Israel to launch Gaza attack soon

The Defense Minister presented information to his ministerial colleagues, showing that terrorists in Hamas-controlled Gaza have fired 700 Kassam rockets towards Sderot, the Negev and Ashkelon since the beginning of the year. He said that Arabs in Gaza have fired a total of some 4,000 since the year 2001, causing 14 deaths.
The Defense Minister feels there will ultimately be no choice other than to attack the terror infrastructures in Gaza, and "it appears that every passing day brings a broad military operation closer."
Though the US was supportive, the United Nations was quick to condemn
the Israeli decision. Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon called on Israel to
reconsider it, saying that detaching of a civilian population from vital
supplies would be in violation of international law and would cause
suffering to an already-suffering population.
The Gaza population voted overwhelmingly in favor of the Hamas terrorist
organization in the Palestinian Authority election last year. Islamic
Jihad, which also enjoys a measure of support in Gaza, has already
announced that it will continue to fire rockets, despite the Israeli
decision.
Hamas, Fatah and Arab MKs Agree
Hamas was not happy with the government's decision, calling it
a "declaration of war [that] continues the criminal, terrorist Zionist
actions against our people."
Hamas-rival Fatah was also critical. Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas, the leader of the Fatah anti-Israel military organization, called the plan an "oppressive decision" that will "increase the suffering of 1.5 million people in the Gaza Strip."
Israeli-Arab MK Taleb A-Sana said, "Israel is defining [Gaza] as a hostile entity in order to excuse itself from war crimes."
All of Gaza's fuel, including diesel, gasoline and natural gas, comes from Israel, as does 62.5% of Gaza's electricity. So says Stuart Shepherd of the UN's Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
Another 28.6% of Gaza's electricity comes from Gaza's power plant, which depends on Israeli fuel. The remainder of the electricity comes from Egypt.
Opinions at Home
The coalition member Shas Party, strongly in favor of the
decision, has long called for cutting off electricity to Gaza in
response to Kassam attacks. Minister Yitzhak Cohen said at the meeting
that Israel must make it clear that every rocket will lead to an
immediate Israeli response against Gaza. "The Gaza power switch should
be directly linked to the rocket's tail," he said.
MK Yossi Beilin, chairman of the far-left Meretz party, said the
decision was both foolish and dangerous. "Instead of dealing with the
situation and trying to prevent its further deterioration," he said,
"this only strengthens Hamas."
On the other side of the spectrum, the nationalist camp said the
decision was long overdue. "This is something we should have done the
moment the first Kassam was fired," said MK Yuli Edelstein (Likud). "We
continue to pay dearly for the hesitancy characteristic of Prime
Minister Ehud Olmert's government," he said, adding that there is no
need to wait before actually cutting back on the fuel and electricity
supplied to Gaza.
MK Tzvi Hendel (National Union) said the move was not enough and
would not help stop the rocket attacks against Israel: "The goal must be
a military operation that will lead to the complete destruction of the
terror infrastructure in Gaza. So long as the government continues to
tie the IDF's hands on this matter, the catastrophic security situation
is the government's fault."
What About Egypt?
Gonen Ginat, former editor of the National Religious
Party-affiliated HaTzofeh newspaper, criticized those who say that the
decision will lead the citizens of Gaza to despair: "I see. So what
will happen now? They will start firing Kassams at Sderot? ... It's
insane. From the moment we ran away from Gaza, the Palestinians
stubbornly insist on trying to fire rockets at the electricity plant
that supplies them with electricity - while we announced that no matter
what they did, we would continue to give them electricity... Never in
the history of man has it happened that a country supplied electricity
and work to its enemies, or bought produce from them, during a war."
"Gaza has a border not only with the Zionist enemy," Gonen writes, "but
also with its Egyptian brothers. If the situation is so difficult, let
them turn to their Arab brothers. If tons of explosives can be passed
from Egypt to Gaza, electricity can also get there."