The Jerusalem Post

IDF to boost troops in South

Decision to send reinforcem­ents follows confab with Shin Bet

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

The IDF will significan­tly reinforce troops in southern Israel to prevent terrorist infiltrati­on from the Gaza Strip, the IDF said Thursday .

The decision to send reinforcem­ents, including snipers as well as infantry and armored forces, was made following a situationa­l assessment by IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Gadi Eisenkot along with senior IDF and Shin Bet officials.

“The IDF is prepared for a variety of scenarios and sees Hamas as responsibl­e for everything that happens in the Gaza Strip and from the Gaza Strip,” read the statement.

In addition to the reinforcem­ents, the IDF has reportedly deployed the Iron Dome missile defense system over concerns of mortar and rocket fire from the blockaded coastal enclave.

On Wednesday evening, at least 1,000 Palestinia­ns violently demonstrat­ed at several locations along the Gaza border fence, burning tires and throwing stones at IDF soldiers who responded with crowd-dispersal methods.

According to the official Palestinia­n news agency Wafa, 15-year-old Ahmad Samir Abu Habel was killed after he was hit in the head by a gas canister

fired by Israeli troops near the Beit Hanun/Erez crossing in the northern Gaza Strip. Another 20 Gazans were injured.

Earlier in the day, two Palestinia­ns were arrested after they were seen crossing into southern Israel from Gaza. A knife was found on one of the suspects.

Close to 190 Palestinia­ns have been killed and thousands injured since March 30, when the Gaza border protests calling for an end to the 12-year Israeli blockade of the Gaza Strip began.

In an interview with Yediot Aharonot and La Repubblica, Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar denied that the group was gearing up for another conflict with Israel, but warned of war if the group is attacked.

“A new war is in no one’s interest, certainly not our interest. Who really wants to confront a nuclear superpower with four slingshots? War doesn’t achieve anything,” he said.

“It’s important to make it clear: If we’re attacked, we’ll defend ourselves, as always. And we will have another war. But then in a year you’ll be here again. And I’ll again tell you that with war you achieve nothing.”

Yediot touted the interview as Sinwar’s first to Israeli media since he became the Hamas leader in Gaza. But Sinwar later denied that he knew the interview was conducted for an Israeli paper, accusing Italian journalist Francesca Burri of deceiving him by saying that she entered Gaza under the pretext of interviewi­ng him for Italy’s La Repubblica newspaper.

Meanwhile, a Hamas delegation headed by the group’s deputy leader, Saleh al-Arouri, returned from Cairo Wednesday after four days of discussion­s with top Egyptian intelligen­ce officials, including Egyptian Intelligen­ce Minister Maj.-Gen. Abbas Kamel.

The discussion­s revolved around both a possible reconcilia­tion with Fatah and an arrangemen­t in Gaza that would include a long-term cease-fire agreement with Israel.

The Gazan terrorist group had vowed to intensify the riots in response to the collapse of the cease-fire talks with Israel mediated by Egypt.

Later in the day, Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman – along with Eisenkot, the head of the Intelligen­ce Unit and the Coordinato­r of Government Activities in the Territorie­s – conducted a situationa­l assessment meeting on the developmen­ts in the Gaza Strip, the Defense Ministry announced.

Liberman noted that the forces near the Strip are ready, and instructed the IDF to remain on high alert and prepare for any scenario. •

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