From the Los Angeles Times
Israeli troops move into Gaza; 13
Palestinians killed
By Jeffrey Fleishman
Times Staff Writer
9:38 AM PDT, June 27, 2007
JERUSALEM —
Israeli soldiers swept into Gaza today, killing at least 13
Palestinians in the heaviest fighting since Hamas seized control of the
territory this month, the Israeli military said.
In raids involving helicopters and ground troops, the troops attacked
around Gaza City and near the southern town of Khan Yunis. The actions,
which included searches for tunnels and explosives, were a sign that
Israel intended to isolate and weaken Hamas while negotiating with
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and his more moderate
Fatah party.
The Israeli military said Palestinian gunmen were killed after Israeli
troops were attacked by six or seven antitank missiles near Khan Yunis.
Two Israeli soldiers were wounded. At least eight of those killed in
the day's operations belonged to Hamas, Islamic Jihad and the Al Aqsa
Martyrs Brigade, which frequently clash with Israeli forces along the
Gaza-Israeli border.
Palestinian officials said Raed Fanuna, a senior member of Islamic
Jihad, was killed when an Israeli airstrike hit his car in east Gaza
City, where eight other Palestinians died. The Israeli military denied
the aerial attack. Palestinian medics said a 12-year-old boy and three
others were killed when an Israeli tank shell struck a house in Gaza
City.
Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum called the military offensive part of a
"conspiracy in which Abbas is a participant and which is aimed at
pressuring Hamas and the people of Gaza." A video on Hamas TV accused
Abbas of collaborating with the Israelis. The footage purportedly shows
Abbas telling his security officials during a meeting that they should
kill Palestinian militants firing rockets into Israel.
In a news conference today, Abbas said of the Israeli attacks: "We
strongly condemn these criminal acts committed against our people in
Gaza and the West Bank. We are against the violence, but at the same
time we are against the useless missiles" fired from Gaza into Israel.
Between Tuesday and late today, three rockets and three mortar rounds
were launched from Gaza toward Israel, according to the Israeli army.
Two of the rockets struck Israel, including one in an industrial area.
The Israeli military incursions came days after a summit in Sharm el
Sheik, Egypt, between Abbas, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, King
Abdullah II of Jordan and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. The meeting
was part of a widening Arab and Western push to strengthen Abbas and
Fatah against the Islamic extremism of Hamas, which now presides over
the 1.5 million Palestinians in Gaza.
In an interview on Israeli radio, Efraim Halevy, the former head of the
Mossad spy agency, said Israeli strikes against militants should not be
influenced by diplomatic efforts.
"If there was pinpointed and reliable information about intentions to
attack Israel and an opportunity to eliminate a key figure responsible
for the rocket fire, then it was both justified as well as welcome,
regardless of what is going on on the diplomatic level," he said.
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times