Posted on 06/27/2006 5:15:57 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
KEREM SHALOM, Israel (AFP) - Israel launched a ground offensive in the Gaza Strip after a wave of targeted air strikes following a tense standoff over the capture of a teenage soldier.
Much of the northern Gaza Strip was plunged into darkness after Israeli war planes hit a power station and two bridges in a series of nighttime raids, witnesses and security sources on both sides said.
"Our forces have begun to enter the southern Gaza Strip," an Israeli army spokesman told AFP at the Kerem Shalom crossing, where tanks and troops were seen crossing into the Palestinian territory.
It was the first major ground offensive against Gaza since Israel pulled out settlers and troops from the impoverished coastal strip of land last year, ending a 38-year occupation.
Israel has massed thousands of troops on the border with Gaza following the capture of a 19-year-old soldier in a militant attack on Sunday that also killed two Israeli servicemen.
Flames could be seen pouring into the night sky after Israeli war planes attacked the electricity plant, causing a power blackout across many parts of the Gaza Strip, including Gaza City.
One of the bridges destroyed in the strikes linked the north and the south of Gaza, with the apparent aim of the operation to prevent movement by militants holding the missing conscript.
No injuries have been reported.
The incursion came amid international appeals for restraint over the captive soldier, the worst Middle East crisis since a Palestinian government headed by the militant Islamist movement Hamas took office in March.
It also followed a landmark agreement Tuesday between Palestinian factions on an political initiative that implicitly recognises Israel's right to exist, a historic shift in policy by Hamas.
Israel -- which has threatened it could take out Hamas ministers over the captured soldier -- dismissed the deal however as an "internal matter".
Palestinian armed groups have vowed not to release the soldier until all Palestinian women and children are freed from Israeli jails, a demand already categorically ruled out Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, facing his first major crisis since taking office in May.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had urged Israel to give diplomacy a chance, saying there was a "concerted international effort" underway for the release of kidnapped Corporal Gilad Shalit.
Shalit, who also holds French nationality, was snatched Sunday in a raid on an army post on the Gaza border in which two other Israeli servicemen and two Palestinian fighters were killed.
Ahead of the incursion, Palestinians abandoned border homes fearing a large-scale assault, while militants fearing assassination have gone to ground.
"Israel is prepared for a long battle against Palestinian terror," Olmert told parliament Tuesday.
But he added: "Even in the difficult circumstances of recent days I declare that we will do everything in our power to hold negotiations with the Palestinians."
Sunday's attack, which saw gunmen from Hamas's armed wing and other militant groups tunnel their way into Israel, was the deadliest assault in the area since Israel's pullout from Gaza.
Tensions have long been mounting however, with Israel and the West boycotting Hamas -- which advocates the destruction of the Jewish state -- as a blacklisted terror group.
Army radio reported deployments of two infantry regiments and two armoured battalions, which would put the concentration of troops at around 5,000.
Turning the screws on the Hamas government -- boycotted politically and financially by the West -- one cabinet minister warned Israel could easily kidnap its high-profile members.
"If we start with kidnappings, Israel has no problem entering the Gaza Strip and kidnapping half the Palestinian government," Benjamin Ben-Eliezer said.
Deputy Prime Minister Shimon Peres also levelled threats against Hamas's Damasus-based political supremo Khaled Meshaal, who famously survived a Mossad assassination attempt in 1997.
An army intelligence officer said Israel knew where Shalit, believed to be alive but injured, was being kept.
A spokesman for the Popular Resistance Committees -- one of three groups that claimed Sunday's attack along with Hamas's armed wing and a group calling itself Army of Islam -- insisted the soldier would remain in captivity as long as Israel ignores their demands.
"The resistance will continue to hold the soldier. We are confident he is in a location the enemy cannot reach," Abu Abir announced.
Egypt, France and the Vatican, as well as the United States, have enlisted efforts to exert pressure on the Palestinians to hand over the soldier, while the Arab League called on the UN Security Council to intervene to prevent Israel from invading.
Past history of soldiers kidnapped at the hands of Palestinians bodes ill for Shalit, with all nine such previous cases ending in death.
In the occupied West Bank, Israeli police said they were looking into reports of a missing Jewish settler after the PRC claimed it was holding a second Israeli.
Public television later reported that the unidentified youth had been taken to the West Bank city of Ramallah by his kidnappers.
Meanwhile, Hamas and the rival Fatah movement announced a deal drawn up by Palestinian prisoners that implicitly recognises Israel's right to exist by calling for a Palestinian state on land conquered in 1967.
All factions excluding the hardline Islamic Jihad had approved the initiative which is due to go before Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas and Hamas prime minister Ismail Haniya.
Abbas had vowed to put the statehood initiative to a referendum on July 26 should no agreement be reached, although Hamas had slammed the vote as an attempt to overthrow its government.
Hey...Ariel Sharon in a coma has more common sense than Jimmah Carter.
I think it was this phrase that triggered the connection. "...not having a clue about what is going on.... "
Actually, I am surprised that Jimmah hasn't offered to go to Gaza and work on a Peace Treaty...so he can work on his second Nobel Peace Prize...
He can stand on the border of Gaza...and hold up his hand, and tell all to stop fighting NOW!
Doncha know that will do the trick.
Green Habitats for Humanity?
LOL
Yeppers...I watched anything I could find about the Gaza Strip..and what happened before, during and after the Israelis left Gaza...
I was so heartbreaking...but, amazing also...because the Jewish settlers did NOT burn those nurserys...but left them there for the Palestinians to take over...just like their homes...most didn't destroy the homes..
BUT, what happens? The Palis wouldn't DARE live in one of the homes...and they destroyed ALL the the Jews had worked HARD to acheive...what a damn shame.
And, I can't tolerate it when I hear the UN and others crying about the need to help the Palestinians..BAH!
ROFL....well...you would have to ask my husband....:)
This is the first time I have been asked to marry someone on line....
Is this like the movie: "You've got mail"? LMAO....
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