Orlando Sentinel

Israel escalates strikes on Gaza

Palestinia­ns say 23 killed; rockets rain upon Israeli towns

- By Joel Greenberg

JERUSALEM — Israel launched a fierce air and sea offensive across the Gaza Strip on Tuesday following a wave of rocket launches by the militant group Hamas, pounding targets across the coastal enclave in a barrage that killed at least 23 people and injured more than 100, Palestinia­n health officials said.

Air raid sirens sounded in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv as volleys of rockets sailed into Israel. Israeli soldiers killed five Palestinia­n gunmen who landed from the sea on Israel’s southern coast. Both sides threatened to step up their assaults.

Hostilitie­s have flared across the Gaza border since the kidnapping and killing last month of three Israeli teenagers in the West Bank, which Israel blamed on Hamas, and the subsequent slaying lastweek of a Palestinia­n teenager. After Egyptian attempts to broker a cease-fire failed, the crossborde­r fighting intensifie­d.

The Israeli Security Cabinet approved calling up 40,000 reservists as troops and tanks were mobilized around the Gaza Strip, signaling a readiness to launch a ground operation.

But analysts said the move was intended as a threat to back up a calibrated escalation designed to press Hamas to halt the rocket fire while avoiding getting bogged down in a costly ground war.

In a televised statement, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he had ordered a “significan­t broadening” of army operations in Gaza, and he urged Israelis to be patient.

The army said it had hit 270 targets across the Gaza Strip, including the homes of Hamas operatives, concealed rocket launchers, tunnels, weapons depots and training bases.

Aspokesman for the Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of Hamas, warned Tuesday night that if Israel continued to bomb houses in Gaza, the group would “broaden the range of targeting,” striking deeper into Israel.

Less than two hours later, dozens of long-range rockets were fired at cities and towns in central and southern Israel. Three landed near Jerusalem, and two were intercepte­d over Tel Aviv. Bomb shelters were opened in both cities. One rocket reached Hadera, north of Tel Aviv, more than 70 miles from Gaza.

In a seaborne raid in southern Israel, five Hamas gunmen tried to infiltrate an Israeli army base at Zikim, close to the Gaza border. An army spokesman said that after the group was spotted by a lookout, the militants were killed in a firefight.

In the deadliest air attack in Gaza, Palestinia­ns said seven people were killed and more than two dozen wounded, including women and children, when a house belonging to the Kawara family was struck in the city of Khan Younis.

According to a report on local television, people had gathered on the roof of the house to serve as human shields after Israel fired a small warning rocket at the building, but it was bombarded anyway. The Israeli army said it was checking the report.

A senior operative in Hamas’ naval commando unit was killed with at least two other people when rockets struck his car, the army and Palestinia­ns said, and another militant was reportedly killed when his house was bombed.

More than 150 rockets and mortar rounds were launched at Israel, most of them landing in open areas, while 29 rockets aimed at populated areas were intercepte­d by Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system, the military said.

Residents of Israeli towns within a 25-mile radius of Gaza were ordered to stay close to safe rooms, summer camp activities were suspended and large gatherings were forbidden as a precaution against the continuing rocket fire.

Analysts said that while neither Israel nor Hamas had wanted a full-blown confrontat­ion, events on the ground were creating a dynamic of their own.

Netanyahu had been pressed by hard-line partners in his governing coalition, and by hawkish members of his own party, to respond forcefully to the continuing rocket attacks from Gaza. And Hamas, politicall­y isolated and facing stepped-up airstrikes from Israel, could not be seen to be standing by, experts said.

Hamas, which controls Gaza, has been weakened by the removal of its patron, the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, in Egypt, analysts said, adding that a reconcilia­tion accord with the Fatah movement of Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has failed to produce real power-sharing.

Hamas’ military wing, rather than the political leadership, was calling the shots now, said Mkhaimar Abusada, a professor of political science at Al-Azar University in Gaza City. “We all know that the Qassam Brigades are the ones in control of Hamas.”

 ?? MOHAMMED SABER/EPA PHOTO ?? Smoke billows from the Gaza Strip on Tuesday. The Israeli army said it had hit almost 300 targets across Gaza, which is controlled by the militant group Hamas.
MOHAMMED SABER/EPA PHOTO Smoke billows from the Gaza Strip on Tuesday. The Israeli army said it had hit almost 300 targets across Gaza, which is controlled by the militant group Hamas.

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