Orlando Sentinel

Cease-fire holds after day of Israel-Hamas fighting

- By Aron Heller

JERUSALEM — The Israeli military lifted its restrictio­ns along the Gaza border Sunday, indicating it had accepted an Egyptmedia­ted cease-fire that ended a 24-hour round of fighting with Hamas militants that had threatened to devolve into all-out war.

The military had shut down a popular beach and placed limitation­s on large gatherings as residents kept mostly close to home on Saturday amid dozens of rockets that were fired from Gaza. But after several hours of calm it said residents could resume their daily routines.

On Saturday, the military carried out its largest wave of airstrikes in Gaza since the 2014 war, hitting several Hamas military compounds and flattening a number of its training camps.

Two Palestinia­n teenagers were killed in an airstrike in Gaza City, while four Israelis were wounded from a rocket that landed on a residentia­l home.

The military said several mortar shells were fired even after Hamas announced the cease-fire as sirens warning of incoming projectile­s wailed in Israel overnight again. The military struck the mortar launcher early Sunday but the calm held, with neither side appearing eager to resume hostilitie­s.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Israel would not accept a ceasefire unless it included an end to all militant hostilitie­s, including incendiary kites and balloons from Gaza that have devastated nearby Israeli farmlands and nature reserves.

“The Israeli military has delivered its most punishing blow against Hamas since the 2014 war. I hope they got the message. If not, they will get it later on,” he

JERUSALEM — Some U.S. media reported new details on Sunday from a Mossad operation that smuggled Iranian nuclear documents out of Tehran, though none of the material appeared to show that Iran wasn’t abiding by its 2015 nuclear agreement with world powers.

The informatio­n relayed to the outlets shed more light on the daring operation but offered few other details on what Israel has already claimed.

The New York Times reported Sunday Israeli agents had six hours and 29 minutes to break into the facility before the guards arrived in the morning. In that time, they infiltrate­d the facility, disabled alarms and cut through safes to remove the secret documents before leaving undetected.

It said certain documents demonstrat­ed that Iran had worked to “systematic­ally assemble everything it needed to produce atomic weapons,” but noted that exculpator­y evidence could have been left out of the hand-picked documents shown to its reporter. It added that Iran maintains the entire document trove is fraudulent.

said at the weekly cabinet meeting.

After several balloons drifted into Israel on Sunday, the military said it targeted the Hamas squad that had launched them from the northern Gaza Strip.

Israel said it unleashed Saturday’s barrage in response to weeks of violence along Gaza’s border — including a grenade attack Friday that wounded an officer — as well as sustained Hamas rocket attacks and a campaign of incendiary devices floating over the border.

Hamas responded with more than 200 projectile­s

toward Israel communitie­s, evoking memories of the three wars the sides have waged over the past decade. Israel said its Iron Dome defense system shot down more than 20 projectile­s.

Two teenagers were killed and several others were wounded when Israel struck an unfinished fivestory building near a Hamas security compound and a public park in Gaza City, reducing the structure to rubble. The military said Hamas was using it as a training facility and had dug a tunnel underneath as part of its undergroun­d network.

 ?? KHALIL HAMRA/AP ?? Relatives mourn during the funeral for a 15-year-old boy who was killed Saturday in an Israeli airstrike on Gaza.
KHALIL HAMRA/AP Relatives mourn during the funeral for a 15-year-old boy who was killed Saturday in an Israeli airstrike on Gaza.

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