sixthfloor apartment in NYCHA's Boulevard Houses, on Wortman Ave. near Jerome St. in East New York, about 5 p.m. Oct. 31 when the two men accosted him.
They repeatedly punched him in the face, and pinned him to the floor after he fell down, cops said. One of the suspects grabbed his cash and wallet, and the duo ran east on Wortman Ave.
Cops released photos of the suspects.