The History Behind Gaza Conflict
CBS Evening News: Renewed Fighting Between Israel And Hamas Has Long Back Story
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Behind The Gaza Conflict
Hamas, an Islamic group that does not recognize Israel's right to exist, took control of Gaza after being elected 18 months ago. As Sheila MacVicar reports, the conflict seemed inevitable.
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On The Ground In Israel
"Only On The Web": CBS News' Mark Phillips reports from the Israeli-Gaza border where he explains rockets are still falling in a campaign Israel has yet to call a success.
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Palestinians gather next to a building used by the Islamic group Hamas after it was hit in an Israeli missile strike in Jebaliya, northern Gaza Strip, Monday, Dec. 29, 2008. (AP Photo/Hatem Moussa)
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Gaza Air Assault
Israel's air force targets symbols of Hamas power as its assault on Gaza Strip continues.
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Mideast Conflict
Events, key players and a history of the world's most unstable region.
Tens of thousands in the Muslim world protested Israel's continuing bombardment in Gaza and chanted, "Down with Israel."
In Cairo, where the Egyptian government had been key in brokering the now-collapsed ceasefire, people called for an end to cooperation with Israel.
If history has shown us anything, getting any cooperation over Gaza has been nearly impossible, reports CBS News correspondent Sheila MacVicar.
Thirty miles long, at most ten miles wide, and twice the size of Washington D.C., Gaza is one of the world's most densely populated places.
It was ruled by Egypt until captured in the 1967 War. Gaza was occupied by Israeli soldiers until three years ago.
When Israel unilaterally withdrew, it left behind a vacuum filled by Hamas, the Islamist group which does not recognize Israel's right to exist. Hamas is now the elected leadership of Gaza.
"The Israelis, as far as they're concerned, what they face with Palestinian resistance and in particular from Hamas, is in their book no different than what the United States faces from al Qaeda," said Rosemary Hollis, a Middle East expert at City University London.
Since 2005, Hamas militants and their allies have launched more than 6,000 rockets at Israeli targets. Ten people have been killed.
As candidate Barack Obama discovered when he toured the frequently hit Israeli town of Sderot last summer, however crudely ineffective the attacks, people did live in fear.
"If somebody was sending rockets into my house where my two daughters sleep at night, I'm going to do everything in my power to stop that," Obama said on July 23.
But the violence was not one-sided. Israel carried out targeted killings. And more importantly for the people of Gaza, it imposed and tightened an economic blockade that cut off supplies of food, medicine, and even electricity.
The theory was that would encourage Palestinians to reject Hamas. It didn't work.
Unwilling to talk to Hamas, with Israeli elections coming soon and no serious prospects for peace, Israel did what it has done before and vows to continue.
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The same arabs who took them out...the same ones who promised these people they would get their piece of land as soon as israel was destroyed (they believed that jewish people wouldnt have been able to defend themselves the way they did back then when they were just out of concentration camps where they starved)
However, NONE of these arab countries want them.
And the world has the guts to criticize Israel for defending themselves from the same type of people US, England, France, Spain are complaining about in their own backyard for the terrorists acts agains humanity.