In
the first three days of its air offensive against the Palestinian
militant group Hamas — to which Islamic Jihad is affiliated — the
Israeli Defence Force struck more than 780 targets in Gaza, including
leaders of the organisation, rocket-launchers and missiles which had
been deliberately hidden among the territory’s civilian population.
A bombed-out building in the Gaza city of Khan Yunis. The Palestinian
health ministry claimed 70 per cent of casualties were civilians, many
women and children
Meanwhile, Hamas has been firing hundreds of its own rockets at Israel from shifting launch-sites in the Gaza Strip.
But
what makes this latest outbreak so terrifying in the endless tragedy of
the Israeli/Palestinian conflict is the extraordinary intensity of both
the provocation from Hamas, and the response from Israel.
Hamas,
for the first time in years, has been targeting Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.
As a result, nearly three million people in these cities were forced
into bomb-shelters during that very same World Cup semi-final.
In
the past week, Hamas rockets have also been fired at targets as far
away as Hadera and Haifa in northern Israel, and at the
heavily-protected Dimona plant where Israel’s nuclear warheads are made.
Hamas, for the first time in
years, has been targeting Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, forcing huge numbers
to take refuge. Pictured, Israelis take cover in an underground car park
Hamas’s
military wing, the Army of Al-Qassam, has only been able to display such
ambition because it has recently added a formidable new weapon to its
armoury of more than 11,000 missiles — a clutch of Syrian-made M-302
rockets with a range of 100 miles.
Before now, the maximum range of their rockets had been in the region of 50 miles.
But
with this dramatic escalation in Hamas’s ability to strike deep into
Israel, the Israeli Defence Force is threatening a ground invasion of
Gaza.
It
is no understatement to say that the inevitable bloodshed and carnage
that would follow such a development could inflame tensions throughout
the Middle East, especially if Hamas manages to incite a general
Palestinian uprising.
Ever
since the Israeli state was created in 1948, and carved out of land
that used to be Palestine, there has always been a sense of grievance
among Palestinian Arabs, many of whom were dispossessed when Jewish
settlers moved in.
Although
1.7 million Palestinian Arabs still live in Israel, huge numbers left
their land and moved to Gaza — a strip of territory 25 miles long by
seven miles at its widest — which is now home to 1.5 million people and
one of the most densely crowded areas on Earth.
Whatever the
rights and wrongs — and there are wrongs on both sides — it is perhaps
understandable that their descendants feel resentment towards Israelis
who live on land they believe is rightfully theirs.
This
resentment has resulted in continual attacks on Israel by Palestinians,
and the latest cycle of violence started after Hamas kidnapped three
Israeli schoolboys on June 12,2014 in a bid to boost its popularity among
Israeli-hating Palestinians in the run-up to elections in less than six
months time.
The
militant group coldly murdered its teenage captives — possibly in panic
after discovering they were not Israeli soldiers who could be used as
bargaining chips to swap for released Hamas prisoners.
The discovery of the boys’ bodies 19 days later shocked the Israeli nation to the core.
Even
President Mahmoud Abbas, who governs the Palestinian Authority in
coalition with Hamas, reluctantly condemned the atrocity — although
cynics said this was to ensure continued U.S. and EU financial aid.
But
a terrifying insight into the dark savagery of the passions involved
came from the Palestinian media which described the killings as a
‘masterstroke’, depicting the three boys as rats hanging from hooks with
Stars of David around their necks.
The
deaths were also greeted with whoops of joy by ordinary Palestinians,
many of whom provocatively held up three fingers to triumphantly
symbolise the three victims. In swift retribution, Israeli vigilantes
kidnapped a Palestinian teenager and killed him. He was almost certainly
burnt alive, for soot was found in his throat and lungs.
Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu speaks at the funeral of three Israeli schoolboys abducted and
killed by Hamas. He has vowed to catch the killers
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