World View: Eight People Killed in Botched Israeli Military Operation in Gaza

Deadly Gaza flare-up threatens to derail peace efforts
AFP

This morning’s key headlines from GenerationalDynamics.com

  • Eight people killed in botched Israeli military operation in Gaza
  • Palestinians demand ‘revenge’ but Hamas backs off from war

Eight people killed in botched Israeli military operation in Gaza

Palestinians stand next to the vehicle used in Sunday's military operation and destroyed by Israeli aircraft missiles on Sunday after the Israeli force had fled the scene. (AFP)
Palestinians stand next to the vehicle used in Sunday’s military operation and destroyed by Israeli aircraft missiles on Sunday after the Israeli force had fled the scene. (AFP)

An Israeli army officer and seven Palestinians were killed in a gunfight that followed a botched Israeli army military undercover operation in Gaza on Sunday evening.

Israeli special forces members wore women’s clothing to avoid detection and crossed the border into Gaza. This follows another “cloak and dagger” operation on Thursday when a car crossed into Gaza carrying three suitcases in the back seat stuffed with $15 million in cash from Qatar.

When the car was two miles into Gaza, near Khan Younis, fighters of the Izzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas, stopped the car and asked to see ID cards. A gunfight ensued, killing one Israeli military officer, who has not been identified, and seven Palestinians. One of the Palestinians was an Al-Qassam Brigades senior command, Noureddin Mohammad Salama Baraka, 37.

Due to the secrecy of the operation, Israel has not revealed the specific purpose of the mission. According to one report, it was an intelligence-gathering operation that went wrong. According to another report, the objective was to kill Baraka, although Israel denied this, saying that the operation was “not intended to kill or abduct terrorists, but to strengthen Israeli security.”

The Israeli car fled the scene followed by Al-Qassam fighters, bombed from the air by an extraction operation that rescued the Israelis with a helicopter. Guardian (London) and Jerusalem Post and International Mideast Media Center (Palestine) and AP

Palestinians demand ‘revenge’ but Hamas backs off from war

In the worst bout of fighting since the end of the 67-day war between Israel and Gaza in 2014, Palestinians launched over 200 rockets and mortar bombs into Israel on Monday. One mortar bomb hit a bus, wounding an Israeli. At least seven Israelis were wounded by other rocket strikes.

Israeli tanks and fighter jets retaliated by bombing sites across Gaza. Palestinian officials said that at least three people, including two militants, were killed. Israeli missiles also struck and destroyed Gaza’s Al-Aqsa television station, as well as a number of apartment buildings believed to house Hamas militants.

This intense exchange of fire occurred just two days after $15 million in money from Qatar entered Gaza, paying civil service workers’ salaries. This money was supposed to help bring calm, but it is worth noting that the money to pay civil service workers’ salaries was blocked for months not by Israel but by Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinian Authority. Abbas strongly opposed the infiltration of Qatari money last week as a betrayal of the Palestinian cause and may be pleased with Monday’s exchange of fire.

Reports are that the Israeli army is preparing for all-out war in Gaza, renewing the 2014 summer Gaza war, especially after Hamas threatened on Monday that Israel will pay a “heavy price” for the operation.

However, Egypt and the U.N., which in the past have been mediators between Israel and Hamas, are hoping to bring about a ceasefire. In addition, a number of analysts are saying that Hamas does not want a war with Israel, at least not at this time, or to give Israel an excuse to launch a major military operation in Gaza.

Besides saying that Israel will pay a “heavy price,” Hamas’s rhetoric has not gone further to say that the incident will affect efforts to reach a truce agreement with Israel. Also, Hamas leaders have not accused Israel of sabotaging the ongoing efforts to achieve a truce in the Gaza Strip. Nor have they indicated that Hamas views the incident, which took place near Khan Younis, as a trigger for another war with Israel.

Hamas and militants in Gaza have been attacking Israel with rockets that have no guidance systems. Reports indicate that they also possess an arsenal of middle range and long-range missiles that reach cities all across Israel, but they have refrained from using them.

Hamas issued a statement saying, “The resistance last night taught the enemy a harsh lesson and turned its intelligence system into the laughing stock of the world.” The statement claimed that Hamas scored a major victory over the Israelis, who were forced to flee after being spotted by Hamas militants.

What these statements mean is that the leaders of Hamas have much to lose at this time in a war with Israel, especially with the influx of Qatari money and promises of further concessions. That means that there probably will not be a new Gaza war, at least for a while.

Generational Dynamics predicts that the Mideast is headed for a major regional war refighting the 1948 war between Jews and Arabs that followed the partitioning of Palestine and the creation of the state of Israel. The war will also pit Sunnis versus Shias and various ethnic groups against each other. Generational Dynamics predicts that, in the approaching Clash of Civilizations world war, the “axis” of China, Pakistan, and the Sunni Muslim countries will be pitted against the “allies,” the U.S., India, Russia, and Iran. Jerusalem Post (11-Nov) and Times of Israel and Jerusalem Post and Israel National News

Related Articles:

KEYS: Generational Dynamics, Israel, Gaza, Hamas, Izzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, Noureddin Mohammad Salama Baraka, Al-Aqsa television, Mahmoud Abbas, Palestinian Authority, Egypt, Qatar
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