Miami Herald

Israeli troops enter Gaza strip in advance of ground invasion

- BY STEVE HENDRIX, SHIRA RUBIN AND MICHAEL E. MILLER

Israeli troops have crossed into the Gaza Strip, the Israeli military said early Friday, as artillery, tanks and war planes joined in a withering assault on the Palestinia­n enclave, and the Israeli military readied at least three brigades of troops for action, raising the prospect of an all-out ground invasion.

Shortly after midnight, the Israeli military announced that air and ground forces had joined in an attack on Gaza, but a military spokeswoma­n did not detail the number or type of troops that had crossed the border.

For most of Thursday, the air war between Israelis and Palestinia­ns had raged unabated with casualties continuing to climb on both sides amid rocket fire and airstrikes.

Violence also continued to spread within Israel as officials braced for a fourth night of street unrest that has seen Arab Israelis and right-wing Jewish Israelis fight one another in towns across the country. Israeli politician­s from across the ideologica­l spectrum condemned attacks by “vigilantes” from both sides, and commentato­rs warned that the communal upheaval may be harder to stop than the military conflict between Israel and the Hamas militant group, which governs Gaza.

Soon after sunset Thursday, clashes between Jewish

and Arab Israelis had resumed in several cities.

The reciprocal bombardmen­t has taken a mounting toll on transporta­tion and other infrastruc­ture in

Israel and Gaza. Under a rain of more than 1,700 rockets fired from Gaza, Israel’s Ben Gurion Airport, the country’s main link to the outside world, closed indefinite­ly to incoming flights. Israeli media reported that rockets struck Israel’s secondary Ramon Airport, where flights had been diverted.

In Gaza, damage to power lines cut daily electricit­y in some parts of the enclave to around three hours. Residents awoke on the normally joyous Eid al-Fitr holiday to pillars of smoke rising from sites bombed by the Israeli military. In the midst of the worst attacks in seven years, streets that would normally bustle with families going to pay holiday visits were quiet.

Gaza’s Health Ministry said 109 Palestinia­ns, including 28 children, had been killed by Thursday night. It said 621 people have been wounded.

On some blocks, displaced residents picked through the rubble of destroyed homes. In northern Gaza City on Thursday morning, Zaher Sbieh pulled two stuffed sheep from what had been a five-story apartment building. They would be a nice surprise for his four children, who are now staying with family in Jabaliya.

The building was demolished by an airstrike Wednesday afternoon, 90

minutes after Sbieh’s brother, who lived in an apartment next door, got an urgent call: Get out now. The call was from an Israeli military officer, Sbieh said. The officer said the building next door was a target. The brothers and their families joined the panicked rush down the stairs as the building emptied. When he returned later that evening, it was gone.

“I lost everything, my clothing, books, laptops, photo albums,” said Sbieh, 48, who runs a youth and community advocacy

group. “I evacuated with the clothes I’m wearing.”

Mohammad Qadada, 31, said that the Israeli demolition of the 13-story Hanadi building, which houses his IT company’s offices, has caused him to consider leaving the Gaza Strip.

“I always said, ‘I can’t leave my country, I can’t leave my country.’ But now, I can’t be in my country,’’ said Qadada, who plans to try obtaining Swedish citizenshi­p through his Swedish-born wife.

‘‘We lived through the

first war in Gaza in 2008; it was the worst one. But, for me, the past two days are worse than ever because I have a family. When you look at your son who is crying from the bombing, my wife’s tears, my mother’s tears, it is exhausting,’’ he said.

In Israel, where seven people – six civilians and one soldier — have been killed since the rocketing began on Monday, families were also counting their losses. The slain civilians include a teenage girl and a young boy who died Wednesday evening from an earlier rocket strike on the family’s bomb shelter in Sderot near the border with Gaza, local media reported.

Late Thursday, Lebanese media reported rockets being fired from southern Lebanon toward Israel. Israel’s military said three rockets had landed in the Mediterran­ean Sea. A media liaison for the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah, which has repeatedly battled Israeli forces, declined to comment on the attack, and Israeli media reported that the rockets had been fired by Palestinia­ns in Lebanon.

The prospect of even fiercer fighting seemed to grow Thursday as two Israeli infantry brigades and an armored one readied for ground operations, according to Israeli military spokesman Lt. Col. Jonathan Conricus. No orders to invade Gaza have been given, he added, but the troops are preparing for the possibilit­y. Israeli troops last entered Gaza en masse during a two-month war in 2014, when more than 2,200 Gazans were killed.

The Palestinia­ns were also talking tough. ‘‘We have much more to give,’’ a Hamas spokesman known as Abu Obaida said in a televised statement. ‘‘The decision to hit Tel Aviv, Dimona and Jerusalem is easier for us than drinking water. Your technology and assassinat­ions don’t scare us.’’

Diplomats from the Middle East, Europe and the United States scrambled to broker a cease-fire before the conflict took another devastatin­g turn. Arabic media reported that an Egyptian delegation arrived in Tel Aviv on Thursday. Hady Amr, the U.S. deputy assistant secretary of state for Israel and Palestinia­n affairs, was also on his way, the State Department said.

Even as Israeli troops were readied for action in Gaza, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced that he would separately deploy the military in restive Israeli towns to quell the ‘‘anarchy.’’ He said he has ordered police to adopt ‘‘emergency powers’’ and intends to ‘‘bring in military forces according to the existing law, and we will pass an additional law if necessary.’’

‘‘What is happening in Israel’s cities over the past few days is unacceptab­le,’’ Netanyahu said on Twitter of the worst Jewish-Arab violence inside Israel in decades. ‘‘We have seen Arab rioters set fire to synagogues and vehicles and attack police officers. They are attacking peaceful and innocent citizens.’’

 ?? ABDEL KAREEM HANA AP ?? Palestinia­ns carry the body of a child found in the rubble of a house that was destroyed in Israeli airstrikes in the town of Beit Lahiya in the northern Gaza Strip on Thursday.
ABDEL KAREEM HANA AP Palestinia­ns carry the body of a child found in the rubble of a house that was destroyed in Israeli airstrikes in the town of Beit Lahiya in the northern Gaza Strip on Thursday.
 ?? ARIEL SCHALIT AP ?? An Israeli artillery unit fires toward targets in the Gaza Strip on Thursday.
ARIEL SCHALIT AP An Israeli artillery unit fires toward targets in the Gaza Strip on Thursday.

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