This Article is From Jul 19, 2014

Israel Warns it May Widen Gaza Ground Offensive, Toll at 285

Israel Warns it May Widen Gaza Ground Offensive, Toll at 285
Gaza/Jerusalem: Israel yesterday warned it would "significantly widen" its first ground offensive in five years in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip, after 11 days of airstrikes that have killed 285 Palestinians so far failed to stop the militants' rocket attacks on the Jewish state.

"My instructions are to prepare for the possibility of significantly widening the ground operation, and the military is preparing accordingly," Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told reporters after convening a meeting of the security cabinet to discuss the Gaza situation.

Netanyahu said the military was targeting the Hamas tunnel network, which it could not do "only from the air".

Some 13 Hamas operatives were caught on Thursday attempting to enter Israel through a tunnel to attack a kibbutz.

Security sources in Israel said that the need to neutralise the subterranean threat was one of the reasons behind the launch of the ground operation.

Netanyahu also emphasised that Israel launched the ground incursion only after Hamas rejected ceasefire proposals.

"The operation came after Israel agreed to the Egyptian and UN proposed ceasefires. In both cases Hamas continued to shoot, and in light of that we chose to begin the operation after exhausting all other options, understanding that without expanding the operation, the price we will pay will be higher," he said.

"The IDF is working against Hamas and other Gaza terror organisations through the air, sea and now also land. Our ground forces have begun to hit terror tunnels spanning from Gaza into Israel," the Israeli premier asserted.

Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Ya'alon also spoke at the meeting, saying "we will not compromise on Israel's security and will not accept rocket fire on the south".

"Hamas has already begun to pay a heavy price for its actions, and will pay even more dearly until rocket fire stops. Whoever attempts to disrupt our life will regret it," Ya'alon said.

Israeli forces backed by artillery and airstrikes launched the ground offensive last night with the army intending to strike a "significant blow to Hamas' terror infrastructure".

 Forty-eight Gazans were killed today as Israel, raising the overall Palestinian death toll since July 8 to 285, medics said.

Thousands of troops moved into parts of Gaza, supported by tanks and artillery fire. An Israeli soldier was killed in the operation.

"Following 10 days of Hamas attacks by land, air and sea, and after repeated rejections of offers to de-escalate the situation, the IDF has initiated a ground operation within the Gaza Strip," a statement from the Israeli army said.

The Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) said the goal was to "establish a reality in which Israeli residents can live in safety and security without continuous indiscriminate terror."

US President Barack Obama called Netanyahu to discuss the situation in Gaza and expressed hope that Israel will minimise civilian casualties in its ground offensive against Hamas.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon will fly to the Middle East today in an effort to end the latest violence in Gaza, a top official told the Security Council.
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