Los Angeles Times

Low-level fighting persists in Gaza

With talks at an impasse, the battle between Israel and Palestinia­n militants appears to be settling into a war of attrition.

- By Laura King and Batsheva Sobelman laura.king@latimes.com King is a Times staff writer and Sobelman is a special correspond­ent. Special correspond­ent Maher Abukhater in Ramallah, West Bank, and special correspond­ent Rushdi abu Alouf in Gaza City contribu

JERUSALEM — Amid efforts to revive stalled talks in Cairo, Israeli forces and Palestinia­n militants in the Gaza Strip traded blows again Saturday, with a volley of rockets fired toward Israel and the Israeli military striking dozens of targets across the coastal enclave.

However, the fighting was far less intense than at the height of the confrontat­ion, which peaked before Israel pulled out its ground forces last week. With Israel having claimed to meet its aims of destroying Hamasdug infiltrati­on tunnels under the border and eroding militants’ weapons caches, the battle showed signs of settling into a relatively low-level war of attrition.

An Israeli military official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Israel Radio that rocket fire from Gaza could continue for many more days and that Hamas and allied militants were shifting toward using locally made rockets and mortars with a shorter range than the more sophistica­ted weapons fired this month at Israeli cities, including Tel Aviv.

Israel, for its part, appeared to be moving toward targeted strikes against militant figures, rather than the large-scale destructio­n that characteri­zed the early days of the offensive. Those killed in the latest bombardmen­t reportedly included a Hamas official and two suspected militants who were hit as they were riding on a motorbike.

Saturday marked a second day of renewed hostilitie­s in the month-old war after a three-day truce crumbled Friday morning. Palestinia­n health officials reported eight deaths in the Israeli attacks, including three men killed in a strike on a mosque in the Nusseirat refugee camp in central Gaza.

In the course of the war in Gaza, more than 60 mosques have been destroyed and 150 badly damaged by Israeli strikes, according to Palestinia­n religious authoritie­s — a tally compiled before the new bombardmen­t Saturday, when more than one mosque was hit. Israel has accused Hamas of using mosques to store weapons and conceal tunnels.

The Israeli military, aware of the sensitivit­y of striking religious sites, released video Saturday of an aerial strike a day earlier on what it described as a rocket launcher set up adjacent to a Gaza mosque. The video appeared to show the mosque left intact.

The government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has come under heavy internatio­nal criticism for air and artillery strikes that leveled whole residentia­l neighborho­ods, with a correspond­ingly large civilian death toll.

More than 1,900 Palestinia­ns have been killed, with human rights groups and the United Nations saying two-thirds of those were civilians. Israel has said up to 900 of those killed were fighters for Hamas or an allied faction.

Netanyahu has forcefully defended Israeli strikes on densely populated areas, saying that every effort was made to warn those living there and that Hamas had deliberate­ly put noncombata­nts in danger by digging tunnels and setting up rocket-launching sites in civilian areas.

Meanwhile, some Israelis living in the south of the country, which remains the most vulnerable to rocket and mortar fire, are venting anger and frustratio­n at the Israeli defense establish- ment. The mayor of the southern town of Sderot, Alon Davidi, lambasted Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon, saying he had failed to deliver security, Israeli news reports said.

Efforts to forge a longer cease-fire and address underlying issues have been fitful and rocky but do not appear to have broken down irretrieva­bly.

The head of the Palestinia­n delegation to the Cairo talks, Azzam Ahmed, suggested that indirect talks were going ahead despite disagreeme­nts over Hamas’ principal demand, a lifting of a blockade of the coastal ter- ritory as a preconditi­on of any cease-fire.

The Israeli delegation left Cairo before the Jewish Sabbath, which begins at sundown Friday and ends at sundown Saturday, but Israeli reports suggested the envoys would return to the bargaining table.

 ?? Roberto Schmidt
AFP/Getty Images ?? RESCUE WORKERS try to retrieve a body from the ruins of Al Qassam mosque in the Nusseirat refugee camp in the Gaza Strip. More than 60 mosques have been destroyed and 150 badly damaged during the monthlong battle with Israel, Palestinia­n authoritie­s...
Roberto Schmidt AFP/Getty Images RESCUE WORKERS try to retrieve a body from the ruins of Al Qassam mosque in the Nusseirat refugee camp in the Gaza Strip. More than 60 mosques have been destroyed and 150 badly damaged during the monthlong battle with Israel, Palestinia­n authoritie­s...

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