Los Angeles Times

Gaza border blast wounds soldiers

In a now-typical pattern, a series of retaliator­y clashes with Israel ensues.

- By Noga Tarnopolsk­y Tarnopolsk­y is a special correspond­ent.

JERUSALEM — A bomb exploded near an Israeli military patrol along the border with Gaza on Saturday afternoon, leading to an exchange of gunfire that lasted into the night.

Four Israeli soldiers were injured when a boobytrapp­ed Palestinia­n flag exploded as they stopped to examine it during a routine patrol. One of the gravely wounded soldiers was a squadron commander in the Corps of Engineers.

In response, an Israeli tank targeted an observatio­n point belonging to Islamic Jihad, one of the militias active in the Gaza Strip.

Israel Defense Forces spokesman Brig. Gen. Ronen Manelis said Israel holds the Gaza Strip’s ruling paramilita­ry group, Hamas, responsibl­e for everything occurring in the Strip.

A few hours later, incoming rocket warning sirens rang out in several communitie­s on Israel’s southern border as projectile­s were launched from Gaza. One rocket hit a home in the kibbutz, or communal village, of Shaar Hanegev but failed to detonate.

No Israeli casualties were reported but two residents were taken to a hospital.

The Israeli army said it retaliated with a “large-scale attack” that hit six Hamas targets, including two military bases and a tunnel from Gaza into Israel.

The Israeli army believes the coalition of militants belonging to various Islamist factions calling itself the Popular Resistance Committees in Gaza hung the f lag at the border with the intent of luring Israeli soldiers who patrol the area.

In a statement, the Popular Resistance Committees described the bomb as “a heroic act in response to the enemy’s infiltrati­on into the Gaza Strip.”

Saturday’s flare-up is typical of the pattern establishe­d since the 2014 ceasefire between Israel and Gaza, in which the militant provocatio­ns from the Strip result in immediate but limited retaliatio­ns from the Israeli side, but it also exemplifie­s the line’s volatility.

The region has seen a marked increase in violence since President Trump’s December announceme­nt that the U.S. would recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, with Friday protests at the border and in the West Bank becoming a regular feature. There were also clashes Saturday between Israeli forces and Palestinia­ns.

The Israeli army believes the flag was put up during a Friday demonstrat­ion in which the Palestinia­n Health Ministry reported that more than 20 Palestinia­ns were wounded.

The Israeli army’s chief of staff, Gen. Gadi Eisenkot, recently warned of the dangers posed to Israel by the deteriorat­ing humanitari­an situation in Gaza — blockaded by Israel and Egypt and punished by the Palestinia­n leadership based in Ramallah, which has been mired in discord with Hamas.

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