Archive for November 17, 2012

Operation Pillar of Defense: A clash of arms and narratives

November 17, 2012

Operation Pillar of Defense: A clash of arms and narratives | The Times of Israel.

Current historical moment takes on particular potential for instability and escalation

November 17, 2012, 3:59 am 1
Smoke rises from a building in the northern Gaza Strip after an Israeli airstrike on November 16 (photo credit: Uri Lenz/Flash90)

Smoke rises from a building in the northern Gaza Strip after an Israeli airstrike on November 16 (photo credit: Uri Lenz/Flash90)

JERUSALEM (AP) — Since Israel completed a devastating military offensive in the Gaza Strip four years ago, military officials have warned it was only a matter of time before the next round of fighting. Violence erupted this week with little warning, driven by Hamas’ ambitions to make its mark on a changing Middle East and an Israeli government reacting to public outcry over rocket attacks just weeks ahead of national elections.

It is a clash of wills driven by wildly contradictory narratives nurtured over the years by two deeply antagonistic societies with little in common save a deep-seated sense of historical grievance and victimization.

From Israel’s perspective, the fact that it withdrew from Gaza in 2005, pulling out all soldiers and settlements after a 38-year occupation, should have been the end of its troubles with the 1.6 million Palestinians there. The continued rocket attacks — especially since Hamas terrorists seized the coastal strip from the more moderate Fatah faction in 2006 — are seen as an outrage that justifies extreme measures. No country, Israelis argue, could possibly be asked to tolerate a decade of rocket attacks.

That view aligns with a deeper historical grievance: Israelis feel their Zionist movement was fundamentally a return home from two millennia of exile but that it was met from the beginning by Arab rejection and violence. The Holocaust, the World War II slaughter of 6 million Jews by the Nazis even as Jews were building their state-in-waiting, further fed the sense of victimization accompanied by a distrust of the world and an obsession with self-reliance.

Hamas, on the other hand, rejects any Jewish connection to the Holy Land and views Israel as a colonial outpost in the heart of the Islamic world that must be destroyed. And among Palestinians, the Gazans’ specific sense of victimization stems most directly from the miserable living conditions in a crowded, besieged and impoverished coastal strip a few miles wide. Israel’s soldiers and settlers may be gone, but Israel continues to seal off its border with Gaza, blockades its seacoast for fear of weapons imports, and controls the airspace — and that, they reason, means that Gaza remains “occupied” and therefore “resistance” retains legitimacy.

That narrative aligns with a seething hatred of Israel fed by the fact that roughly three-quarters of the strip’s population are refugees or descendants of refugees who lost their homes in what became Israel in 1948. For many, the current predicament is one chapter in a long story that will end with the restoration of historical Palestine to Arab and Muslim control.

In that context, the current historical moment takes on particular potential for instability and escalation.

The Arab Spring has opened up many new possibilities for Hamas, which has long been shunned by the international community. The changes in the region have strengthened Islamists across the Middle East, bringing Hamas newfound recognition. Last month’s visit by Qatar’s emir and Friday’s solidarity mission by the prime minister of Egypt’s new Islamist government illustrated the growing acceptance of Hamas.

“I say on behalf of the Egyptian people that Egypt today is different than Egypt yesterday and the Arabs today are different that the Arabs of yesterday,” Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi, a member of Hamas’ parent movement, the Muslim Brotherhood, said Friday. “I say with all confidence Egypt will not leave Gaza on its own.”

Such words were hardly imaginable under ousted President Hosni Mubarak, who leaned to the West and whose officials over the years were much engaged in evenhanded mediation between Israel and various Palestinian factions.

But Hamas has paid a price in public opinion, especially among its religious and conservative base. The organization rose to power as an armed resistance group, and is considered by not only Israel but also the United States as a terrorist organization. Many in Gaza, ranging from longtime supporters to more radical al-Qaida-influenced groups, have accused it of going soft. Recent attacks on Israel, and this week’s confrontation, are meant in part to re-establish Hamas’ militant credentials.

For Israel, the offensive in Gaza has been brewing for months. After dealing Hamas a heavy blow in an offensive four years ago, Israeli intelligence has carefully watched the group recover and restock its arsenal with more powerful weapons and longer-range rockets. Rocket fire has steadily increased over the past two years, with more than 1,000 launched at Israel this year alone, according to the military. A pair of incidents last week marked a significant escalation in Israel’s view. First, Hamas terrorists blew up a tunnel along the Israeli border in an attempt to attack Israeli troops. Then, Hamas fired an anti-tank missile at an Israeli jeep, seriously wounding four soldiers.

Israel’s unhappiness with Hamas’ surging confidence was evident in comments by Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman. “Hamas mistakenly thought that because of the change in government in Egypt and the election here that we will not respond properly,” he said.

As rocket fire heated up early this week, there were an increasing number of calls by the Israeli public for a response by the government, which is up for re-election on Jan. 22.

Might Israel have decided to escalate — or allow itself to be easily provoked — with electoral calculations in mind? Israeli officials dismiss such suggestions, and the army says the objective is solely to halt the rocket fire.

Still, historical precedent certainly seems to be there:

In June 1981, weeks before a vote he seemed set to lose, Prime Minister Menachem Begin ordered the air force to destroy Saddam Hussein’s nuclear reactor at Osirak in faraway Iraq. The strike was successful, Begin won the election by a whisker, and as a bonus the world even came to appreciate the elimination of Saddam’s potential nuclear weapons.

Fifteen years later the man Begin defeated, Shimon Peres, found himself as caretaker prime minister and saddled with a electorally inconvenient reputation as an overzealous advocate for peace. First, Peres ordered the killing of Hamas’ key bombmaker, leading to a series of ferocious revenge bombings that badly sapped his support. And in April 1996, two months before the vote, he ordered a massive air campaign against Hezbollah in Lebanon which many considered to be at least partly politically driven. The campaign ended with Hezbollah still in place and Israel halting the operation ignobly after mistakenly killing dozens in a U.N. compound. Peres lost by a whisker.

Four years ago the man who defeated Peres then, Benjamin Netanyahu, was staging a comeback after a few years out of office, and surging in the polls. The government of Ehud Olmert, far more moderate than Netanyahu, ordered an operation against Hamas.

The reason will be familiar to anyone watching the news today: Israeli public opinion was fed up with rockets from Gaza.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

IDF bombs Hamas government building in Gaza

November 17, 2012

IDF bombs Hamas government building in Gaza – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Israeli aircraft attack Hamas government’s 4-storey building in Gaza City; eyewitnesses say it was completely destroyed; rocket attacks on south continue overnight. Watch live feed from Gaza

Elior Levy, Yoav Zitun

Published: 11.17.12, 06:45 / Israel News

Israeli fighter jets bombed early Saturday the Hamas government headquarters in Gaza City. Palestinian sources said the four-storey building was completely destroyed. An IDF official said the building was apparently empty at the time of the attack. Egyptian Prime Minister Hisham Kandil met with senior Hamas figures in the building on Friday during his snap visit to Gaza.

The building housed Hamas Prime Minister Ismail’s office. Palestinian television released images of the destroyed building, which is located Gaza City’s western sector.

The rocket fire on Israelcontinued overnight, but there were no reports of injury or damage. The Color Red air raid siren was sounded in Netivot and the Ashkelon Beach Regional Council overnight, and sirens were activated again in Netivot and the Sdot Negev Regional Council at the break of dawn.

Israel expanded its fierce air assault on rocket operations in the Gaza Strip on Saturday, striking Hamas government and security compounds, smuggling tunnels and electricity sources after an unprecedented rocket attack aimed at the holy city of Jerusalem raised the stakes in its violent confrontation with Palestinian terrorists.

According to the Palestinians, one of the Israelis strikes targeted the Jabalia home of Ibrahim Salah, a senior Hamas Interior Ministry official. At least 20 people were injured in the strike, the sources said, adding that Israeli aircraft also attacked Hamas police headquarters.

Israeli aircraft also kept pounding their initial targets, the terrorists’ weapons-storage facilities and underground rocket-launching sites. The Israeli military called up thousands of reservists and massed troops, tanks and armored vehicles along the border with Gaza, signaling a ground invasion of the densely populated seaside strip could be imminent.

Israel launched its military campaign Wednesday after days of heavy rocket fire from Gaza and has carried out some 700 airstrikes since, the military said. Terrorists, undaunted by the heavy damage the air attacks have inflicted, have unleashed some 500 rockets against the Jewish state, including new, longer-range weapons turned for the first time this week against Jerusalem and Israel’s Tel Aviv heartland.

Israel has slowly expanded its operation beyond military targets and before dawn on Saturday, the Gaza Interior Ministry reported, missiles smashed into two small Hamas security facilities as well as the massive Hamas police headquarters in Gaza City, setting off a huge blaze that engulfed nearby houses and civilian cars parked outside. No one was inside the buildings at the time.
שיגור רקטות לעבר ישראל. גם הבוקר (צילום: EPA)

Rockets launched from Gaza, Saturday (Photo: EPA)

In southern Gaza, Israeli aircraft went after the hundreds of underground tunnels militants used to smuggle in weapons and other contraband from Egypt, people in the area reported. A huge explosion in the area sent buildings shuddering in the Egyptian city of El-Arish, 30 miles (45 kilometers) away, an Associated Press correspondent there reported. The tunnels have also been a lifeline for residents of the area during the recent fighting, providing a conduit for food, fuel and other goods after supplies stopped coming in from Israel days before the military operation began.

Missiles also knocked out five electricity transformers, plunging more than 400,000 people into darkness, according to the Gaza electricity distribution company.

A separate airstrike leveled a mosque in central Gaza, damaging nearby houses, Gaza security officials and residents said. The military had no comment on that attack and it wasn’t clear whether weapons or fighters were being harbored in the area.

One person was killed and three dozen people were wounded in the various attacks, Gaza health official Ashraf al-Kidra said. In all, 30 Palestinians and three Israelis have been killed since the Israeli operation began.

Destroyed Hamas gov't building (Photo: Reuters)
Destroyed Hamas gov’t building (Photo: Reuters)

The Israeli military said it did not immediately have an accounting of its various overnight targets.

“The Palestinian government emphasizes its steadfastness and support for the Palestinian resistance,” government spokesman Ihab Hussein said in a text message to reporters after the wave of Israeli attacks.

“It stands alongside its people, who are subject to this aggression.”

The widened scope of targets brings the two sides closer to the kind of all-out war they waged four years ago. Hamas, a terror group committed to Israel’s destruction, was badly bruised during that confrontation, but has since restocked its arsenal with more and better weapons, and has been under pressure from smaller, more militant groups to prove its commitment to armed struggle against Israel.

The attack aimed at Jerusalem on Friday and strikes on the Tel Aviv area twice this week dramatically showcased the terrorists’ new capabilities, including a locally made rocket that appears to have taken Israeli defense officials by surprise. Both areas had remained outside the gunmen’s reach in past rounds of fighting, and their use dramatically escalated the hostilities.

צילום: רויטרס

 

IDF strike in Gaza, early Saturday (Video: Reuters)

Just a few years ago, Palestinian rockets were limited to crude devices manufactured in Gaza. But in recent years, Israeli officials say, Hamas and other armed groups have smuggled in sophisticated, longer-range rockets from Iran and Libya, which has been flush with weapons since Moammar Gaddafi was ousted last year.

The eerie wail of air raid sirens sounded in Jerusalem after the start of the Jewish Sabbath in the holy city, claimed by both Israel and the Palestinians as a capital and located about 75 kilometers (47 miles) from Gaza. Jerusalem residents were shocked to find themselves suddenly threatened by rocket fire, which, for more than a decade, had been limited to steadily broadening sections of southern Israel.

The attack on the contested city was especially audacious, both for its symbolism and its distance from Gaza. Located roughly 50 miles (80 kilometers) from the Gaza border, Jerusalem had been considered beyond the range of Gaza rockets – and an unlikely target because it is home to the Al-Aqsa Mosque compound, Islam’s third-holiest shrine.

Most of the terrorists’ rockets do not have guided systems, limiting their accuracy, though Israeli officials believe the terrorists’ may have a small number of guided missiles that have not yet been used.

Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said the rocket landed in an open area southeast of the city – near the Palestinian city of Bethlehem and just a few miles from Al-Aqsa.

Earlier on Friday, Gaza gunmen fired toward Tel Aviv for the second straight day, causing no injuries.

“We are sending a short and simple message: There is no security for any Zionist on any single inch of Palestine and we plan more surprises,” said Abu Obeida, a spokesman for Hamas’ armed wing.

Israeli leaders have threatened to widen the operation if the rocket fire doesn’t halt. Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said options included the possible assassination of Hamas’ prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, and other top leaders.

“Every time that Hamas fires there will be a more and more severe response,” he told Channel 2 TV on Friday. “I really recommend all the Hamas leadership in Gaza not to try us again. … Nobody is immune there, not Haniyeh and not anybody else.”

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu huddled with his emergency Cabinet on Friday night. Israeli media reported the meeting approved a request from Defense Minister Ehud Barak to draft 75,000 reservists. Earlier this week, the government approved a separate call-up of as many as 30,000 soldiers. Combined, it would be the biggest call-up of reserves in a decade.

Lt. Col. Avital Leibovich, a military spokeswoman, said 16,000 reservists were called to duty on Friday and others could soon follow.

She said no decision had been made on a ground offensive but all options are on the table. Dozens of armored vehicles have been moved to Israel’s border with Gaza since fighting intensified Wednesday.

The violence has widened the instability gripping the region, straining already frayed Israel-Egypt relations. The Islamist government in Cairo, linked like Hamas to the region-wide Muslim Brotherhood, recalled its ambassador in protest and dispatched Prime Minister Kandil to the territory on Friday to show solidarity.

AP contributed to the report

Netanyahu, Obama discuss ‘de-escalating’ Gaza conflict

November 17, 2012

Netanyahu, Obama discuss ‘de-escalating’ Gaza … JPost – Defense.

 

By JPOST.COM STAFF, YAAKOV LAPPIN

 

11/17/2012 04:39
US president reiterates “Israel’s right to defend itself;” PM expresses “deep appreciation” for US investment in Iron Dome; call follows Cabinet’s move to raise cap of reservists for possible Gaza ground operation to 75,000.

Netanyahu and Obama meet in New York

Photo: Reuters

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu called US President Barack Obama on Friday to discuss options for “de-escalating” the situation in Israel and Gaza, the White House said.

Obama “reiterated US support for Israel’s right to defend itself, and expressed regret over the loss of Israeli and Palestinian civilian lives,” according to a statement on the call.

“The prime minister expressed his deep appreciation to the president and the American people for the United States’ investment in the Iron Dome rocket and mortar defense system, which has effectively defeated hundreds of incoming rockets from Gaza,” the statement said.

Israel’s right to self defense likewise was reaffirmed Friday by US State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland, who also called on countries with influence “to maximize the pressure we can bring to bear on Hamas to cease and desist,” as the ongoing rocket fire “is not benefiting the cause of the Palestinian people and it’s certainly not benefiting the cause of regional stability.”

Meanwhile, the IDF released statistics upon the conclusion of day three of Operation Pillar of Defense. According to the statement, the Israel Air Force hit 238 targets in the Gaza Strip on Friday. A total of 105 rockets struck Israel during the course of the day, the IDF said, while the Iron Dome missile defense system shot down an additional 99 rockets.

Earlier Friday evening Defense Minister Ehud Barak received Cabinet approval for the IDF’s request to increase the maximum number of reservists it could enlist to 75,000 ahead of a possible Gaza ground operation.

Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman, however, told Channel 10 that toppling Hamas is not on the agenda as a goal for Operation Pillar of Defense.

“We are definitely considering a ground operation, but toppling Hamas, I think that’s something that the next government will have to decide,” he said.

Liberman also told Channel 2 that the IDF will only stop its attacks against Hamas and other terrorist organizations in the Gaza Strip once Israel accomplishes its goals of stopping rocket fire and increasing deterrence.

“Each time that Hamas fires [into Israel], there will be a harsher and harsher response,” he added.

Debate over an incursion into Gaza comes after three days of constant rocket-fire from the Strip, which has reached as far as Tel Aviv and Jerusalem for the first time, and targeted Israeli strikes against terrorist leaders and weapons depots in Gaza.

On Friday morning, IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Benny Gantz issued draft orders to 16,000 out the 30,000 reservists the cabinet approved Thursday. Most of the reservists called up thus far serve in the IDF’s Engineering Corps.

The engineering corps would play a vital part in any ground operation into the Gaza Strip, enabling armored vehicles to move across the border into Gaza. The IDF operation to root out terror in the coastal territory has consisted of air raids on terror targets thus far.

IDF: Tonight will not be calm in Gaza

The IDF assassinated two Hamas members in Gaza on Friday evening.

The first, Muhammad Abu Jalal, was a Hamas company commander in central Gaza’s El Muazi area, and the second, Khaled Shaeer, operated anti-tank missiles.

Earlier, the IDF sent text messages to 12,000 Gazan civilians, warning them to stay away from Hamas members.

The IDF warned that its activities would continue into the night on Friday, warning Hamas to take cover.

“Terrorists in Gaza should hide. Tonight won’t be calm in Gaza,” IDF spokesman Yoav Mordechai said. “We’re hitting hundreds of rocket launchers in waves of air strikes, including right now.”

The IDF also revealed on Friday that it had taken out Hamas’s nascent drone program.

The military recently focused its intelligence efforts on a group of Hamas terrorists who were developing and producing drones designed to strike fortified targets in Israel.

The terrorists were under the instruction of Iranian technical instructors, and the ‘production team’ carried test flights in Gaza of the drones.

The IAF struck the test flight sites in recent attacks.

Pillar of Defense! – Live Blog – Day Four

November 17, 2012

Dawn breaks on fourth day of Gaza operation with no end to conflict in sight | The Times of Israel.

IAF strikes Hamas targets overnight while rocket fire from Gaza slows; Netanyahu and Obama talk de-escalation as Cabinet approves call up of 75,000 reservists in advance of possible ground invasion

November 17, 2012, 5:59 am 0
The Iron Dome defense system fires to intercept incoming rockets from Gaza. (photo credit: Tsafrir Abayov/Flash90)

The Iron Dome defense system fires to intercept incoming rockets from Gaza. (photo credit: Tsafrir Abayov/Flash90)

The Israeli Defense Forces are continuing their crippling air campaign against Hamas targets in the Gaza Strip, with 85 airstrikes since midnight, as the rain of rockets shows no sign of abatement. The IDF Spokesperson reports at least 119 rockets fired from Gaza struck Israel on Friday, including two that exploded outside Jerusalem and another two near Tel Aviv. Iron Dome missile batteries intercepted another 82. As Palestinian casualties mount and the Israeli government signals a possible ground invasion, neither Jerusalem nor Hamas is expressing willingness to back down.

22:38 – Burned out.  Please keep each other updated in the “comments” on this post till I return in the morning.  VICTORY ! – JW

Ynet reports that ‘senior government sources’ flatly deny that Israeli representatives are on their way to Cairo to finalize details for a ceasefire. Rumors still circulating in Arab media that a ceasefire will begin at midnight.

A rocket has landed in an open area next to a town in the Sha’ar Hanegev region. No injuries or damage reported.

Times of Israel Arab affairs reporter Elhanan Miller notes that a Palestinian news agency, Donia Al-Watan, reported Saturday evening that Hamas has agreed on a ceasefire brokered by Egypt, Turkey and Qatar. The ceasefire is supposed to take effect at midnight following a final agreement by Israel. The report is unsupported by other sources.

Channel 2 analyst Ehud Yaari says Arab media outlets are reporting Israel and Hamas may be closing in on a ceasefire. According to the report, which is unconfirmed and based on sources close to Hamas, an Israeli representative is on his way to Cairo to work out the deal.

Included in the agreement would be the opening of Gaza crossings and an end to the blockade on the Strip in exchange for a ceasefire, Yaari said.

Yaari earlier reported that Hamas had rejected an Egyptian-brokered ceasefire deal, and were demanding an end to the blockade and to Israel’s policy of carrying out targeted killings.

Red alert sirens are being heard in the Sha’ar Hanegev and Sdot Henegev regional councils.

Palestinians report two people have been killed in an air strike on a vehicle in the Gaza Strip. Hamas TV showed people crowded around a burned out red car. It is not clear who was in the car or who the Israeli Defene Forces may have been targeting. The two deaths bring the Palestinian death toll to 42.

The White House has continued to defend Israel in its conflict with Gaza, even as pressure grows for a lull in fighting.

American president Barack Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu are in agreement that a de-escalation of the violence is preferred, provided that Hamas stops sending rocket into Israel, deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes told reporters during the president’s flight on Air Force One to Asia.

Rhodes said the US believes “the precipitating factor for the conflict was the rocket fire coming out of Gaza. We believe Israel has a right to defend itself, and they’ll make their own decisions about the tactics they use in that regard.”

“These rockets have been fired into Israeli civilian areas and territory for some time now. So Israelis have endured far too much of a threat from these rockets for far too long, and that is what led the Israelis to take the action that they did in Gaza,” he added. (Source: AP)

Home Front cancels studies on Sunday in schools and colleges within a 40 km (25 mile) distance of Gaza Strip. However, studies in Tel Aviv will be held as usual, despite the fact that the city was targeted by Hamas over the weekend.

Police to launch nation-wide search for West Bank residents who are currently inside Israel’s pre-1967 borders without a permit. Security forces are concerned that Palestinians angry over the Gaza offensive may try to carry out terror attacks inside Israel. Earlier Saturday, Hamas began circulating a video warning of a return to suicide bombings against Israelis.

Alert sirens sound in Ashdod, Ashkelon, the Yavne region and in the Yoav Regional Council. At least three rockets reported shot down near Ashdod by Iron Dome.

Israel carries out targeted strike on a terrorist in Gaza Strip. Identity of those killed not yet reported, local television from Gaza is showing a destroyed vehicle that was the target of the attack.

20:22

The last hour and a half has seen rocket fire from the Gaza Strip slow to a trickle, a possible sign that Hamas and Islamic Jihad are beginning to feel the effect of IDF strikes.

The army has hit some 950 targets in the Gaza Strip since the beginning of the operation, including symbols of Hamas power, such as the prime minister’s office, in the last day. They have also taken out a number of rocket launchers and missile arsenals.

Speaking to reporters about an hour ago, Southern Command head Tal Russo said the army had wiped out much of Hamas’s arsenal, especially their long range rockets.

Still, 150 rockets were fired at Israel Saturday, four of which hit homes. Ten people were lightly injured in the attacks. The total Israeli death toll is three, with dozens more injured, since the beginning of the operation.

Palestinians report that 40 people in the Strip have been killed, including 17 civilians, and hundreds more injured.

On Saturday, the New York Times reported on the death of Gazan Aiman Abu Wardah as he returned from a shopping trip, mistakenly thinking a ceasefire had gone into effect, as well as a neighbor. The newspaper wrote that given the size of the explosion, however, the two were more likely killed by an errant Hamas rocket than an Israeli strike.

Kerem Shalom border crossing between Israel and Gaza to be opened tomorrow morning to allow the transfer of food and medical supplies into the Hamas controlled enclave. The arrangements for opening the crossing made in coordination with the IDF, representatives of the Palestinian Authority and international mediators.

The last hour and a half has seen rocket fire from the Gaza Strip slow to a trickle, a possible sign that Hamas and Islamic Jihad are beginning to feel the effect of IDF strikes.

The army has hit some 950 targets in the Gaza Strip since the beginning of the operation, including symbols of Hamas power, such as the prime minister’s office, in the last day. They have also taken out a number of rocket launchers and missile arsenals.

Speaking to reporters about an hour ago, Southern Command head Tal Russo said the army had wiped out much of Hamas’s arsenal, especially their long range rockets.

Still, 150 rockets were fired at Israel Saturday, four of which hit homes. Ten people were lightly injured in the attacks. The total Israeli death toll is three, with dozens more injured, since the beginning of the operation.

Palestinians report that 40 people in the Strip have been killed, including 17 civilians, and hundreds more injured.

On Saturday, the New York Times reported on the death of Gazan Aiman Abu Wardah as he returned from a shopping trip, mistakenly thinking a ceasefire had gone into effect, as well as a neighbor. The newspaper wrote that given the size of the explosion, however, the two were more likely killed by an errant Hamas rocket than an Israeli strike.

Israeli media reports Home Front Command to station 20 public mini shelters in Ashkelon on Sunday due to the increased rocket fire on the city.

Workers place new bomb shelters in schools and day care centers in the southern Israeli town of Ashkelon. April, 2009. 20 more shelters were due to be installed on Sunday 18th November after increased Hamas rocket fire at the city. (photo credit: Edi Israel/Flash90)

AFP reports that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have agreed that a ceasefire is needed, “as soon as possible,” citing sources in the German chancellery.

International pressure on Israel and Gaza to halt hostilities in the wake of Operation Pillar of Defense have ramped up recently and will likely continue to intensify over the coming days, especially with the visit of UN chief Ban Ki-moon on Wednesday.

The agency also reported that Merkel spoke with Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi. Channel 2 earlier reported that Hamas had rejected an Egyptian ceasefire proposal.

Qassam rocket explodes on the edge of Hof Ashkelon region community. No injuries reported.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu telephones the heads of state in European countries including Germany, Italy, Greece, and Czechoslovakia.

Netanyahu tells Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel that no country in the world would agree to have its citizens under persistent threat from rocket attacks. Merkel is reportedly in contact with Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi to encourage him to continue efforts for negotiating a ceasefire. (source Ynet)

19:27

Amid international diplomatic efforts to bring the conflict to a halt, French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius is said to be heading this way.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, left, speaks with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Paris in July (photo credit: AP/Brendan Smialowski)

He’ll visit Jerusalem and Ramallah for meetings in relation to Operation Pillar of Defense. Fabius (whose parents incidentally were Jewish and converted to Catholicism) is scheduled to meet with his Israeli counterpart Avigdor Liberman.

Channel 2 is examining the political consequences of Pillar of Defense. For now, there’s wide consensus in Israel in favor of the resort to force. “If it ends now, it’ll be seen as a considerable achievement by Israel.” If not, consensus may start to weaken, Amit Segal, the channel’s political reporter, says

Southern Command head Tal Russo tells reporters that the IDF will continue to act until it reaches it’s goals, hitting terror groups in Gaza and Hamas leaders, with a ground operation in the offing.

He says there are still many targets that the IDF has not hit, and that terror groups in the strip have an “impressive” arsenal of weapons and missiles.

“Deterrence is the main part of this operation and we will return in order to bring back a normal life to the south.”

He also thanked the residents of the south and IDF soldiers and said the operation would take time.

Arab League meeting ends in Cairo with a call for Israel’s leaders to be tried for war crimes by the international community.

General-Secretary of the Arab League Nabil Elaraby says that Israel shouldn’t think countries that experienced the Arab Spring will only focus on their own internal issues. (source Ynet)

A Channel 10 News analyst says a senior Cabinet official told him, off the record, that within the next 48 hours key-decision makers will decide whether or not to pursue a ground incursion in Gaza.

In two days time, UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon should have arrived in Israel; his aim is to secure a ceasefire.

Paratroops Brigade Commander Colonel Amir Baram briefs his soldiers on their objectives in Gaza as the IDF prepares for the ground phase of Operation Pillar of Defense on Friday, November 16 (photo credit: IDF Spokesperson's Office/Flash90)

The senior official also told Channel 10 News that a big part of the decision about a ground incursion depends on the international community’s stance, i.e. if Israel feels that a real change regarding Hamas can be made and that it won’t have to battle rockets on a regular basis — and if it then has the backing to stage a mass military operation in Gaza if terror groups continue to fire rockets — the ground incursion will be postponed, with great probability.

IDF confirms that a senior Hamas commander involved in smuggling operations between Egypt and the Gaza Strip was killed in an air strike.

Earlier the IDF killed Mohammed Kalab, a senior operative in Hamas’s air defense forces.

Jewish Agency emissaries in communities around the globe are organizing rallies in support of Israel, the semi-governmental organization said in a press release Saturday evening.

Demonstrations are planned for Sunday in San Diego, which is a sister city with the Shaar Hanegev Regional Council, as well as in Melbourne, Sydney and Perth in Australia. Dozens more rallies are also planned in the coming days on other cities.

The Agency is also encouraging people to wear red in solidarity with Israelis within rocket range, an homage to the red alert siren that sounds every time a missile is fired from Gaza. In addition, the Australasian Union of Jewish Students are trying to incubate a viral campaign for Israel supporters to change their Facebook profile pictures to photos of themselves wearing red.

Israel has thus far mostly been on the butt end of rallies around the world, which have gathered hundreds in cities around the world to demonstrate in support of Gazans. Protests have taken place in Cairo, Washington, D.C., New York, Jerusalem, Istanbul, Seoul, Rome, Vancouver and other cities since the launch of Operation Pillar of Defense on Wednesday.

18:40

Five rockets fired at Ashdod. One hits road in town near the city. Four others intercepted by Iron Dome. No injuries or damage reported.

18:08
A new Hamas video that’s being circulated warns Israelis, in Hebrew, of violence to come. In the digitized-video, set to tense music, the voice tells Israelis, “We miss the suicide bombings,” and continues in both spoken and written text in Hebrew, “We’ll see you on the buses, and at the cafes,” a reference to previous Palestinian suicide attacks that occurred at popular Israeli hangouts:
17:58

Channel 2′s Ehud Yaari reports that Hamas has rejected an Egyptian proposed ceasefire agreement. In exchange to putting down its arms, Hamas is reportedly demanding a complete removal of Israel’s blockade of Gaza and international obligations that Israel will cease from conducting targeted killings.

The next stage, according to Yaari, is a meeting of Arab foreign ministers set to be held in Cairo tomorrow, during which a second proposal will be drafted.

Hamas leader Moussa Abu Marzouk says his organization is prepared for an IDF ground incursion and threatens to kill any Israeli soldier who sets foot in Gaza.

Two rockets fired from Gaza at Ashdod were intercepted by Iron Dome.

A Gazan (twitter handle: @pcangel_25) posts a picture of a building that allegedly collapsed in Yarmouk Refugee Camp after being struck by the Israel Air Force:

There was a problem with the blakbirdpie shortcode

Tel Aviv Mayor Ron Huldai stresses the importance of maintaining composure during and after rocket attacks.

Speaking on Channel 2, Huldai is expressing thanks to the Iron Dome operators who successfully intercepted an “upgraded Kassam” rocket fired at the central city an hour ago.

“Serious people take these threats seriously, but it is wrong to create false drama,” says Huldai.

The mayor says city schools will be open tomorrow despite the rockets and urges residents to

carry out their lives as usual.

Tel Aviv Mayor Ron Huldai (Photo credit: Gideon Markowicz/FLASH90)

Update from the sirens 30 minutes ago in Beersheba: Five rockets were launched at the city; four were intercepted by Iron Dome and one fell in a open area. No injures have been reported.

Reuters reporting that US President Barack Obama called Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan about bringing an end to the fighting between Gaza and Israel.

Ex-chief of staff Dan Halutz, on Channel 2, says it’s time to be looking for a political solution. Some kind of an agreement is needed, he says, and it will need to ensure quiet in the south. He says Hamas is making “victory claims” and that people who claim victory are indicating that they are ready to end the round of conflict.

Halutz was chief of staff at the time of the Second Lebanon War, widely regarded as a failure. He resigned in the wake of that conflict.

The demonstration against Pillar of Defense in Nazareth, an Arab town in northern Israel, drew 500 attendees.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is speaking in Cairo. Channel 2 News is reporting that Erdogan expressed solidarity with the people of Gaza and support of Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi’s decision to remove his ambassador from Tel Aviv, but stopped short of blasting Israel for its military operation.

During his visit in Egypt, Erdogan is scheduled to participate in a summit with Morsi, Hamas political chief Haled Mashaal and other Arab leaders to work towards reaching a ceasefire with Israel.

Channel 2 Arab affairs analyst Ehud Yaari says the Arab world is interested in attaining a ceasefire as soon as possible.

Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan speaking in Ankara, in October (photo credit: AP)

At least two sirens ringing, within minutes of each other, in Beersheba.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke with Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti Saturday afternoon. He will also speak with other foreign leaders Saturday to update them on Pillar of Defense.

During their conversation, Monti expressed “great concern” over the escalation in Gaza. He called for “a truce between the parties as soon as possible, to bring to an end the fighting and allow dialogue and peace negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians to begin again,” AFP reported.

NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel tweets about what it’s like in Gaza:

@RichardEngel

Richard Engel

So many drones over #Gaza city it sounds like everyone is out mowing their lawns in the dark

17:01

Iron Dome intercepts two rockets fired at Sderot. Rockets fired towards other southern towns. No injuries or damage reported.

Magen David Adom reports no injuries or damage in the latest, and third rocket attack on Tel Aviv.

Channel 2′s Ehud Yaari says that the missile fired at Tel Aviv moments ago was not a Fajr, but one of Hamas’s “upgraded Kassams” similar to the ones fired towards Jerusalem on Friday.

Hamas has claimed responsibility and says it fired a long range Fajr-5 missile at Tel Aviv.

4:40- Rocket over Tel Aviv was destroyed by the new, fifth Iron dome system that went into service two hour ago.

Hooray !

4:34 – Two explosions heard in the center of Tel Aviv

16:33 – COLOR RED – Tel Aviv

Hamas officials claim Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu must stand trial for war crimes, Iran’s Press TV reports.

As of Saturday afternoon, Ben Gurion International Airport is functioning as normal. Flights arriving and departing unaffected by the conflict. At the Israel Airports Authority, word is that there are no delays and no changes in schedule.

Egypt, Turkey, and Qatar are working toward an informal ultimatum for Israel regarding Pillar of Defense, according to Channel 2 News’ analyst Ehud Yaari.

Iron Dome shoots down two rockets over Beersheba.

The Israel Air Force destroyed a rocket launcher that shot at the center of Israel. It was an Iranian rocket, with a range of 60 km, that Islam Jihad assembles in Gaza, according to Channel 10 News’ analyst Alon Ben-David on Twitter.

15:45

Mass rally beginning in the predominantly Arab town of Nazareth in northern Israel. Activists waving Palestinians flags tell Channel 2 News they are “against Israel’s military operation in Gaza.”

Islamic Jihad claims responsibility for the long-range rockets launched at Tel Aviv and Jerusalem over the past two days.

BBC reports heavy IDF troop buildup near Gaza border.

Sirens blare in Ashkelon.

The armed wing of Hamas is prepared to carry out suicide missions in case the IDF launches a ground operation in Gaza, according to a statement published on one of the websites run by the group.

“Suicide bombers are standing by for the ground invasion,” the statement said. “Once the first tank enters Gaza, these units will be activated.”

A total of three houses suffered direct hits from rockets. Two of the homes are located in the Eshkol region.

In addition, a rocket landed in the yard of a home in the Beer Tuvia Regional Council. The residents were home when it fell; one person was treated for shock.

Also, an apartment building was struck by a projectile.

Gaza terrorists fire five rockets at Ashdod, three of which are intercepted by Iron Dome. The other two land in open areas.

This is the third successful interception of rocket fire at Ashdod on Saturday. Earlier, a rocket fired at the city hit a residential building, causing serious damage.

Iron Dome intercepted four rockets in past 30 minutes. Sirens were heard in Netivot. A second house was hit in the Eshkol region; no injuries were reported.

Palestinians in Gaza fire four rockets at the southern Israeli town of Netivot, all of which are intercepted by Iron Dome, reports Channel 2 News.

Red alert siren sounds in Ashkelon.

Gaza terrorists fire five rockets at Ashdod, three of which are intercepted by Iron Dome. The other two land in open areas.

Total of three homes hit by rockets: two in Eshkol and one in Ashdod.

Iron Dome intercepted four rockets in past 30 minutes.

Palestinians in Gaza fire four rockets at the southern Israeli town of Netivot, all of which are intercepted by Iron Dome, reports Channel 2 News.

Red alert siren sounds in Ashkelon.

Sky News in Arabic is reporting that Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi will convene a meeting with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Qatari ruler Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa and Hamas political leader Khaled Mashaal later this afternoon to discuss a possible ceasefire.

Senior Egyptian intelligence officials met with Mashaal in a closed meeting earlier today.

Channel 2 News analyst Ehud Yaari said that Egypt sent Hamas leaders Ahmad Jabari and Ismail Haniyeh messages just days before the start of Pillar of Defense warning them that Egypt was categorically against an escalation of violence in Gaza. Yaari added that Egypt has been working nonstop to try to secure a ceasefire.

14:18

Five rockets land in open areas in Beersheba.

14:11

Islamic Jihad obtained the names, places of work, cell phone numbers, and e-mail addresses of 5,000 IDF soldiers, Channel 2 News reported Saturday.

The soldiers received threats from Islamic Jihad members — part of the terror group’s psychological warfare campaign — threatening them if they cross over into Gaza as part of a ground incursion.

Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman said that if the IDF launches a ground incursion into Gaza that it must be prepared to go all out.

“We are ready for a wide-scale ground operation, if necessary, but it should be noted that the IDF enters Gaza, it cannot be stopped in the middle; it needs to go all the way.” Click here for the full article.

Five rockets land in open areas in Beersheba.

Islamic Jihad obtained the names, places of work, cell phone numbers, and e-mail addresses of 5,000 IDF soldiers, Channel 2 News reported Saturday.

The soldiers received threats from Islamic Jihad members — part of the terror group’s psychological warfare campaign — threatening them if they cross over into Gaza as part of a ground incursion.

Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman said that if the IDF launches a ground incursion into Gaza that it must be prepared to go all out.

“We are ready for a wide-scale ground operation, if necessary, but it should be noted that the IDF enters Gaza, it cannot be stopped in the middle; it needs to go all the way.” Click here for the full article.

Update from the Ashdod rocket attack: Five people were lightly injured when a rocket struck a four-story apartment building in Ashdod. The victims were rushed to the hospital. Seven others were treated for shock.

Iron Dome intercepts four of six rockets fired at Beersheba minutes ago. The other two fell in open areas.

Sirens wailing in Ashdod and in the Beer Tuvia Regional Council, where a rocket landed in the yard of a house earlier today.

Rocket struck a home in Eshkol region; no injuries were reported.

Siren blasted in Beersheba. No explosion was heard; the rocket most likely landed in an open area, Channel 2 News reports.

Barzilai Medical Center reports that it is treating 56 people for injuries. Among the injured, 13 are suffering from shock, 42 people are being treated for contusions to their bodies, and another person was indirectly injured by shock waves from a rocket.

At least three rockets have been fired at Ashdod. One rocket reportedly made a direct hit on a house; no report of injuries at this stage. Magen David Adom is en route to the location.

Two other rockets were reportedly intercepted by Iron Dome. Two sirens were heard.

David Buskila, the mayor of Sderot, tells Channel 2 News that it’s been quiet for the past hour or two. “Please stay inside your homes,” Buskila said, addressing the town’s residents, “and don’t play around with the Home Front Command’s directions [to be in the vicinity of a safe-room].”

“We are optimistic,” added Buskila. “We hope that the IDF continues and achieves its objectives.” He also thanked MK Amir Peretz (Labor), a former defense minister, for helping raise awareness about Sderot’s suffering.

Beersheba has been quiet for over an hour as well.

Hamas Political Bureau chief Khaled Mashaal meeting now with Egyptian intelligence chief Mohamed Raafat Shehata in Cairo.

Shehata was instrumental in negotiating the release of kidnapped IDF soldier Gilad Shalit in 2011.

The meeting between Mashaal and Shehata may be a sign of efforts to begin a diplomatic push toward a ceasefire, reports Channel 2 News.

12:54

Prime Minister of Malaysia Mohd Najib Razak condemns Israeli operation in Gaza during ASEAN Conference in Cambodia.

Red alert sirens wail in Ashkelon.

The city’s mayor Benny Vaknin says Iron Dome has been 100 percent successful in shooting down multiple rockets fired toward Ashkelon on Saturday.

Vaknin warns residents to stay indoors. He says he saw several people outside earlier, with their children, who wanted to watch Iron Dome make its interceptions.

IDF Spokesperson Brig. Gen. Yoav Mordechai says Hamas field operatives are taking cover in hospitals and mosques in light of Israeli airstrikes, according to Channel 2 News.

Tal Russo, head of the IDF’s Southern Command, has declared the area bordering the Gaza Strip to be a closed-military zone. People should not enter, unless they have permits or live in communities within the proximity.

Islamic Jihad claims responsibility for firing four of Saturday’s rockets at Beersheba and Ashkelon.

Gaza terrorists fire four rockets at the Eshkol region, which borders the Strip. One rocket directly hits a house, causing serious damage but no injuries.

The foreign minister of Tunisia, Rafik Abdessalem, visiting the Gaza Strip right now, says “Israel must understand that there have been several changes in the Arab world. That which [Israel] was able to do previously is no longer allowed today.”

He added, “We call for a united Arab stance. Arab foreign ministers plan to meet today, under the framework of the Arab League, and we call for the implementation of a united and comprehensive Arab stance against the aggression.”

Gaza terrorists fire four rockets at the Eshkol region, which borders the Strip. One rocket directly hits a house, causing serious damage but no injuries.

A fourth, consecutive siren blaring in Ashkelon — the fourth in the span of a few minutes. Streets are empty; residents are asked to stay within one minute of safe rooms.

Protests against Israel’s military operation in Gaza expected to take place Saturday in Hebron and Ramallah in the West Bank.

The United Nations Children’s Fund, UNICEF, issued a statement late Friday calling for children in Israel and Gaza to be protected.

“UNICEF is deeply concerned about the deteriorating situation in Gaza and Israel and its impact on children,” according to the statement. “In the past two days, six Palestinian children age 10 months to 15 years have been reported killed in airstrikes on Gaza, and 60 injured. Another Palestinian child was reported killed by a rocket which fell short. Gaza is under closure making it difficult for civilians to flee.”

Demonstrations against Israel’s military operation in Gaza have sprung up in various cities around the world — in Cairo, Washington, D.C., New York, Jerusalem, Istanbul, and Seoul — as well as in European cities.

In Istanbul Saturday, protesters burned the Israeli flag and a poster of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Thousands gathered in Cairo Friday and chanted slogans in support of Gaza Strip against Israel’s “blatant aggression,” according to Reuters.

In New York, some 250 activists stood outside the Israeli Consulate at 42nd Street Friday and chanted “Free, Free, Palestine!” and “Hey Israel, what do you say, how many kids did you kill today?” They were joined by the ultra-religious anti-Zionist group Naturei Karta. A small, opposing group congregated across the street and retorted:“Israel wants peace, Hamas wants terror” and “God bless America. God bless Israel.”

Similar rallies also took place in South Korea’s capital city, Seoul, in front of the Israeli embassy. “Protestors laid flowers on a temporarily built memorial, for Palestinians who have died in the last couple of days,” China’s Xinhua reported.

Activists carrying the Palestinian flag and donning keffiyehs in Washington D.C. stood outside the White House Friday and chanted “Zionism is racism,” and “Free Gaza, free Palestine.” One activist said: ”I don’t know if [US President Barack] Obama’s in there, but if he is, I hope he hears us,” Channel 10 News reported.

Red alert sirens sound in Beersheba, Ashkelon and the Hof Ashkelon Regional Council.

Explosions heard in Sderot — not clear if it’s rocket fire or Iron Dome fire.

Minister of Defense Ehud Barak speaks with US counterpart, Leon Panetta, about Pillar of Defense. Barak tells him Israel is preparing for a Gaza ground incursion. Meanwhile, back-channel negotiations for a ceasefire, through Britain and the United States and via Egypt, are ongoing, Channel 10 News commentators confirm.

A rocket fired from the northern Gaza Strip at the southern Israeli city of Ashkelon was shot down minutes ago by Iron Dome. The IDF also launched an immediate counterattack on the launching crew that fired the rocket, achieving a direct hit.

Iron Dome system in action as it intercepts rockets fired from Gaza (photo credit: Flash90/File)

Al-Qassam Brigades post video online warning of suicide attacks on Israeli civilian targets such as bus stations and cafes.

IDF reports three Israeli soldiers in southern Israel were injured by a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip.

Red alert sirens wail in the southern Israeli city of Ashkelon.

Palestinian sources reporting 39 dead since the beginning of Operation Pillar of Defense on Wednesday and some 350 injured in the Gaza Strip.

Tunisian officials, including ministers, have arrived in Gaza and are visiting the site of the Hamas cabinet headquarters, which was destroyed in an Israeli strike this morning.

10:37

Fifth Iron Dome battery will be operational shortly, according to Channel 2 News.

The battery is being deployed in central Israel, in the Gush Dan region which includes Tel Aviv, where millions of Israelis live.

Tel Aviv (photo credit: Moshe Shai/Flash90/File)

Reports of direct hit on a house in southern Israel.

Three people lightly injured and being treated by Magen David Adom  crews.

Dror Schor, the mayor of the Beer Tuvia Regional Council — where a house suffered severe damage this morning from a rocket which landed in its yard — tells Channel 2 News that the residents of the damaged house were home during the attack. The residents were not injured, but one woman was treated for shock.

Schor advises residents to heed the advice of the Homefront Command and to enter safe rooms or shelters as soon as they hear sirens. “This saves lives,” according to the mayor.

Red alert sirens sounding in Beersheba. One explosion heard in the area.

650 rockets have been fired at Israel from the Gaza Strip since the start of Operation Pillar of Defense, only 26 of which landed in urban areas. IDF reports that 210 rockets were shot down by Iron Dome.

Also, reports of 79 failed launches from Gaza, according to Channel 2 News, meaning that the rockets backfired or landed in the Strip.

Turkish Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan is scheduled to arrive in Cairo at around noon to discuss Israel’s Operation Pillar of Defense with President Mohammed Morsi, an Egyptian news outlet reported. (Ynet)

Red alert sirens sound in the southern Israeli city of Ashkelon. No initial reports of explosions.

Reports of 12 senior Tunisian officials, including several ministers, arriving in the Gaza Strip today.

Yesterday, Egyptian Prime Minister Hisham Kandil traveled to Gaza to show solidarity with the Palestinian people. Kandil promised his visit would be the first of many missions to the Strip.

Israel agreed to a short ceasefire during Kandil’s visit, but the quiet was cut short by rocket fire from Gaza, which was answered by Israeli strikes.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is scheduled to arrive in Cairo today to confer with Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi about Israel’s Operation Pillar of Defense.

Yesterday, Erdogan said Israel was harming innocent civilians because of the upcoming Knesset elections in January.

09:26

Third red alert siren sounds this morning in Sderot. A big explosion is heard.

About a half hour ago, three rockets fell in open areas near the city.

Red alert sirens sounding in the Shaar Hanegev Regional Council.

Red alert sirens wail in Ashdod. Iron Dome downs one rocket fired from Gaza at the southern Israeli city.

IDF Chief of the General Staff Lt. Gen. Benny Gantz is currently conducting a security assessment with his top staff.

Hamas reporting three military leaders killed this morning. Palestinian sources say that 32 people have died and some 300 have been injured in the Gaza Strip since the start of Operation Pillar of Defense on Wednesday.

The IAF strikes the house of Ahmad Randouj, commander of Hamas forces in northern Gaza and the deputy of Ahmed Jabari, who was killed Wednesday by an Israeli strike on his vehicle.

The house was used as an operations center. Randouj was not in the house when it was hit, according to Channel 2 News.

A rocket fired from the Gaza Strip directly hits a business in the Beer Tuvia Regional Council. One person being treated for shock.

Palestinian sources report that the IDF just struck targets in the Gazan city of Deir al-Balah and in the Zeitoun neighborhood of Gaza City. According to reports, there are injuries in both locations.

Earlier this hour, in a 15-minute timespan, a total of 14 rockets were fired at communities in the south, including seven at the Bnei Shimon Regional Council, one at Beersheba, five at the Eshkol region and another at the Merhavim Regional Council. (Ynet)

Air raid sirens are sounding in Ashdod and Gan Yavne. Residents are being advised to take shelter. No reports on damage or injuries.

Hamas prime minister in Gaza Ismail Haniyeh tweets the following after the IAF strikes the terror organization’s headquarters:

“They think this will make us weaker. But the opposite is true. It only strengthens us and makes us more determined to liberate our land and deter the Zionist robber until victory.” (Translation by Times of Israel staff)

Gaza's Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh, right, and Egyptian Prime Minister Hesham Kandil, left, wave to the crowd as they meet in Gaza City on Friday (photo credit: AP/Adel Hana)

Air raid sirens are sounding in Ashdod and Gan Yavne. Residents are being advised to take shelter. No reports on damage or injuries.

Channel 10 reports that 20,000 IDF reservists have already been called up, less than 12 hours after the cabinet approved the increase of reserves mobilization to 75,000 troops.

Rafael Advanced Defense Systems Chairman Ilan Biran tells Channel 10 that his company will have the fifth Iron Dome battery ready for deployment on Saturday night or Sunday.

IDF conducts 19 strikes on terror targets, including smuggling tunnels, in the Gaza Strip over the last hour.

Israel’s Channel 2 reports that two Hamas commanders were assassinated in IAF airstrikes. It also cites reports that the IAF carried out a targeted assassination on a motorcycle-riding Palestinian.

Palestinians fire salvo of seven rockets at Beersheba. Iron Dome shoots down five of them; the other two land in open areas, reports Channel 2 News.

Also, five rockets land in the Eshkol region. The rockets appear to have all landed in open areas, and there are no initial reports of injuries or damage.

07:41

Ynet reports that two rockets fired from the Gaza Strip exploded in open areas near Sha’ar Hanegev and Sderot. Two more hit outside the coastal city of Ashkelon. No damage or injuries are reported.

Medical sources in the Gaza Strip reportedly say that 27 Palestinians were injured, two critically, in two IAF airstrikes outside Gaza City that targeted the homes of two Hamas leaders earlier this morning.

Contrary to previous unconfirmed reports, there were no fatalities in the attacks.

The Israeli Air Force strikes 186 terror sites in the Gaza Strip overnight, including Hamas cabinet headquarters and numerous rocket launching sites, reports Ynet.

Since the start of Operation Pillar of Defense on Wednesday, the IDF has struck some 830 targets in Gaza.

Air raid sirens are going off in the Gaza-adjacent town of Sderot. Walla reports several rockets inbound at the border town, but it is currently unclear how many rockets have hit. Channel 2 reports one rocket exploding in open area outside town.

No injuries or damage are reported.

The IDF Spokesperson reports that a “mortar fired by Gaza terrorists damaged electricity cable in southern Israel. As a result, power is out in areas of northern Gaza Strip.”

Air raid sirens sound in the Ashkelon area. No reports of explosions at this time.

Reuters uploads images of Hamas cabinet headquarters in Gaza City being hit by what reports say are multiple IAF airstrikes. The building is ablaze and multiple injuries are reported.

Hamas cabinet headquarters in Gaza City after being struck Saturday morning by the IAF. (photo credit: image capture from Reuters video)

Hamas cabinet headquarters in Gaza City hit by an IAF airstrike on Saturday morning. (photo credit: image capture from Reuters video)

Hamas cabinet headquarters in Gaza City hit by an IAF airstrike on Saturday morning. (photo credit: image capture from Reuters video)

Gaza City resident reports via Twitter that IAF strikes targeted homes of Hamas leaders Abu Saed Karmoot and Ibrahim Salah in Jabalia, next to Gaza City.

Multiple injuries reported.

Al Arabiya reports that an IAF strike has targeted the house of Hamas leader Ibrahim Salah in Gaza City.

No report of injuries in IDF attack on Hamas headquarters in Gaza City.

Ismail Haniyeh speaks to a crowd in Gaza, August 19 (photo credit: Abed Rahim Khatib/Flash 90)

Hamas spokesman says attack doesn’t weaken the organization and will not break the spirit of the government. He adds that Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh will respond to the attack shortly.

AFP reports multiple IAF strikes on Hamas cabinet headquarters in Gaza City, with eyewitnesses reporting massive damage to the building.

Channel 10 News reports that Hamas deputy political bureau chief Moussa Abu Marzouk said Saturday morning that while there were talks taking place to reach a ceasefire between his organization and Israel, he saw little chances of a truce agreement being reached any time soon.

The report also quotes a second Hamas official, Ahmed Yosef, saying that any ceasefire would have to include a lifting of Israel’s blockade on Gaza.

According to Israeli Cabinet ministers, Egypt is attempting to broker a two-stage ceasefire agreement. To begin with the sides would have to commit to an immediate cessation of hostilities. The second phase would require both parties to commit to a series of yet to be defined obligations.

IAF kills Hamas commanders; rockets fired at south

November 17, 2012

IAF kills Hamas commanders; rockets fired at south – Israel News, Ynetnews.

Elior Levy

Published: 11.17.12, 00:32 / Israel News

As third day of Operation Pillar of Defense came to an end Friday, the Israel Defense Forces continued to strike targets in Gaza while rockets continued to pour into Israel‘s southern communities.

Palestinian sources in the Gaza Strip reported that the Israel Air Force bombed the Hamasgovernment’s interior ministry headquarters in the Gaza Strip. The IDF confirmed that the place had been attacked.

In addition, two senior field commanders in Hamas’ military wing were assassinated.

Air raid sirens sounded in the southern cities of Ashdod and Netivot. Four rockets were intercepted by the Iron Dome System over Ashdod, while one rocket was located in the Be’er Tuvia Regional Council.

Earlier Friday evening, the government approvedthe defense minister’s request to recruit up to 75,000 reserve soldiers if necessary.
תקיפה בעזה, הערב (צילום: AFP)

Airstrike in Gaza, Friday evening (Photo: AFP)


תינוקת שנהרגה בתקיפה בעזה. לטענת הפלסטינים, 16 אזרחים נהרגו עד כה ברצועה (צילום: AP) 

Baby killed in Gaza strike (Photo: AP)

Khaled Shaer, a senior activist in Hamas’ antitank unit in the central Strip was killed in an Air Force strike. Earlier, three Hamas members – including Ahmed Abu Jalal, a senior member in Hamas’ military wing – were killed in a strike east of the Maghazi refugee camp in the central Strip. Abu Jalal’s two brothers and another person were also killed.

The IDF sent text messages to 12,000 of the Strip’s residents on Friday morning. The messages read, “Stay away from Hamas activists. The next phase is about to begin.”

A state official said Friday evening, “We are going to significantly aggravate the operation.”

Official sources in the Gaza Strip said that 28 Palestinians have been killed in IDF strikes in Gaza since the start of Operational Pillar of Defense, including 16 civilians. The Palestinian health ministry reported that some 270 people have been injured so far.

Osama Hamdan, who is responsible for Hamas’ foreign relations, said that the Arab Spring events in the Middle East have resulted in regimes which will not turn their backs on the Palestinians.

In an interview to the al-Quds television network, Hamdan said that the rules of the game against Israel have changed: “If (Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu wants to win the elections at Gaza’s expense, Ahmed Jabari’s blood will be a curse in its military and political career. Hamas will emerge stronger and greater from this war.”
(צילום: AFP)

Gaza after IDF strike (Photo: AFP)


הפצצה בעזה (צילום: רויטרס) 

Gaza bombing (Photo: Reuters)


פגיעה במסגד בבית חנון (צילום: AP) 

Mosque hit in Beit Hanoun (Photo: AP)


בית החולים שיפא בעזה (צילום: AFP) 

Shifa hospital in Gaza (Photo: AFP)

Thousands of reserve soldiers were called up in recent days as part of the preparations for a ground offensive in Gaza. The IDF has opened the war-reserve-stores unit and many weapons have been transported toward Gaza.

IDF Spokesperson’s Office Yoav Mordechai said in a press briefing at the Kirya Base in Tel Aviv that “there is a wide-scale call up of reserve soldiers, and the forces are prepared to continue the task and launch a ground offensive according to the political echelon’s decisions.”

In the meantime, the Home Front Command has instructed local authorities to prepare for a long period of fighting of up to seven weeks.

Jerusalem’s residents were caught off guard shortly before the beginning of Shabbat, as an air raid sirenwas sounded in the capital and surrounding communities.

security forces confirmed that one rocket had been located in the Gush Etzion area, closer to a Palestinian village than to the settlement’s houses. There were no reports of injuries or damage.

This was the first air raid siren sounded in the area since the IDF launched Operation Pillar of Defense. Air raid sirens were sounded in southern communities throughout the day and a barrage of missiles hit the area.

On Friday afternoon, an air raid siren sounded in Tel Aviv, followed by an explosioncaused by a missile landing in an open area.

Shortly after the air raid siren sounded in Jerusalem, Hamas’ military wing, the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades, claimed responsibility for the rockets fired at the capital area. according to the organization, it fired a homemade rocket called Qassam M76. The rocket Hamas fired at Tel Aviv is nicknamed Qassam M75.

Abu Ubaida, spokesman for the ‘Izz Al-Din Al-Qassam Brigades, said: “We are conveying a short and simple message – not a single Zionist on Palestinian soil is safe, and we are planning additional surprises.”

Yoav Zitun and Itamar Eichner contributed to this report