Prime minister to meet with foreign diplomats, prepare ground for possible Gaza operation

Prime minister to meet with foreign diplomats, prepare ground for possible Gaza operation | The Times of Israel.

Following two-day escalation in which over 140 rockets were fired on southern Israel from the Strip, Netanyahu says the IDF is ready to intensify the response

November 12, 2012, 8:07 am 2
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem on November 11 (photo credit: Miriam Alster/Flash90)

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem on November 11 (photo credit: Miriam Alster/Flash90)

Prime Minister Netanyahu is scheduled to meet with foreign diplomats on Monday to update them on the Gaza situation and prepare world opinion for a possible extensive military operation in the Strip.

Southern Israel has come under heavy rocket and mortar fire from Gaza over the last two days, during which more than 140 projectiles were fired by terror groups, disrupting normal routines and closing schools throughout the region. Three people have been injured and several houses damaged in the barrage.

Israel has so far responded with preventive and retaliatory airstrikes, targeting rocket launching squads and other terrorist infrastructures, killing six and injuring dozens.

Fighting continued Monday despite reports of an Egyptian moderated truce that was supposed to take effect Sunday evening. Cabinet ministers, heads of southern regional councils and citizens of the south have called on the government to authorize the IDF to carry out missions that will restore Israel’s deterrence and lead to an extended period of calm in the region.

Netanyahu held consultations with defense establishment leaders on Sunday and was briefed on various military options to tackle the situation in Gaza.

“The IDF is operating, and will operate forcefully against the terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip, which are sustaining heavy blows from the IDF,” the prime minister said on Sunday. “The world needs to understand that Israel will not sit idly by in the face of attempts to attack us. We are prepared to intensify the response.”

Defense Minister Ehud Barak made clear that Israel would not hesitate to reenter Gaza. “If we are forced to go back into Gaza in order to deal Hamas a [serious] blow and restore security for all of Israel’s citizens, then we will not hesitate to do so,” he said.

Vice Prime Minister Moshe Ya’alon denied Monday that Israel had agreed to a truce with Gaza organizations. “I don’t know of any request for a ceasefire by Hamas, nor of any actions taken with that goal in mind by Gaza,” he said in an interview to Army Radio.

Ya’alon indicated he supported the resumption of targeted killing operations against terrorists leaders, a strategy he said worked well during his time at the helm of the IDF during 2003-2004.

On Sunday, Ya’alon spoke about the possibility of a Cast Lead-style ground operation deep in the Gaza Strip, saying Israel would first try to achieve its goals with more moderate force.

“Everything is being weighed and will be weighed,” he intimated, when asked if he was talking about a “Cast Lead II.”

Internal Defense Minister Yitzhak Aharonovich said the IDF needed to respond forcefully to the Gaza rocket fire in order to bring an end to the “insufferable” situation in the south.

Speaking on Israel Radio Monday, Aharonovich said Hamas was responsible for the attacks from Gaza and that the results of any IDF action must be “painful.”

Aharonovich said he does not support re-conquering the Gaza Strip, which Israel unilaterally withdrew from in 2005, but said that the army had many tools at its disposal. He said that Hamas only understands force and that Israel has the means to overcome it.

“We need to create a completely different deterrence situation” in regards to the “terrorist state” in the Gaza Strip, Home Front Defense Minister Avi Dichter said in a Sunday interview with Army Radio.

Dichter, who recently joined Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s ruling Likud party, noted that “nobody should think Israel’s actions will be affected by upcoming elections. [Operation] Cast Lead came during an elections period [in 2008-9], and so did [the 1981 attack on the Iraqi nuclear reactor at] Osirak.”

Dichter wouldn’t specify what kind of Israeli response could change the rules of the game, and stopped short of calling for a large-scale IDF ground excursion into the Gaza Strip.

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One Comment on “Prime minister to meet with foreign diplomats, prepare ground for possible Gaza operation”


  1. Mladen Andrijasevic
    November 11, 2012 
    3:00 pm

    I was listening to Leonard Cohen’s Suzanne on the way to work this morning, but had my window lowered an inch to hear the sirens go off. For all the communities near the Gaza Strip had already been hit – Sderot, Ashkelon, Ashdod, Eshkol…. we could expect to be next. Another consequence of irresponsible 69 percent of American Jews voting for Obama whose administration donated $900m to Hamas … was I pissed !

    And we were hit, as expected. At 2 pm the sirens went off. The two safe rooms were packed with programmers, some talking, continuing to discuss work, some calling their families . How long is this bizarre show going to last? What country on the planet would tolerate that an encircled militarily inferior enemy lob dozens of rockets on its cities with impunity ? We in Be’er Sheva have 60 seconds to take cover or get killed, the people in Sderot have 15 seconds. The worst is to get caught at a red light in an intersection surrounded by other vehicles. Your only choice is to lie on the pavement and hope the Iron Done will work. How would you in the US like to play this Palestinian roulette?

    http://www.algemeiner.com/2012/11/11/report-beersheba-mayor-says-southern-israel-in-war-of-attrition/


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