Israelis storm Gaza neighborhood
Talks in Egypt will determine Israel’s next move, military officials said.
GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — Terrified residents ran for cover Tuesday in a densely populated neighborhood of Gaza City as Israeli troops backed by tanks thrust deeper into the city and sought Hamas fighters in alleyways and cellars.
On the diplomatic front, Egyptian mediators pushed Hamas to accept a truce proposal and, in a hopeful sign, Israel sent its lead negotiator to Cairo for “decisive” talks on a cease-fire. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon also headed for the region to join diplomatic efforts.
Israeli military officials say that depending on what happens with what they described as “decisive” talks in Cairo, Israel will move closer to a cease-fire or widen its offensive. They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were discussing sensitive policy matters.
Asked if Israel’s war aims had been achieved, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said: “Most of them; probably not all of them.”
Israeli troops now have the coastal city of 400,000 virtually surrounded as part of an offensive launched Dec. 27 to end years of Palestinian rocket attacks on its southern towns.
Palestinian medical officials reported at least 42 deaths from the conflict Tuesday throughout Gaza.
The army said three soldiers were wounded, including an officer who was searching a northern Gaza house when a bomb exploded.
Palestinian hospital officials say more than 940 Palestinians, half of them civilians, have been killed in the fighting. Thirteen Israelis, at least nine of them soldiers, have died.
Palestinian rocket fire has dropped significantly since the offensive was launched. Some 15 rockets and mortar shells were fired toward Israel on Tuesday, causing no injuries, the army said.
Fireballs and smoke plumes from Israeli bombings have become a common sight in the territory of 1.4 million people, who are effectively trapped because of blockaded border crossings. Recent fighting has focused on Gaza City, where Israeli soldiers could be increasingly exposed to the treacherous conditions of urban warfare.
The operation in Tel Hawwa neighborhood, one mile southeast of downtown, matched fast-paced forays into other areas designed to avoid Israeli casualties. Residents said troops entered overnight, reconnoitered the area and then pulled back to more secure positions.
One Israeli military officer told The Associated Press that Hamas fighters often operate in small groups of up to four and have largely refrained from confronting Israeli troops at close range.
“Their strategy has mainly been to use lots of booby-traps, shooting guns and missiles from afar,” the Israeli officer said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.
“Soldiers are taking lots of precautions; they are being more careful than the army has ever been before in any war,” he said. “Soldiers shoot at anything suspicious, use lots of firepower and blast holes through walls to move around.”
Gabi Ashkenazi, chief of staff of the Israeli military, said Hamas militants also have put on Israeli military uniforms to try to approach troops and carry out suicide bombings.
Hamas, which is backed by Iran, cannot hope to score a battlefield victory over the powerful Israeli military, but mere survival could earn it political capital in the Arab world as a symbol of resistance to the Jewish state. Lebanon’s Hezbollah, another Iran-backed group, largely achieved that goal in its 2006 war with Israel.
On Tuesday, a Gaza resident said he saw Hamas militants in civilian clothing firing rockets from the southeastern corner of the territory. He spoke by telephone and requested anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information.
Israel says it will push forward with the offensive until Hamas ends all rocket fire on southern Israel and there are guarantees the militant group will stop smuggling weapons into Gaza through the porous Egyptian border.
43
