Sunday, March 02, 2008

Cabinet to decide future of Gaza operation midweek

From Ynet News, by Roni Sofer / Israel News 2/3/08:

National Security Cabinet to discuss prolonging Gaza operation Wednesday; Defense Minister Barak, Foreign Minister Livni demand operation be widened. Foreign Ministry prepares to fight off international onslaught in view of death toll in Gaza



IAF strike in Gaza Photo: AP
The cabinet is not expected decide on prolonging the IDF operation in Gaza in its Sunday meeting. Prime Minister Ehud Olmert is likely to wait for the National Security Cabinet's Wednesday meeting to have the operation declared a wide-range incursion.

The Israeli government has simultaneously launched an international informative campaign, aimed at explaining Israel's stand on the Gaza situation.
Foreign Minister Tzipi Livini spoke on the matter with US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Slovenian Foreign Minister and current EU President Dimitrij Rupel.

Israel, she stressed, has the right to defend its citizens and the Palestinians must not suspend the peace talks because of the Gaza operation, especially since Israel "did not suspend the talks, despite the ongoing rocket fire."

Director-General of the Foreign Ministry Aharon Abramovich called a special ministry session Saturday night, in which the Israeli ambassadors around the world were briefed on the measures in which to deal with the expected international onslaught in view of the death toll in Gaza.

Foreign Ministry personnel were instructed to stress the impossible reality in which 200,000 of Israel's residents have been living.

Meanwhile, the security establishment is readying for a large-scale incursion aimed at terror infrastructure and the Hamas-led government in Gaza Strip.

Defense Minister Ehud Barak and Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni both believe the operation is warranted, and both agree this is not the time to engage in a Gaza war.

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert approved the current operation in the Strip's north, but his is in no hurry to call for a wide incursion. Olmert is expected to meet with defense establishment official on Sunday to study the weekend's occurrences in Gaza more thoroughly.

The National Security Cabinet will meet Wednesday, with Rice's visit to Jerusalem hovering in the background, and is not expected to necessarily result in a declaration of war.

A source in Jerusalem told Ynet that "things may change", especially now that Ashkelon and its vicinity are under rocket fire.
The overall feeling, added the source is that as time goes by, Israel deterrence in decreasing and since political pressure on Hamas to cease fire has proves ineffective, Israel may have no choice but to decide the matter by military force. The only remaining question is when.

Faced with the escalation in rocket fire, said the sources, the PM has some hard decisions to make.

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