Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Israel launches widest Gaza daytime assault since 2014

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JERUSALEM — The Israeli military carried out its largest daytime airstrike campaign in Gaza since the 2014 war Saturday as Hamas militants fired dozens of rockets into Israel, threatenin­g to spark a wider conflagrat­ion after weeks of tensions along the volatile border.

Two Palestinia­n teenagers were killed in an Israeli airstrike, health officials said, and three Israelis were wounded by fire from Gaza that landed in a border town.

But late Saturday, Hamas and the Islamic Jihad movement announced that a ceasefire agreement in the Gaza Strip had been reached with Israel.

Mediation led to the ceasefire agreement, Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem saidin an emailed statement.

Local media quoted senior Hamas officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity, as saying that senior Egyptian security intelligen­ce and the United Nations special envoy, Nicolai Mladinov, mediated the ceasefire. The reports could not be verified.

Israel had said it was focused on hitting military targets and was warning Gaza civilians to keep their distance from certain sites. But it still marked a significan­t flare-up after a long period of a generally low-level, simmeringc­onflict.

Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus said the latest Israeli sortie, the third of the day, struck some 40 Hamas targets including tunnels, logistical centers and a Hamas battalion headquarte­rs. He said the escalation was the result of the sustained Hamas rocket attacks, its fomenting of violence along the border and its campaign of launching incendiary kites and balloons that have devastated Israeli farmlands and nature reserves.

“Our message to Hamas is that we can and will enhance the intensity of our effort if needed,” he said. “What Hamas is doing is pushing them ever closer to the edge of the abyss ... Hamas will have to understand that there is a price to be paid.”

The Health Ministry in Gaza said the teenagers, ages 15 and 16, were killed by shrapnel following an Israeli attack on a Hamas training facility. Projectile­s fell next to a synagogue and in the yard of a home in the Israeli town of Sderot, the Ynet news website reported. One person was wounded moderately and two were hurt lightly, Israel’s Magen David Adom rescue service said.

Israel has been warning Hamas in recent weeks that while it has no interest in engaging in the kind of conflict that led to the sides fighting three wars over the past decade, it would not tolerate Gaza militants’ continued efforts to breach the border and its campaign to devastate Israeli border communitie­s with incendiary attacks.

On Friday, thousands of Palestinia­ns gathered near the Gaza border for their near-weekly protest.

A 15-year-old Palestinia­n who tried to climb over the fence into Israel was shot dead. Later the military said an Israeli officer was moderately wounded by a grenade thrown at him.

Gaza’s health ministry also said Saturday that a 20year-old struck by gunfire Friday during the protests in the southern Gaza Strip had also died of his wounds.

The Islamic militant group Hamas that rules Gaza has led border protests aimed in part at drawing attention to the Israeli-Egyptian blockade imposed after Hamas took control of Gaza in 2007.

The demonstrat­ions have been fueled in large part by pervasive despair caused by the blockade, which has caused widespread economic hardship.

 ?? Khalil Hamra/Associated Press ?? Smoke rises in the background after an Israeli airstrike hits a government building Saturday in Gaza City.
Khalil Hamra/Associated Press Smoke rises in the background after an Israeli airstrike hits a government building Saturday in Gaza City.

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