CBS/AP/ November 4, 2009, 11:06 AM

After Brief Pause, Gaza Fighting Rages

Israeli airstrikes and Hamas rockets resumed after a brief pause Wednesday to allow food and fuel to reach Palestinian civilians in Gaza, where an Israeli warplane dropped leaflets urging some residents to flee because of imminent attacks.

Even as the Israeli government tentatively welcomed a cease-fire proposal from Egypt and France, its military was instructed to continue its assault on Hamas.

The proposal could mark the first sign of a possible exit from 12 days of bloodshed in Gaza. But Israel says it needs guarantees that any cease-fire will halt rocket fire and prevent Hamas from rearming, while Hamas officials in Syria told CBS News that they could not agree to the plan because it does not guarantee open border crossings or an end to a crippling blockade.

Israeli strikes in response to continued Hamas rocket fire on southern Israel have killed at least 688 Palestinians since Dec. 27, including around 350 civilians, among them 130 children, according to Palestinian officials.

Israel says it has killed at least 130 Gaza militants since it launched its ground offensive Saturday. Ten Israelis have been killed since the fighting began, including three civilians.

On Wednesday, 29 Palestinians were killed, including at least 22 civilians and two Islamic Jihad militants, medics said. In one incident, a family of four was killed in an airstrike on their car, medics said.

In the Jebaliya refugee camp, there was a mass funeral for 40 people killed Tuesday by Israeli mortar fire toward a U.N. school. Israel said it was responding to an attack by Hamas militants who fired mortar shells from an area near the school.

The bodies, wrapped in blankets, were laid out in a long row on the ground, with mourners kneeling in prayer before them.

Israel carried out 40 airstrikes Wednesday on targets including smuggling tunnels on the Gaza-Egypt border, Israel's chief army spokesman Brig. Gen. Avi Benayahu said.

An Israeli combat officer, identified as Lt. Col. Amir, said troops neutralized hundreds of explosives devices, including booby-trapped houses.

Residents said 16 houses on the border were destroyed, with Israel presumably targeting buildings shielding tunnel entrances. Hamas had about 300 smuggling tunnels in the area before the offensive, and Israel has already destroyed dozens in repeated strikes.

Fida Kishta, an area resident, said she could hear sporadic shelling from F-16 planes.

"I feel like the ground is shaking when we hear the shelling. People are terrified," Kishta said.

In the evening, an Israeli warplane dropped leaflets over the Rafah refugee camp on the Gaza-Egypt border, urging residents to flee because of planned Israel strikes. Hamas has weapons smuggling tunnels in the area, and Israel has already destroyed dozens of them in airstrikes.

"Because Hamas uses your houses to hide and smuggle military weapons, the IDF will attack the area, between the Egyptian border until the beach road," the leaflet said, according a local U.N. official.

After the leaflets were dropped, about 5,000 fled to two U.N. schools turned into temporary shelters.

Despite the army's push, Gaza militants fired 14 rockets Wednesday, including hits on the cities of Beersheba and Ashkelon.

Rocket fire has fallen off somewhat as Israeli troops tighten their hold on Gaza, taking over open areas used to launch rockets, but Gaza residents say militants are still launching from heavily populated areas.

(AP/ESRI/United Nations)
Israel released footage of suspected Hamas militants captured by Israeli troops. The men were blindfolded and their hands were bound with plastic cuffs. Several were cuffed together, and led away by soldiers. Others were seen kneeling on the sandy ground.

The army spokesman said 120 suspected militants have been captured.

"We uncovered many tunnels for kidnapping soldiers, at least one car bomb, booby trapped dolls, tunnels - an underground city," Benyahu told Israel TV's Channel 10.

With the renewed fighting, a truce deal still seemed distant. There are also wide gaps between the demands raised by Israel and Hamas.

Still, Israel was to send an envoy, senior Defense Ministry official Amos Gilad, to Cairo on Thursday to hear more about the French-Egyptian truce proposal, whose terms still remain unclear.

The plan calls for an immediate cease-fire for a limited period to allow humanitarian aid into Gaza. It also calls for an urgent meeting of Israel and the Palestinian side on arrangements to prevent any repetition of military action and to deal with the causes.

In Paris, French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Israel and the moderate Palestinian Authority, Hamas' rival, accepted the plan. However, the Palestinian Authority is not a direct party to the conflict.

In Syria, a spokesman for Hamas leader Khaled Mashaal told CBS News' George Baghdadi soon after Sarkozy's comments were made public that the militant group did not accept the terms of the Egyptian-French plan.

Spokesman Abu Omar said Hamas could only agree to a plan which guaranteed to end the economic blockade and to reopen the border crossings as soon as hostilities on both sides were halted; what he called a "complete package."

The Egyptian plan calls for Hamas to stop firing rockets and Israel to stop its military campaign simultaneously - which Hamas is amenable to - but it then states both sides should sit down to discuss further measures to be taken, such as the border crossings and the blockade.

Israel has no direct contacts with Hamas, but Mashaal indicated earlier Wednesday for the first time an apparent willingness to "contribute in reaching a solution to stop the aggression in Gaza." (Click here to read more on this from George Baghdadi in the World Watch blog.)

Turkey has already been asked to put together an international force in Gaza, according to a Mideastern diplomat familiar with the country's efforts to end the conflict. He said the responsibilities of the force were yet to be determined. The diplomat spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the information, and Turkish officials would not immediately comment.

Hamas and Israel voiced reservations, and the Bush administration also withheld firm backing. "What we are seeking is a cease-fire that would actually last," said White House press secretary Dana Perino.

At a news conference, President-elect Barack Obama deferred to President Bush on the Gaza conflict. Obama has insisted that he would allow the current chief executive to deal with foreign policy matters until the Jan. 20 inauguration.

"We can't have two administrations running foreign policy at the same time. We simply can't do it," Obama said. "The silence is not as a consequence of a lack of concern. In fact, it's not silence. ... I've explained very clearly what institutional constraints I'm under when it comes to this issue."

Israel briefly suspended its offensive to allow humanitarian supplies to reach Gaza, and officials said such lulls would be declared on a regular basis, depending on security.

However, just getting aid into Gaza won't solve the huge humanitarian problems. Roads are bombed and blocked, reports CBS News correspondent Richard Roth and it's still a battle zone full of hazards for people delivering the aid and the people who need it.

The pause in fighting came amid growing warnings by the World Bank and aid groups of a humanitarian crisis. The World Bank said there is a severe shortage of drinking water and that the sewage system is under growing strain.

During the lull, Israel allowed in 80 trucks of supplies from various donors as well as industrial fuel for Gaza's power plant. Medics tried to retrieve bodies in areas that had previously been too dangerous to approach.

Medic Mohammed Azayzeh in central Gaza pulled out three people, killed by shrapnel fire Sunday, from the border town of Mughraqa, where Israeli tanks had settled nearby. The medic said he also found a dead family of three, including a father cradling a 1-year-old boy.

Ambulance sirens wailed as drivers rushed to the border crossing with Egypt to evacuate the wounded during relative drop in violence.

Despite the new cease-fire efforts, Israel's security Cabinet decided to push ahead with the offensive, according to participants who spoke on condition of anonymity because they are not allowed to discuss the content of such meetings.

The military has called up thousands of reserve troops that it could use to expand the offensive, supporting the three brigade-size formations of regular troops now inside.

Defense officials said the troops could be ready for action by Friday. They spoke on condition of anonymity because the army's preparations are classified.

Osama Hamdan, a Hamas representative in Lebanon close to the group's leadership in Syria, told Al-Jazeera television that Hamas will reject any initiative that does not include the withdrawal of the Israeli army from Gaza and the opening of all of the territory's border crossings.

"Any proposal that does not include these bases is unacceptable," he said. "The idea of an international force is rejected and such forces which will come to Gaza to protect Israel will be dealt with as enemy forces."
© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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gaye5 says:
augustus131, you are dead right, but the Palestinians would not come in and reap the productive land, they always destroy what they touch.
Israel could have destroyed the hot houses when they left Gaza a few years ago instead Israel transfered 3,500 dunams of Gush Katif hothouses to the Palestinians in Gaza when they pulled out.

The greenhouses were a symbol of ingenuity and hope for the future of Gaza. They produced flowers, fruits and vegetables out of season and sold them for export in Europe. They were a source of employment for local Palestinians.
In August of 2005 a consortium of Jewish philanthropists contributed $14 million to buy former Gaza settlers%u2019 greenhouses to save the green houses and giving them to the Palestinian authority - a hopeful gesture of reconciliation. The greenhouses provide jobs for 3,500 Palestinians and had been a lucrative market, what a thoughtful and meaningful gift!

From this hopeful beginning, came, no sooner had Israel left, then the orgy of chaos and destruction began.
BUT Palestinian looters carted off materials from greenhouses and within hrs or days it was just rubble.
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gaye5 says:
MrNrgmizer, the UN got it''s information from the Gaza people themselves so how we know what is truth.
The media wasn''t at all interested in the rockets when they were being hailed down on Israel, and notice that no one mentioned that despite the rockets being sent into Israel that Israel has still sent over 6000 tons of medical aid and food etc into the Gaza, oh no the media wouldn%u2019t mention that eh...
We have no way of knowing if these details in the article above are true or not. Muslims have been known to do this before for the cameras, and then when the media has gone these people all get up and go home..

I have no doubt that there are causalities, you cant put weapons of war in occupied schools, Mosques etc without innocent people being killed.. Surely one has to wonder why Hamas did this knowing that Israel always targets where they came from... hmmm.. why isn''t the media carrying on about this inhuman act.. Hamas knows that their children will be killed but they also know that if they are killed that the world will not think to blame Hamas for putting the weapons in the schools and will blame Israel.. As Hitler said, "what luck for leaders that people don%u2019t think", in other words that people are so dumb...why do you think these weapons were put in schools, Why isnt the world upset that Hamas is not protecting their own like Israel does with its shelters so as the rockets cant hurt their children.
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augustus131 says:
Closethippy,no,..Texgirl has a point, here is the really history. The Jews already paid for the land back in the 1910''s-40''s. Read your history!!! They never "stole" the Palestinians land. They bought it (before & after WWII) from the "other" arab princes/sheiks, etc. who controlled/owned the "worthless" arid/swampy land that the nomad "gypsie" Palestinians lived/roamed on (The Jews & arabs actually lived peacefully along side each other for a long time).

After they got their loot, the "other" arab princes, booted the Palestinians off the land they just sold to the Jews; and since no other arab "country" would take in these "gypsie" nomads they were left fend on their own on the little bit of land the "other" arabs had not sold off. Really, the "other" arab tribes had/have more direct responsibility for the plight of the Palestinians, than the Jews or Americans (BTW the British & U.N. are the second biggest reason for this regions screw up, not the USA). If you don''t believe me read up on it.. Study the true history of what happend to Palestine begining around WWI.

Also ask yourself; if all the other arab factions/tribes/countries are really SO concerned about the plight of the Palestinians why hasn''t any other arab country EVER taken in the Palestinians since they''d been displaced/sold them out?!?!?!?!? They don''t really like them and don''t really care what happens to them; they never did. That is why they sold their "worthless" land to the Jews in the first place.
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augustus131 says:
Continued.....

Only after they realized how many jews were moving in (& starting their own country/homeland) and how they (the jews) turned a worthless, arid/swampy land into a productive, viable, profitable, region; ONLY THEN did they "care". That is when they started saying "kill the jews", "get them out of here", "give the land back to the poor Palestinian refugees".

They other countries/tribes don''t care a hoot about the Palestinians and really don''t want the Palestinians to make peace with Isreal. They''d rather use them as an excuse (pawns) to keep harrasing Isreal/jews until they leave (so then they can come in and scoop up the now productive/viable land). If that ever happened (jews leave) then watch who gets/takes over the land and see what will happen to the Palestinians...nothing!

That is why anytime the Palestinians make "peace" with Isreal, "other factions" start causing trouble, like Hamas, like hezbullah, etc.., not usually the Palestinias. These factions come in from other arab countries, like Syria, Lebenon, etc. Just watch, if the P''s make peace with Isreal, in about 6 months some other "non-Palestinian" faction will start trouble non the "plaestinians" behalf. That is what has Really been going on thin the region for the last 60 yrs.

BTW, I''m not Jewish, just well read/educated on the region/subject.
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draugwolf says:
mmmmmm pretzels
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cheetah-man7 says:
Gaza should be razed and made into the Israeli version of Coney Island... lots of rides and large pretzels for everyone!
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rusure5 says:
Re: "On the way to cover he spots a young child, grabs him by the arm, and drags him as a shield."

Posted by roadracer9x

That sounds very unlikely.

This seems to be the favorite excuse of Zionists to justify Israeli terrorism and the slaughter of women and children.

But the fact is that the only group that we know of, FOR SURE, with a chronic policy of hiding behind Human Shields, are the Israelis themselves- proven, beyond a shadow of a doubt, before their own Supreme Court.

www.adalah.org/newsletter/eng/oct05/1.php

The Israelis often attempt to attribute this practice to their adversaries, as an excuse to justify their own crimes and atrocities, and always without any substantial support.

One thing is for sure, though- that the craven Israelis have no standing to criticize anyone for using this cowardly terrorist tactic, since they so eagerly embrace this practice themselves.

The Israelis have truly become their own worst oppressors.

Hiding behind Human Shields and slaughtering unarmed civilians, mostly women and children. This is the face of Zionist terrorism.
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rusure5 says:
Re: "There''s only one grievance and Hamas is open about it. Israel''s very existence."

Posted by factsearcher

The main grievance at the moment seems to be the Israeli invasion of Gaza, and their targeting and killing of primarily civilians, mostly women and children.

Israel doesn''t seem to be making a very good case for its own continued existence.
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yongamerica says:
If Hamas has 20,000 terrorists in Gaza, the body count is paltry. When 20,000 Hamas bodies are being eaten by dogs, then peace will be lasting.
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ajmarine111 says:
AJMarine111

Are you still here ?


Posted by Joe-NY at 07:57 PM : Jan 07, 2009



You still looking for me Joe?
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