Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Netanyahu says Gaza rockets making war inevitable

- ARON HELLER

JERUSALEM — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Thursday that continued rocket fire from Gaza is making another war against Palestinia­n militants in the coastal strip inevitable, his latest headline-grabbing announceme­nt just days before he seeks re-election.

Netanyahu said advanced plans were in place to strike Gaza and that he would decide the optimal timing of the offensive, given the unwillingn­ess of Gaza’s Hamas rulers to stop the daily barrages.

The recent attacks have caused no casualties. The Israeli military has responded with limited strikes against Hamas installati­ons that have caused no casualties and little damage, and has refrained from risking a larger conflagrat­ion as Israelis prepare to head to the polls.

The Israeli leader has been criticized for failing to respond harshly to the rockets, which have sent residents of southern Israel racing for cover. Netanyahu, who counts on the working-class, Gaza border towns as part of his electoral base, was whisked away himself by bodyguards from a campaign event on Tuesday when Palestinia­n militants fired rockets toward the area.

Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip in 2005 and Hamas militants seized power two years later. Israel and Hamas have fought three wars and engaged in several other rounds of violence over the past decade.

“I do not wage war unless it is a last resort and I don’t risk the lives of our soldiers and citizens just to get applause,” Netanyahu said in an interview with Kan Reshet Bet Radio. “We will probably have no choice but to set out on a big campaign, a war against the terror forces in Gaza.”

“I won’t start it one minute before we are ready, and we are preparing for a ‘different war’,” he added, shortly before flying to Russia for a meeting with President Vladimir Putin. Before his departure to Sochi, Netanyahu said the focus of his talks with Putin would be to promote the “joint goal” of removing Iranian forces from neighborin­g Syria.

It was Netanyahu’s first major interview with a mainstream media outlet in a frenetic campaign in which he has been dictating the agenda with a dizzying array of maneuvers.

Just this week, he alleged fraud in Arab voting areas, without providing any evidence, and pushed for legislatio­n to place cameras in polling stations on election day.

He also claimed to have found a previously unknown Iranian nuclear weapons facility and vowed to annex the heart of the West Bank if he wins re-election.

His pledge to extend Israeli sovereignt­y over the Jordan Valley sparked internatio­nal condemnati­on. Stephane Dujarric, spokesman for the U.N. secretary-general, said it would be a “serious violation of internatio­nal law.”

Jordan, one of only two Arab states to have reached a peace agreement with Israel, condemned Netanyahu’s “catastroph­ic” announceme­nt.

“It will not only undermine the two-state solution, which the whole world sees as the only path toward resolving this conflict, but it will kill the whole peace process,” Foreign Minister Ayman al-Safadi said.

 ?? AP/SHAMIL ZHUMATOV ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (left) meets Thursday with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Sochi, Russia. Before leaving Israel for Russia, Netanyahu said his talks with Putin would center on the “joint goal” of removing Iranian forces from Syria.
AP/SHAMIL ZHUMATOV Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (left) meets Thursday with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Sochi, Russia. Before leaving Israel for Russia, Netanyahu said his talks with Putin would center on the “joint goal” of removing Iranian forces from Syria.

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