Palestinians inspected a vehicle in Gaza yesterday after an Israeli air strike. Israel said it was retaliating for a barrage of mortar and rocket fire into southern Israel.
(MOHAMMED SALEM/REUTERS)
Israeli strikes in Gaza kill 7 Palestinians
Defense minister warns Hamas
Palestinians inspected a vehicle in Gaza yesterday after an Israeli air strike. Israel said it was retaliating for a barrage of mortar and rocket fire into southern Israel.
(MOHAMMED SALEM/REUTERS)
GAZA CITY - Israeli forces killed seven Palestinians in an air strike and ground assault in the Gaza Strip yesterday, retaliating for a barrage of mortar and rocket fire into southern Israel.
On the bloodiest day in Gaza since Israel declared it a "hostile territory" last week, Defense Minister Ehud Barak warned that the military was "moving closer to a broad and complex operation" in the enclave ruled by the Islamic movement Hamas.
The Israeli air strike hit a jeep on a Gaza City highway, killing three occupants and wounding the fourth, hospital officials said. The targeted men were members of the Army of Islam, a Hamas offshoot involved in the capture last year of an Israeli soldier who is still missing and the March kidnapping of a British Broadcasting Corp. correspondent who was later freed.
The Israeli military said the jeep was transporting rockets to launch sites.
Dozens of Palestinians surrounded the wrecked vehicle, some dipping their hands in the dead men's blood and crying out for revenge.
About 10 miles to the north, Israeli troops backed by dozens of tanks and armored bulldozers moved into Beit Hanoun, setting off clashes with Hamas and other armed groups. Hospital officials said 17 Palestinians were wounded in the fighting.
Witnesses said an Israeli tank shell struck a residential building in Beit Hanoun, killing a militant who had been firing rocket- propelled grenades at the tanks. Hospital officials said three teenagers in a crowd of bystanders also were killed by the shell.
The Popular Resistance Committees said the dead militant was one of its members.
Israel said the raids were a response to the recent bombardment of Israeli border towns, including 20 mortar shells and 10 rockets fired yesterday. Much of the fire comes from Beit Hanoun.
Small militant groups such as the Popular Resistance Committees and Islamic Jihad fire most of the rockets, with little apparent interference from Hamas. By designating Gaza as a hostile territory, Israel formally held the strip's leadership responsible for the attacks, a precursor to a possible cutoff of electricity, water, and fuel to the strip's 1.5 million people.
Ismail Haniyeh, the Hamas leader in Gaza, called Israel's military offensive "a new wave of Israeli aggression" and said it would only strengthen the resolve of Palestinians to fight back.
Israel withdrew Jewish settlers and military bases from the Gaza Strip in 2005 after 38 years of occupation. Palestinians there say they are still fighting occupation because Israel controls the territory's borders, waters, and air space.
In a sign that rocket-launching cells might spread to the West Bank, Palestinian security officials said yesterday that they had seized two homemade rockets in Bethlehem and turned them over to the Israeli army.
The West Bank-based government of the Palestinian Authority's president, Mahmoud Abbas, has been cooperating more with Israel since Hamas gunmen seized control of Gaza in June, ousting security forces loyal to him.
In the West Bank city of Nablus, meanwhile, the Israeli army arrested the fifth and last remaining wanted suspect in a deadly mob attack on two Israeli reservists in 2000.![]()
