Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Talk To The Hand

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Talk To The Hand

    TALK TO THE HAND

    Strategy Page
    http://www.strategypage.com/qnd/israel/articl es/20090217.aspx
    Feb 17 2009

    February 17, 2009: Despite the ceasefire in Gaza, since January 18th,
    Palestinians have fired, on average, two rockets or mortar shells
    into Israel each day. The response has usually been bombing attacks
    on weapons smuggling tunnels on the Egyptian border, as well as
    halting goods entering or leaving Gaza. The tunnel attacks include
    storage areas for weapons moved into Gaza. Hitting these usually
    results in spectacular secondary explosions, as the smuggled weapons
    detonate. Despite Hamas denials, Israel has identified many of the
    fired rockets as those previously manufactured and used by Hamas.

    Hamas was forced to return ten truckloads of UN food aid that it
    had seized at gun point. The UN cut off all aid shipments until
    Hamas returned the stolen food, which Hamas did after a few days,
    explaining that they had simply stolen the wrong aid shipments and
    were very sorry.

    Fighting inside Gaza continues, as Hamas gunmen continue to kill, wound
    and terrorize real or suspected opponents. Over a third of the Gaza
    population is hostile to Hamas for one reason or another. Hamas, in
    turn, considers these people responsible for the targeting information
    the Israelis continue to get. The Hamas leadership is particularly
    concerned about this, because Israeli missiles and smart bombs are
    regularly used to kill Hamas leaders and key technical people. Hamas is
    believed to have killed over a hundred suspected opponents inside Gaza
    since late December. Many more have been injured or imprisoned. This
    violence continues because Israel continues to find and kill (usually
    with a guided missile) key Hamas personnel, especially those still
    involved with firing rockets into Israel. Thus Hamas believes there
    are still many Palestinians in Gaza who are providing targeting data.

    The Israel-Hamas peace talks in Egypt are stalemated over
    several issues. First, the Israelis want Sergeant Gilad Schalit
    released. Schalit was kidnapped by Hamas gunmen on June, 2006. Now
    Hamas is hinting that Schalit may be dead. This may just be a
    negotiating tactic, as Hamas is still haggling with Israel over how
    many jailed Hamas members would be released in return for Schalit
    (Hamas wants a thousand, Israel offers much less). Israel also wants
    the freed Palestinian terrorists to be exiled, which Hamas opposes. The
    jailed Palestinian terrorists are experienced operators, and Hamas
    wants them to replace the terrorists Israel has been killing with
    missiles strikes. Israel also wants a halt to the rocket and mortar
    attacks. Hamas says it cannot halt all of them, because there are
    some splinter terrorist groups that it cannot control. Israel also
    wants a halt to the use of smuggling tunnels to move more weapons
    into Gaza. Hamas insists that it has the right to arm and defend
    itself. Israel believes that Hamas is not serious about the peace
    talks, and is only using them to prolong the temporary ceasefire. This
    allows Hamas to continue smuggling weapons in and firing rockets
    into Israel.

    Israel held national elections, and more conservative and
    anti-Palestinian candidates were elected. As usual, no party won enough
    seats in the parliament (Knesset) to form a government, So there will
    be a week or more of bargaining, as the two largest factions (centrist
    Kadima and conservative Likud) try to make enough deals with smaller
    parties to form a majority block that can form a new government. If
    Kadima manages to remain in power, it won't treat the Palestinians any
    more gently than Likud proposes to do. Most Israelis have lost all
    patience with the Palestinians. Hamas remains determined to destroy
    Israel, and appears to have no intention of changing that doctrine.

    Relations with Turkey continue to get worse. It began last month when
    the Turkish prime minister accused the Israeli prime minister of war
    crimes against the Palestinians. The Israeli prime minister refuted
    the accusation and the Turkish prime minister stalked off the stage
    (at the Davos economic summit). Then the head of the Israeli armed
    forces pointed out that the Turks had treated Greeks in Cyprus, as well
    as Kurds and Armenians in eastern Turkey badly, and continues to kill
    Kurds. This further enraged the Turks, who are currently ruled by a
    pro-Islamic government (which feels it has to join the "hate Israel"
    crowd or lose street cred in Islamic conservative circles.)

    February 7, 2009: After six weeks in hiding, senior Hamas officials
    are appearing in public again, primarily as part of negotiating teams
    that go to Egypt to meet with their Israeli counterparts.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X