Posted tagged ‘Hamas’

Exclusive: Militants, weapons transit Gaza tunnels despite Egyptian crackdown

August 22, 2014

Exclusive: Militants, weapons transit Gaza tunnels despite Egyptian crackdown

AL-SARSOURIYA Egypt Thu Aug 21, 2014 6:55pm BST

via Exclusive: Militants, weapons transit Gaza tunnels despite Egyptian crackdown | Reuters.

 

A Palestinian fighter from the Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of the Hamas movement, gestures inside an underground tunnel in Gaza August 18, 2014.Credit: Reuters/Mohammed Salem
 

(Reuters) – A third of the houses on the main street of this Bedouin town near Egypt’s border with Gaza look derelict, but inside they buzz with the activity of tunnel smugglers scrambling to survive a security crackdown by the Egyptian army.

Smugglers and tunnel owners, who once publicly advertised their services, have taken over the nearly two dozen single-storey concrete structures and boarded up their doors and windows to avoid the attention of the authorities.

While tunnels used by Gaza’s dominant Hamas militants to infiltrate Israel were a priority target of an Israeli offensive in the Palestinian enclave this summer, many smuggling conduits into Egypt have skirted detection.

That has allowed transports of weapons, building materials, medicine and food to continue to and from the small, coastal territory that is subject to blockade by both Israel and Egypt, tunnel operators say and Egyptian security sources acknowledge.

“During the Gaza war, business has flourished,” said a Bedouin guide who gave Reuters access to one of the tunnels and a rare look at how the illicit, lucrative industry has evolved since Egypt began trying to root out the passages in 2012.

Egypt sees a halt to the flow of weapons and fighters as important to its security, shaken in the past year by explosions and shootings by an Islamist insurgency based mainly in the Sinai Peninsula bordering Gaza and Israel.

Humanitarian supplies and building materials headed in the other direction have provided a vital lifeline to the 1.8 million Palestinians in Gaza who have been living under the Israeli-imposed blockade since Hamas seized the enclave in 2007.

Cairo mediated talks this month between Israel and Palestinian factions led by Hamas to try to end the war in Gaza but refused to discuss easing its tight control of the Rafah border crossing as part of the deal Hamas seeks.

A 10-day ceasefire expired on Tuesday without a deal to extend it indefinitely, with Israel resuming air strikes on Gaza and Hamas and other Islamist militants their rocket salvoes into the Jewish state.

The guide who accompanied Reuters and requested anonymity estimated the total number of functional tunnels in about 10 border villages like Al-Sarsouriya at nearly 500 – down from about 1,500 before the Egyptian clampdown began.

Most of the bigger tunnels – the kind that can accommodate cars and even trucks – have been destroyed by the Egyptians, but smaller ones ranging 1-2 meters (yards) in diameter survive.

The guide said that as many as 200 new tunnels had been built in the past two years, dodging Egyptian security sweeps, with new ones coming onboard each week.

The smaller tunnels are still big enough to allow weapons, building materials and humanitarian supplies to pass under the heavily guarded land crossing.

“Each day, about 3 or 4 people cross with weapons, and each one carries about 6 or 7 guns,” the Bedouin guide said, without specifying what type of arms were being transported.

A senior Egyptian security officer confirmed that while the biggest and longest tunnels were no more, smaller ones remain operational.

“The situation is much more controlled. It’s not 100 percent but we are trying to reach this percentage,” he told Reuters. He said the army had achieved a noticeable reduction in smuggling of weapons, fuel, food and drugs over the past two years.

Egypt accuses the Islamist Hamas of supporting the Sinai insurgents, which Hamas denies. For its part, Israel has long wanted Egypt to end arms smuggling from Sinai to Gaza militants.

LUCRATIVE TUNNEL BUSINESS BEHIND SHOWER CURTAIN

A shower curtain is all that conceals the entrance ramp to the tunnel which Reuters visited. Two sheep and a cart in an adjacent room gave the impression that the house was abandoned, should security forces come searching.

The tunnel owner and his teenage son sat on cushions around a small wooden table beside the curtain. A photograph of the pair hung on the wall overlooking their cash cow.

The concrete-lined entrance to the 600-metre (0.37 miles) tunnel turns to dirt after a few steps. Posts support a wooden ceiling as deep as 10 meters (33 feet) below the surface, and energy-saving bulbs every few meters light the way.

The Egyptian owner accompanies passengers to the midpoint where a sentry checks on the security situation on the other side and then brings them to meet the Palestinian co-owner.

“This tunnel is a partnership between us,” said the Egyptian. “Building it cost us $300,000. He paid half and I paid half. The profit is split between us 50-50.”

The tunnel regularly brings the men profits of $200 a day. Shipping rates vary, starting at $12 for one-metre crates of medicine or food and topping out at $150 for weapons, building supplies or fuel.

People can pass for $50 each but the rate increases if they are armed. Most of the passengers are men, the owner said, but women and children also use the tunnels. Farm animals occasionally make the journey as well.

“If someone is passing with one or two guns, we charge $60 to $70. But if someone has more weapons, it’s a special operation and might cost as much as $1,000 or $2,000 depending on the type of weapon,” the Egyptian owner told Reuters.

He said he does not check the identification of people who pass and even allows masked men to use his tunnel if his Palestinian partner vouches for them. “As long as they give me $50, I let them through,” he said.

The owner said he also does not seek to know the affiliation or destination of militants and weapons for fear that displeased customers will use another tunnel or report him to the security forces. “I just deliver the weapons and take the money,” he said. “I’m not concerned with where they’re going.”

In Gaza, Hamas has disputed Israel’s claim that it demolished all of the militants’ infiltration tunnels during the current conflict, and granted a rare tour to a Reuters news team last week to back up its assertion.

(The name of the correspondent is being withheld for security reasons; Additional reporting by Yasmine Saleh in Cairo; Writing by Stephen Kalin; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Hamas buries commanders killed by Israel

August 21, 2014

Hamas buries commanders killed by Israel

Funerals held for three al-Qassam Brigades leaders in Rafah, as Israel calls up fresh troops for extended Gaza campaign.

Last updated: 21 Aug 2014 18:54

via Hamas buries commanders killed by Israel – Middle East – Al Jazeera English.

 

Hamas said the deaths of the three commanders was a “big Israeli crime” [AFP]
 
So much innocent civilians !
 

Thousands of Palestinians took to the streets as funerals were held for three Hamas commanders killed in the latest round of Israeli air raids in the Gaza Strip that left a total of 29 Palestinians dead.

The Qassam Brigades, Hamas’ military wing, said Mohamed Abo Shamaleh, Raed al-Attar and Mohamed Barhoum were killed in an attack in Rafah on Thursday, little more than a day after an attempt on the life of its leader Mohammed Deif.

Their supporters later took over the streets as their funerals processions snaked through Rafah, which bears scars of Israeli bombing from previous days.

Another 26 people have been killed in Israeli strikes in Gaza since Wednesday evening, raising the overall death toll to 2,077 in 45 days of conflict.

Israel meanwhile said it was rotating 10,000 troops – meaning fresh soldiers were being prepared for possible future operations – a day after the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said Israel’s offensive may be an extended operation.

Hamas condemned the assasinations, with Sami Abu Zuhri, a spokesman, calling them a “big Israeli crime” for which it would pay.

Al Jazeera’s Jacky Rowland, reporting from West Jerusalem, said Israel had turned to its historical tactic of targeting senior figures.

“This could be seen as an acknowledgement that military tactics have not been delivering on several levels,” she said, including damage to its international reputation.

Al Jazeera’s Jane Ferguson, reporting from Gaza, said the Hamas commanders killed on Thursday had been implicated in the kidnapping of its soldier Gilad Shalit, who was freed in 2011 under a prisoner swap deal with Hamas.

Ferguson said that Hamas and other Palestinian factions were still open to talks, an “indicator of how both sides … are aware that while they say they’re prepared to fight, they also know that they need a political solution at some stage”.

Hamas is seeking an end to a seven-year Israeli-Egyptian blockade that has battered Gaza’s economy, while Israel wants guarantees that Hamas will disarm.

Mashal to Mahmoud Abbas in Qatar: “We Are Ready For a War of Attrition of Years”

August 21, 2014

Mashal to Mahmoud Abbas in Qatar: “We Are Ready For a War of Attrition of Years

The head of the political bureau of Hamas and Palestinian Authority Chairman met in Emirate, the goal of the latter to bring a quick cease-fire between the two sides, after it emerged that the truce was broken when rockets were fired at Be’er Sheva on Tuesday by members of Hamas.

Aug 21, 2014, 06:00PM | Jerusalemonline Staff

via Israel News – Mashal to Mahmoud Abbas in Qatar: “We Are Ready For a War of Attrition of Years” – JerusalemOnline.

 

5 minutes ago a mega rocket attack on Israel

 

Now another mega attack direction Dimona, and continuing, BIBI has to stop this NOW !

 

Abbas and Mashal Channel 2 News/Reuters
 

Due to the continued rocket fire from the Gaza Strip, the IDF targeted three senior Hamas military wing officials and the absence of a cease-fire agreement on the horizon, Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas and Head of the Hamas Political Bureau, Khaled Mashal are meeting today in Qatar. The goal: Mahmoud Abbas is attempting to stop the fire between the two sides.

This afternoon their first meeting between the two ended when the Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Tamim Ben Hamad Aal Thani, met with Abbas and then after were joined by Mashal and his entourage. Abbas tried to get Mashal to understand that he must first arrive at an agreement in Cairo. Mashal on the other hand, told Abbas that Hamas is prepared for a long war of attrition, which could last years.

However, Abbas is expected to discuss with Mashal’s future government of national reconciliation. Among the issues to be discussed: whether elections will be held, and if so – when, and how the PLO will be integrated and what will be the political leadership role of Hamas in the West Bank. Now, the chairman of the Palestinian Authority must recruit Qatar in orer to convince Mashaal that Hamas must arrive at a cease-fire agreement.

U.S. Has Not Expressed Concerns Over Hamas Leader in Turkey

August 21, 2014

U.S. Has Not Expressed Concerns Over Hamas Leader in Turkey

Turkish official says no ‘concerns’ expressed to Turkey following Hamas coup plot

BY:

August 20, 2014 5:00 am

via U.S. Has Not Expressed Concerns Over Hamas Leader in Turkey | Washington Free Beacon.

 

AP
 

he Obama administration has not expressed to Turkey any concerns over recent reports indicating that a senior Hamas operative operating in Turkey had been implicated in a coup plot to overthrow the Palestinian government in the West Bank and wage war on Israel, according to a Turkish official.

The State Department on Monday defended new missile sales to Turkey just hours after news emerged that Ankara is hosting a senior Hamas operative who Israel accused of hatching a plan to violently overthrow the Palestinian Fatah government in the West Bank.

State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf did not respond yesterday to Free Beacon requests for comment on whether the Obama administration had related any concerns to Ankara over its reported sheltering of Hamas official Saleh Al-Arouri, who is said to have been responsible for planning the kidnapping of three Israeli teens who were killed by Hamas.

A Turkish official confirmed to the Free Beacon late Tuesday that the Obama administration has not reached out to express concerns over the reports about the alleged coup and rejected allegations that Turkey may be aiding Al-Arouri.

“Turkey strongly condemns and rejects such allegations. As a matter of fact Turkey’s strong support to the National Unity Government in Palestine and to the President [Mahmoud] Abbas himself is self-explanatory and refutes such accusations,” the official said.

The Turkish official further noted that “U.S. authorities are well aware” of Turkey’s support for Abbas and his government.

“Since U.S. authorities are well aware of Turkey’s aforementioned position, there has been no such concern [expressed by the Obama administration] as you mention in your email which has been conveyed to the Turkish side,” the official said.

Turkey’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs also addressed the controversy in a statement issued Tuesday in Turkish.

“Turkey is at the top of the list of countries that have supported the Palestinian reconciliation” between Hamas and Fatah, Turkey’s Foreign Ministry said in the statement, which was translated for the Free Beacon by Merve Tahiroglu, a research associate for the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD). “In this regard, our country has welcomed and supported the Palestinian unity government that was formed on June 2.”

Turkey views this unity government as “an indispensible element” for peace in the region and “the welfare of the Palestinian people,” the statement adds.

Turkey maintains that is has not “overlooked any attempts to overthrow the Palestinian national unity government,” according to the statement. “We strongly reject and condemn such slander. Turkey’s close contact and strong cooperation with the Palestinian administration will, just as it has been in the past, continue with determination in the future.”

A heated back-and-forth between reporters and Harf broke out at the State Department’s daily briefing on Monday and Tuesday when questions emerged about why the administration is going through with the transfer of U.S. missiles to Turkey while simultaneously holding up similar weapons shipments to Israel.

Harf again on Tuesday ducked questions by reporters asking if the U.S. government had conveyed concerns to Turkey over the plot.

“Do you have any concerns at all about the apparent role of Turkey in this?” AP reporter Matt Lee asked Harf.

“I don’t have any more details on this, Matt. I’m happy to check with our team,” Harf responded.

“Okay. Because I did ask this yesterday. You weren’t aware of the incident, but … now, the Israelis say that this is all being planned and funded from Turkish territory,” Lee followd up.

“Well, as I said, I think it involves some Hamas militants and cash, but let me check on that piece of it. I certainly have nothing to confirm that,” Harf told Lee.

“I’m most curious to know if you guys are planning to raise any concerns with the—I don’t know, maybe you don’t have any concerns … if you’ll raise them with the Turks,” Lee responded.

Harf responded that she would “check on that.”

Harf maintained on Monday that the Turkish and Israeli arms shipments are completely separate matters.

“Turkey is also a NATO ally,” she told reporters. “So for all of us who are—talk a lot about the importance of the NATO alliance, particularly when it comes to Russia and Ukraine and what’s happening there, we think it’s important to provide our NATO allies with resources. We think that’s an important use of our resources. The two [cases] aren’t comparable, but those are the facts behind them, I would say.”

Additionally, Harf could not explain to reporters the exact process taking place behind the scenes regarding the hold up in Israeli arms shipments.

“I don’t know how the process specifically works in that granularity,” she said, when faced with questions about who in the government holds veto power over the arms shipments.

When asked later in the briefing to comment on reports about the Turkey-backed Hamas coup, Harf could not provide much information.

“I don’t have anything to confirm those [reports],” she said. “I hadn’t heard about that otherwise. I can check,” she told reporters.

Israel ‘Closer than Ever’ to Full Gaza Invasion

August 21, 2014

Minister: Israel ‘Closer than Ever’ to Full-Scale Gaza Invasion

Communications Minister and Security Cabinet member Gilad Erdan appeals to Israelis for patience, says Hamas will reach ‘breaking point.’

By Shlomo Piotrokovski

First Publish: 8/21/2014, 9:36 AM

via Israel ‘Closer than Ever’ to Full Gaza Invasion – Defense/Security – News – Arutz Sheva.

 

Minister Gilad Erdan Flash 90
 

Communications Minister and Security Cabinet Member Gilad Erdan (Likud) has appealed for Israelis to be patient and to allow the IDF time to complete Operation Protective Edge, adding that the army was closer than ever to launching a full ground invasion of Gaza.

Speaking in an interview with Army Radio on Thursday morning, Erdan revealed that Israel did not yield to Hamas’s demands during recent negotiations in Cairo.

“Hamas did not receive a single one of its demands and so it appears they have resumed firing,” he stated.

Echoing sentiments shared by Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu late last week, Erdan said that Israel was not prepared to concede its position of strength by suddenly capitulating to Hamas demands. He also noted that the negotiations were not expected to have achieved any major achievements for Israel apart from a period of calm, and added that

“Israel is the stronger party, it is the party in control here, and so there wasn’t much for Israel to receive apart from a long-term period of quiet. That is the achievement that we will receive, but in return we do not need to give anything more than humanitarian affairs.”

“When will Hamas reach breaking point? There’s no scientific formula,” he continued. “At first Hamas wanted to come (to the table) with preconditions and at the end it came without preconditions – in the end it will reach breaking point.

He added that Israel was closer than ever to launching a full-scale ground operation, but cautioned “Will this happen tomorrow? It’s not certain, since the price for this will be high, but we are closer today to a ground operation than we have been at any point since the start of the operation.”

Is it Israel vs Hamas, or Egypt vs Qatar?

August 20, 2014

Is it Israel vs Hamas, or Egypt vs Qatar?

Wednesday, August 20, 2014 | Ryan Jones

via Is it Israel vs Hamas, or Egypt vs Qatar? – Israel Today | Israel News.

 

he ongoing Gaza war is presumably a localized conflict between Israel and the Palestinian terror group Hamas. But contentious truce talks in Cairo reveal that the violence that is costing so many their security and lives is rooted further afield.

When Hamas predictably broke the tenuous ceasefire on Tuesday, most assumed it was simply doing what terrorist organizations do. Palestinian Authority officials involved in the Cairo talks said that in reality, Hamas’ patrons in Qatar were pulling the strings.

A senior member of the ruling Palestinian faction Fatah told the pan-Arabic newspaper Al-Hayat that Qatar had coerced Hamas into resuming the war so that the Gulf state could “teach a lesson” to its rivals in the Egyptian regime.

Qatar has long been a sponsor of the Muslim Brotherhood, and is currently playing host to Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal (Hamas is a direct descendant of the Muslim Brotherhood). Egypt recently ousted its own Muslim Brotherhood rulers, and has no love for the movement or anyone connected to it.

According to Al-Hayat, when Hamas demanded that Qatar be party to the truce talks, Egypt flatly refused, much to the satisfaction of Israel, which was flabbergasted late last month when US Secretary of State John Kerry consulted with Qatar in formulating his own Gaza ceasefire proposal.

 

 

Qatar, in turn, put the screws on Hamas, threatening to expel Mashaal if the group agreed to anything tabled by Egypt. An Israeli security source told Walla News that it was only hours later that Mashaal bypassed the local Hamas leadership in Gaza and ordered militant cells to resume fire on Israel.

The Muslim Brotherhood hijacking of the “Arab Spring” and the subsequent advance of the Islamic State have redrawn regional alliances, bringing some Arab states like Egypt and Saudi Arabia much closer to Israel as they face down a common enemy with global aspirations.

In reality, the Gaza conflagration is merely a minor sideshow of a much wider and more serious struggle.

 


Veiled Palestinian women demonstrate in Gaza while holding the Qatari flag.

Hamas Launches Massive Rocket Barrage on Israel + Update

August 19, 2014

Hamas Launches Massive Rocket Barrage on Israeli Cities

Hamas claims missile shower on major Israeli cities; Home Front Command orders public bomb shelters opened.

By Ari Soffer and Netanel Katz

First Publish: 8/19/2014, 10:48 PM / Last Update: 8/19/2014, 11:27 PM

via Hamas Launches Massive Rocket Barrage on Israel – Defense/Security – News – Arutz Sheva.

 

Iron Dome Flash 90
 

Gaza terrorists kept up their rocket assault on Israel Tuesday night by firing a rocket barrage on the southern and Gush Dan central region several minutes before 11 p.m.

At least one rocket reportedly hit open ground in Tel Aviv; another five hit open land in Be’er Sheva. Another rocket was reportedly shot down over central Israel.

Sirens were sounded in the Gush Dan region, the Shfela coastal plain, Ashdod, Be’er Sheva and various areas near Gaza.

Sirens were heard shortly thereafter in the city of Beit Shemesh to the west of Jerusalem and and in parts of Judea, to the south of the capital.

Two rockets were intercepted by the Iron Dome anti-missile system over Sderot. Two more rockets were intercepted over Be’er Sheva.

Hamas’s “military wing”, the Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, reportedly claimed the rocket barrage, saying it fired domestically-produced M-75 and Iranian-supplied Fajr 5 missiles at the Gush Dan region.

With the temporary ceasefire in tatters and set to splutter to a close just over an hour from now, the IDF Homefront Command has ordered all public bomb shelters to be reopened in communities located between 40-80 kilometers from Gaza.

The directives indicated fears that Hamas would once again begin launching long-range rockets at major Israeli population centers, including central Israel and the Jerusalem region – fears which just minutes later were proven to be well-founded. Areas effected by the order include all Negev communities, the Beit Shemesh area, the Shomron (Samaria), Judea, Gush Dan and central Israel, Jerusalem, the Jordan Vallet and the Sharon Region, among others.

The Homefront Command have also issued updated directives to communities closer to Gaza, who have already been under fire since terrorists breached the ceasefire earlier Tuesday. Until now, only short and medium-range rockets and mortar shells have been used, but that is likely to change once the truce officially ends at midnight.

In communities between 0-7 kilometers from Gaza, the army has banned gatherings of 300 people or more. In communities within 400 kilometers of Gaza, gatherings of 500 or more have been banned.

 

Update

After claiming responsibility for rockets fired at Tel Aviv and southern Israel, Hamas takes responsibility for rocket fire at Jerusalem.

At least one rocket was fired at the capital earlier this evening. Air raid sirens were heard over the city, followed by a loud thud indicating a successful interception.

Ynet reports that the rocket fired toward Jerusalem was an M-75 long-range rocket.

Thud heard over Jerusalem

After a siren sounds in Jerusalem and its environs, including in Beit Shemesh and the West Bank, a thud is heard over the capital, indicating that a rocket was shot down over the city.

Channel 2 reports that a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip was successfully intercepted by the Iron Dome missile defense system.

Code Red siren heard over Jerusalem

A Code Red siren sounds over Jerusalem after a rocket hits Tel Aviv.

No hits are reported.

IDF confirms Tel Aviv rocket hit

After Hamas claims responsibility for firing dozens of rockets at Israel, including at Tel Aviv, the IDF confirms a rocket fired from the Gaza Strip hit the central Israeli city.”

“A rocket hit an open area in the Tel Aviv metropolitan area,” a statement from the military reads.

The IDF also confirms a hit in the southern city of Beersheba.

— AFP contributed

Code Red sirens sound over southern Israel

Air raid sirens sound over southern Israel, signaling incoming rocket attacks.

The sirens sound in Beersheba, the Eshkol region and Sderot, as well as in areas near Jerusalem and in Beit Shemesh.

At least two rockets are shot down over Beersheba, and two others explode in open areas in Eshkol.

Hamas fighters show defiance in Gaza tunnel tour

August 19, 2014

Hamas fighters show defiance in Gaza tunnel tour

Terrorists say they feel at home in tunnels, vow to restock arsenal: ‘In peace we make preparations, and in war we use what we have readied,’ says one of them.

ReutersPublished: 08.19.14, 19:13 / Israel News

via Hamas fighters show defiance in Gaza tunnel tour – Israel News, Ynetnews.

GAZA – Hamas fighters, clad in black and armed with assault rifles, navigated the dimly lit tunnel with ease, saying they felt at home in their network of underground passages in the Gaza Strip.

A rare tour that Hamas granted to a Reuters reporter, photographer and cameraman appeared to be an attempt to dispute Israel’s claim that it had demolished all of the Islamist group’s border infiltration tunnels in the Gaza war.

“We are speaking to you today from inside one of those tunnels, which Israel said it had destroyed. Our men are still operating in those tunnels prepared for all options,” said a masked fighter from Hamas’s Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades.

But driven, blindfolded, to the secret location in a Hamas vehicle that made a series of turns, it was impossible for the Reuters crew to tell whether it was close to the frontier or further inside the Gaza Strip in tunnels untouched by Israeli bombing. It was not clear where the tunnel led.

 

Photo: Reuters
 

By Israel’s own account, its ground forces focused only on destroying tunnels within 2 to 4.5 km of the border, while ignoring more distant connecting passages. During the Gaza offensive, Israel’s military took reporters through tunnels it discovered at the frontier.

Chatting in soft voices and laughing at times, Hamas men guided the Reuters crew through corridors less than a metre (3.3 feet) wide that are reached by descending a thin metal ladder through a tiny shaft.

“It feels just like home,” their commander said. “Fighters dug these tunnels with their own hands just like they built their houses, so they live here at comfort and assurance like they do at home.”

Sound of silence
The ceiling in parts of the tunnel was high enough so we could walk through – alternately on dry, concrete floors and muddy ground – without having to bend our heads.

It was impossible to gauge the tunnel’s length, but it had offshoots leading in different directions. Once inside, the sounds of traffic and Israeli drones that routinely fly over the territory of 1.8 million people could not be heard.

Israel said the tunnel network is used by Hamas to move and store weapons and keep fighters out of sight of Israeli aircraft.

It is separate from smuggling conduits that ran under the Egypt-Gaza border. Egypt, which regards Hamas as a security threat, destroyed those tunnels before the current war.

 

Photo: Reuters
 

Israel launched its Gaza offensive on July 8 after a surge in Hamas rocket fire across the border. Israeli ground forces invaded on July 17 with the declared aim of destroying infiltration tunnels and left on August 5 after saying that mission had been accomplished.

Egypt is trying to finalize a long-term ceasefire after a five-day truce was extended by 24 hours into Tuesday, a truce that was broken several hours before it was set to expire when Palestinian factions in Gaza resumed rocket fire on Israel.

On the battlefield, Hamas met Israeli forces with an array of tactics, including the use of tunnels to launch surprise attacks. The IDF lost 64 soldiers, more than six times the number of troops killed in its previous invasion of Gaza in early 2009. Three civilians in Israel were also killed.

Israel says it has killed hundreds of Hamas fighters and destroyed more than 30 tunnels. Funeral marches were held for several members of the Qassam Brigades but there has been no official word from the group on its losses.

The Palestinian Health Ministry puts the Gaza death toll at 2,016 and says most were civilians in the small, densely populated coastal territory.

 

Photo: Reuters
 

In the tunnel, a Hamas fighter said the group would press on with restocking its arsenal or rockets and other weaponry and shoring up its underground network.

“In peace we make preparations, and in war we use what we have readied,” he said.

Head of Palestinian delegation presents ‘final proposal’ to Egyptians

August 19, 2014

Head of Palestinian delegation presents ‘final proposal’ to Egyptians

By JPOST.COM STAFF08/19/2014 21:20

Palestinian delegation waits for Israeli response, says team is meeting in the next few hours to try to salvage negotiations following renewed rocket fire and departure of Israeli delegation from Egypt.

via Head of Palestinian delegation presents ‘final proposal’ to Egyptians | JPost | Israel News.

 

Smoke rises following Israeli air strike in Gaza August 19 Photo: REUTERS

Palestinian sources said on Tuesday evening that little progress has been made after a nine-hour meeting in Cairo, where Egyptian-mediated negotiations are currently underway.

The head of the Palestinian delegation Azzam al-Ahmad said his negotiating team presented their final proposal to the Egyptians for a cease-fire agreement and was waiting for a final response from the Israeli delegation.

In a statement, the chief negotiator said the Israeli delegation was trying to impose what they want which was ” impossible to accept as Palestinians.” He criticized Israel for their continued “procrastination,”

“We have 5 hours ahead of us,” Al-Ahmad said, adding that “we hope to receive a response before this time so that we can determine the next step”

He said the Palestinians “exercised flexibility to the maximum extent possible.”

The team is slated to meet over the next few hours to try and salvage the negotiations.

Izzat al-Rishq, a Hamas representative said there was no agreement between the two sides, up until now, and expressed little hope for future talks.

Meanwhile, in Gaza, the air force has struck around 30 targets so far in response to Palestinian rocket attacks that led to a collapse of the truce.

Eight rockets were fired into Israel on Tuesday, thus far.

For it’s part US State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf said the US was concerned about the recent developments in the conflict. She condemned the renewed fire from Gaza and reiterated Israel’s right to defend itself.

“We call for an immediate end to hostilities and rocket fire and call on both parties to go back to cease-fire talks.”

Under Rocket Fire, PA Calls for UN to Force Israeli Withdrawal from Judea, Samaria + Update

August 19, 2014

It appeared the Fatah faction had coordinated its diplomatic assault against Israel with the renewal of missile attacks by Hamas.

By: Hana Levi JulianPublished: August 19th, 2014

via The Jewish Press » » Under Rocket Fire, PA Calls for UN to Force Israeli Withdrawal from Judea, Samaria.

AND Livni calls for heavy blow to Hamas, cooperation with PA

 

The United Nations Security Council.
Photo Credit: Patrick Gruban / Wikimedia
 

A top official in the Fatah-led Palestinian Authority government launched a diplomatic assault as the Hamas terror organization renewed its military assault against Israel late Tuesday afternoon from Gaza.

The head of the negotiating team for the former Palestinian Authority, Saeb Erekat, issued a statement Tuesday calling on the United Nations to force Israel to withdraw from all areas in the country won during the defensive 1967 Six Day War.

“Today we demand officially from the international community and the UN Security Council to adopt a resolution that would set a time frame for the withdrawal of Israeli troops from territories occupied in 1967,” Erekat told journalists at a news briefing in Moscow.

The Ramallah-based PA government represented by Erekat has been reborn as the ‘Palestinian Authority unity government’ since its reconciliation earlier this year with theHamas terrorist organization.

For the 11th time since the start of Operation Protective Edge, Gaza terrorists violated an Egyptian-brokered cease-fire more than eight hours prior to the deadline for its scheduled termination at midnight Tuesday.

Hamas claimed it had no connection to the violation and said it had “no idea” who fired the rocket attacks, which continued one after the other.

Also on Tuesday, the U.S. State Department announced it had decided to declare the Mujahedeen Shura Council in the Environs of Jerusalem (MSC) as a foreign terrorist organization.

The MSC, which is an umbrella organization comprised of Gaza-based global jihad terror organizations, is linked to the Islamic State — also known as ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) or ISIL (Islamic State in the Levant).

The group has claimed responsibility for the August 2013 missile attack on the resort city of Eilat, and for a March 2013 attack on Sderot.

 

Update

 

Hamas radio says 1 killed, 10 injured in Gaza airstrike

Hamas’s Al Aqsa radio tweets that one died and ten were injured in an Israeli airstrike on a house in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood of Gaza City. Roughly 20 Palestinians are reported injured in total thus far since Israel commenced airstrikes on Gaza following rocket fire that broke the ceasefire.

Multiple casualties in strike on Gaza

Palestinian media report a strike on a house in the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood of Gaza City and multiple casualties on site.

There is no official statement about the toll, but multiple people are reported killed and injured.

Airstrike on Gaza hits Al Aqsa radio station

An Israeli airstrike reportedly hit Hamas’s Al Aqsa radio station in Gaza City.

The station appears to be broadcasting static.

Massive explosions reported in Gaza City

Journalists in Gaza City report massive explosions from Israeli airstrikes. There are no immediate reports of casualties.

Rocket hits shopping center in southern Israel

A rocket hits a shopping center in the Ashkelon coastal region, causing damage but no injuries, Channel 2 reports.