MIFTAH
Tuesday, 2 July. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

The most recent Israeli offensive in Gaza, which has claimed 23 Palestinian lives in the last five days, will continue in the coming days, Israeli military spokesmen announced Sunday. The stated goal of the offensive is to halt arms flow from Egypt into the Gaza Strip, and to prevent rocket fire from the Strip into Israel. The recent Jewish holiday season saw an increase in Qassam rocket fire into the Western Negev, injuring three civilians in the border town of Sderot. Israeli officials have pledged to use any means necessary to prevent these attacks.

“Our policy is clear—we will deploy all of our efforts to prevent these firings and this contraband,” Defense Ministry official Amos Gilad told Army Radio. These efforts, he added, would include “ground and air attacks on terrorists and their infrastructure.”

On Thursday, the army received the go-ahead to intensify its assault on the debilitated and impoverished strip. Over the weekend, ground troops and tanks backed by helicopter gun ships made their way across the northern part of the Gaza Strip, carrying out a search-and-destroy mission for weapons stores and suspected militants.

Since Thursday, 23 Palestinians have been killed, with the majority of the deaths coming over the weekend. The victims include two children, aged 10 and 14, as well as a 29-year-old mother of five children, who was shot by an Israeli sniper while standing in the doorway of her Khan Yunis home.

More than a dozen tanks stormed the strip early Saturday morning as clashes between Israeli and Palestinian forces increased. On the same day, an Israeli gunship fired five missiles at a group of suspected Hamas activists, rumored to be en route to attacking Israeli soldiers. Seven were killed, and dozens wounded. Israeli forces also killed two Fatah-linked militants on Saturday, who were allegedly involved in producing Qassam rockets. Seven people were also killed on Friday, including local Hamas commander Imad al-Makusi, along with two of his men.

Palestinian Minister for Refugee Affairs, Atef Adwan (Hamas), responded to the assault with the following statement: “We are calling on the international community to curb Israeli crimes against the Palestinians. Israel is killing people to try to make our society collapse. They are attacking and besieging us all because of one soldier. They are punishing every Palestinian, not just in Gaza, but in the West Bank too. They are depriving our people of the essentials of their lives."

Israeli forces have killed 320 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip, many of them civilians, since the capture of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit on 25 June 2006.

The latest attacks on the Gaza Strip come amid rumors of increased weapon smuggling into the territory from Egypt. According to Israeli officials, the latest offensive is an attempt to stem weapons smuggling and ensure Israeli tactical advantage while operating in the strip. According to Brigadier General Yossi Baidatz of the IDF Intelligence Research Department, Hamas has recently obtained anti-aircraft missiles in addition to other weaponry. The army is hoping to crack down on this weapons smuggling, because intelligence experts predict that Israeli soldiers could encounter much stiffer resistance in the Gaza Strip, and they are also wary of the increased risk posed to Israeli aircrafts flying assault missions over the territory.

Recent reports suggest that weapons shipments from Egypt to the Gaza Strip include the same Russian made-anti tank missiles used by Hezbollah fighters in the recent Lebanon war. These weapons proved surprisingly affective at destroying Israeli tanks, rumored to be among the strongest in the world. Also included in weapons shipments are Kayatusha type rockets and upgraded Grad rockets (another variety of ground-to-ground missile), as well as sniper rifles.

The Israeli military has faced intense criticism for its tactical blunders in the Lebanon war, therefore it is not surprising that military officials are taking careful precautions not to underestimate the military potential of Hamas. Israeli military heads fear that underestimation could lead to the loss of military advantage in the war-torn strip.

Defense Minister Amir Peretz has also urged the Egyptian government to help stymie smuggling efforts. Reflecting on the mistakes made in Lebanon, he told news sources “…we will not allow terrorist organizations to become stronger.”

 
 
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