Wednesday, July 23, 2014
Celaka US: Dah Ramai Tentera Israel Mampos, Baru Sibuk Dengan Gencatan Senjata!
U.S. Calls for Immediate Truce in Gaza as Death Toll Mounts
Palestinian Deaths Reach 571
ASA FITCH in Jerusalem, JAY SOLOMON in Cairo and JOSHUA MITNICK in Kibbutz Nir Am, Israel
Ini pula statements celaka Ban Ki-Moon
The U.S. turned
to pushing for an immediate cease-fire in Gaza with the death toll
nearing 600, as Israeli officials indicated they would keep up efforts
to destroy tunnels that Hamas is increasingly using to mount
cross-border attacks.
The death toll
in Gaza rose to 571 on Monday, the Palestinian Health Ministry said. It
is up more than 300 in the four days since Israel's ground invasion
began. More than 149 children are among the dead, the officials said.
More
- Israel Soldier Missing Amid Assault on Hamas
- Humanitarian Toll Rises as Gazans Flee
- Kerry Arrives in Cairo in Bid to Broker Cease Fire
- Young Americans Fought and Died in Israeli Uniform
- Israel's Incursion Was Driven By Risk From Tunnels
- Gaza Battle Deadliest in Conflict
- Elite Israeli Unit Loses 13 in Gaza Battles
Nine more
Israeli soldiers were killed on Monday, four of them in a raid by Hamas
militants who infiltrated southern Israel through a tunnel. There have
been five such raids in five days. Twenty-five soldiers and two
civilians have been killed, 20 of the soldiers in the past two days.
That is more than double the combined total of 10 soldiers killed for
Israel's last two conflicts with Hamas in 2012 and 2008-9.
"We don't want to see any more civilians getting killed," President Barack Obama said after he dispatched his top diplomat, Secretary of State John Kerry,
to Cairo for open-ended negotiations on a cease-fire. "I have
instructed him to push for an immediate cessation of hostilities based
on a return to the November 2012 cease-fire agreement between Israel and
Hamas in Gaza." It was Mr. Obama's most forceful call to immediately
end the fighting.
Mr. Kerry said
the U.S. was deeply concerned about the consequences of Israel's
"appropriate and legitimate" effort to defend itself.
"No country can
stand by when rockets are attacking it and tunnels are dug in order to
come into your country and assault your people," he said. "But always,
in any kind of conflict, there is a concern about civilians—about
children, women, communities that are caught in it."
Palestinians mourn the death of relatives at a hospital morgue in the southern Gaza Strip on Monday.Reuters
On Sunday, Mr.
Kerry was inadvertently recorded talking to an aide and appeared to mock
Israel's claims of "pinpoint" accuracy in its military operations in
Gaza.
Since launching
a ground invasion on Thursday, Israel has found the tunnel network is
far more extensive than previously thought.
Defense
Minister Moshe Ya'alon said Sunday that Israel expected to complete its
operation against the tunnels within several days. That was seen as a
signal that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government doesn't have
an appetite for a prolonged offensive.
Mike Herzog, a
former Israeli negotiator familiar with government thinking, said Israel
wants to finish the tunnel operation, which will take a few more days,
and only then will consider a cease-fire.
If Israel's
security requirements for a cease-fire aren't met and it perceives that
the deal would give Hamas a political achievement, the government will
oppose the truce "no matter who is calling for it," he added.
A senior
American administration official said the U.S. believes Israel is
generally on board with a cease-fire because Mr. Netanyahu indicated as
much in his conversations with Mr. Obama and Mr. Kerry, and Israel
supported an Egypt cease-fire proposal last week. Israel will back a new
proposal, the U.S. believes, if leaders feel there is a diplomatic
solution that addresses their concerns about ending Hamas rocket fire.
The intensified
offensive hasn't stopped rockets from Gaza. Israel said militants
launched 130 into its territory on Monday and 14 were intercepted over
populated areas, including two over Tel Aviv.
In addition to
the four soldiers who died in the tunnel raid, the military said five
more soldiers were killed on Monday. Dozens of Palestinians died during a
day of heavy fighting in Gaza's densely populated cities and along its
northern border, the Palestinian Health Ministry said. Five Palestinians
were killed at a hospital in Deir el-Balah hit by Israeli tank fire. An
Israeli airstrike in Khan Younis killed 28 people in a home that was
flattened.
While Israeli
forces have found and destroyed 16 tunnels and 45 entrances since
Thursday, a senior military official said the recent ground operations
revealed there were many more. The Gaza Strip, a densely populated
sliver of land 25 miles long and roughly 7 miles wide with nearly two
million people, is sitting on top of a vast infrastructure used to move
rockets, weapons and people, the official told reporters in a briefing.
"It's very
complicated to find which entrance belongs to which tunnel," the
official said, adding that the military had learned the network was
"much more sophisticated than we suspected."
Israel has
extensive surveillance capabilities in Gaza, including drones that give a
live, close-up picture of the area. But tunnel construction is
difficult to detect because entrances are typically built within
enclosed structures such as houses or warehouses. Some are even sealed
with cement or tile for later use, further complicating detection
efforts, said Michael Oren, a military historian and former Israeli
ambassador to the U.S.
Given the
difficulty in detecting tunnels, even if Israel succeeds in its mission,
wiping out the network entirely is probably not feasible, the military
official said. Without a political agreement that allows for inspections
by Israel, there is nothing that would prevent Hamas from rebuilding
other than the high cost.
Hamas's predawn incursions on Monday highlighted Israel's vulnerability to surprise attack.
At Kibbutz Nir
Am near the Gaza border, the agrarian scene offered no sign of the
construction project that had been taking place below. Over 14 years,
the border farming collective has become accustomed to frequent barrages
of rockets. But residents believed the ground near the kibbutz was made
up of sandstone and too unstable to build a tunnel.
Two teams of
Hamas fighters emerged from different openings, one headed to Nir Am and
another to a neighboring kibbutz. The army said it repelled both teams,
and residents at Nir Am said the fighting lasted several hours. Hamas
said it destroyed an Israeli armored vehicle with an antitank missile.
The army said four of its soldiers and 10 of the militants died in the
clash.
"This is a new threat," said Betty Gavri, a member of Nir Am's emergency response team. "We knew it existed in theory, but until you experience it, you don't really know."
"This is a new threat," said Betty Gavri, a member of Nir Am's emergency response team. "We knew it existed in theory, but until you experience it, you don't really know."
Hamas has
highlighted the sophistication of its tunnels on social media and
elsewhere as a point of pride, and has responded defiantly to Israel's
pledge to eradicate them. Asked what it would do if Israel destroyed all
of them, a Hamas spokesman said last week that they would be rebuilt.
Tunnel-building
expertise came to Gaza in the 1990s from Hezbollah, which had developed
tunnels as a tactic to evade Israeli airstrikes. The extent and
sophistication of the underground passages has grown steadily since
then, overseen by an elite Hamas unit that digs them.
Some are used
to infiltrate Israel, others to smuggle goods and people to and from
Gaza across the Egyptian border and some are large enough to transport
cars. Egypt, which like Israel is at odds with Hamas, said in March that
it destroyed 1,370 of the smuggling tunnels.
"It started
with crawling, but through the years it advanced," said Doron Peskin,
head of research at the Tel Aviv-based consultancy Info-Prod. "We are
now speaking about tunnels in which an average person can stand and a
fighter can carry his equipment and weapons. Also one of the purposes of
course was to take an Israeli as a hostage."
Hamas secured
the release of more than 1,000 prisoners in 2011 in exchange for soldier
Gilad Shalit, who was captured in a raid through a cross-border tunnel
in 2006.
Gaza's tunnels
are supported by concrete and steel walls and sometimes include
communication lines, electricity and lighting—an expensive amenity in
Gaza where energy is in short supply and blackouts hit daily. The
average depth of the tunnels being uncovered is 82 feet, according to
the army.
An Israeli
commander quoted in the newspaper Yedioth Ahronoth said the forces had
discovered a large tunnel built to a high structural standard.
"It was 27
meters (88 feet) deep, which is more than seven stories," the commander
said. "Based on the list of quantities of the previous tunnel we
exposed,…this tunnel had at least 8,000 tons of concrete. You could
build a high-rise with that."
As the fighting
rages, the Obama administration has come under growing pressure from
European and Arab allies to stanch the rising civilian death toll in
Gaza.
Senior U.S.
officials traveling with Mr. Kerry said the politics of the Middle East
have shifted dramatically since the Obama administration intervened in
2012 to end the last round of fighting between Israel and Hamas. The
officials said leading Arab states are deeply divided over whether to
bail Hamas out and that Egypt's new president, Abdel Fattah Al Sisi, had
only limited sway over the Palestinian fighters.
Relations
between Mr. Kerry and Israel's government have noticeably cooled since
the collapse in April of formal peace talks between Israel and the
Palestinians.
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mountdweller
1 orang berkata:
Wahai mujahidin gaza bunuh semua yahudi laknatullah...almahdi sudah hampir
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