Tension Builds in the Middle East After Apparent Ambush
May 11, 2001Five paramilitary Palestinian policemen were killed overnight in
an apparent ambush by Israeli troops in the town of Betunia, near Palestinian-ruled
Ramallah. The Israeli army said soldiers opened fire on a group they identified as
"suspicious figures." A government spokesman said later that Palestinians at the
station had fired first. But Palestinian spokesman Marwan Kanafani denies it. "This
is an ambush where innocent soldiers who were guiding their posts were assassinated,"
Kanafani said. The Palestinians plan to protest to the UN security council over the
incident. Thousands of Palestinians chanted for revenge as they marched in a memorial
procession in Ramallah. A few hours earlier, Israeli helicopters and gunboats heavily
rocketed Palestinian security compounds near Yasser Arafat's office and several other
areas in the Gaza Strip. Israeli gunboats fired shells toward a Palestinian navy office in
the Nusseirat refugee camp and helicopters fired rockets at Palestinian security
installations in Khan Yunis, Deir el Balah and Jabalya. Three people were injured by
shrapnel and eight armored vehicles destroyed. An army spokesman said the assault was in
retaliation for "an escalation of violence and terror in recent days." Loud
booms could be heard around Gaza City as the Israeli helicopters fired several missiles at
security headquarters some 100 yards from Yasser Arafats office.
In other incidents today, the Israeli army demolished a Palestinian police station and
several other buildings in the village of Shuwakeh in Samaria. The army said Palestinian
police had used the station and buildings to fire at Israeli troops. Palestinian officials
said the buildings were part of an agricultural college. Near the border between Egypt and
Gaza, Israeli tanks fired machine guns to cover a bulldozer as it destroyed two buildings
about 100 yards (meters) inside Palestinian-controlled territory. The Israeli military
said soldiers defused bombs in the area and came under fire from Palestinians. No injuries
were reported.
Tension is also rising on the northern border. Today, Islamic Hizbollah guerillas in
Lebanon fired two anti-tank missiles toward an Israeli army outpost, triggering Israeli
artillery fire. There were no injuries on the Israeli side, the army spokesman said. The
missiles were aimed at the Har Dov outpost, and an army dining hall was damaged in the
attack. The outpost is in the disputed Chebaa Farms area, which Lebanon claims as its
territory despite UN verification of Israels unilateral withdrawal from South
Lebanon a year ago. Hizbollah has killed three Israeli soldiers and captured three others
in the area since Israel withdrew. Todays attack was the first since April 14, when
Hizbollah killed an Israeli soldier in a rocket attack. Two days later, Israeli warplanes
retaliated by bombing a Syrian military radar station deep inside Lebanon, killing three
soldiers. It was the first Israeli attack on Syrian targets in Lebanon in four years.
Israel has warned Syria to restrain Hizbollah, or it will strike at Syrian targets in
Lebanonsomething that could turn what is now a border dispute into a regional war.
The Palestinian Authority has released a leading member of the Islamic terrorist group
Hamas, Abdel Aziz Rantisi. Rantisi was arrested for criticizing the Palestinian Authority,
but said that he had not been questioned during his week in prison. He said Hamas and the
Palestinian Authority now agree that armed struggle is the only way to deal with Israel.
They "believe that the only way for the Palestinians is to fight to defend their
people, to defend their land," Rantisi said. Commenting on Rantisi's remarks, Gaza
security chief Mohammed Dahlan said, "We can't be partners with the Israelis as long
as their aggression continues." Israel charged that it was another manifestation of
Arafats "revolving door" policyterrorists are briefly jailed and
then released. Arafat is sending mixed signals of diplomacy and terror, said Dore Gold, an
adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. The release of Rantisi "sends the
message of the latter," he said.
Israel will formally reject a US-led inquiry's call for a freeze on construction in Jewish
settlements in Judea, Samaria and the Gaza Strip. The decision was taken at a meeting with
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and senior cabinet ministers to discuss the 32-page report of
an inquiry commission led by former US Senator George Mitchell. According to the report,
"a cessation of Palestinian-Israeli violence will be particularly hard to sustain
unless the government of Israel freezes all settlement construction activity."
Israeli officials say that while Israel will not build new settlements, it will allow for
"natural growth" and also allocate funds to protect the communities. In
addition, the government rejected the reports criticism of the army's use of lethal
force against Palestinian demonstrators, saying soldiers are fighting "under
difficult conditions." However, Israel backs the report's recommendations for ending
violence and renewing peace talks. Israel and the Palestinians have until Tuesday to
respond to the findings of the five-member committee established at an emergency Middle
East summit last October in Egypt. The Palestinians, by contrast, have accepted the report
as is, and conditioned any renewal of peace talks on a freeze in Israeli settlement
activity.
THE FOLLOWING APPEARED IN the "israel today" update on Sunday, May 14:
Israeli helicopters fired rockets at a car carrying Palestinian intelligence agents and
militiamen on Saturday, killing two of them outside police headquarters in the autonomous
town of Jenin. Moutasem Sabaa, 26, a well-known gunman from Yasser Arafat`s Tanzim
militia, was killed in the attack along with Ala`a Jaloudi, a Palestinian policeman who
was standing nearby. The first rocket missed the car and three other Tanzim gunmen escaped
without serious injury, including Abdel Karim Awais. Palestinian officials say they
suspect Israel`s main target was Awais, 30, who leads a group of local gunmen and was
planning mortar attacks on Jewish settlements in Samaria. Awais, like many Tanzim, also
serves as a Palestinian intelligence officer. At least 17 people were admitted to a
hospital and treated for shock and shrapnel injuries. Some 10,000 Palestinians attended
the joint funeral of the two victims, chanting for revenge. Israel did not comment on the
attack, but Palestinians described it as an Israeli "assassination," one of at
least 20 since violence erupted over seven months ago. "This is state-sponsored
terrorism," said Palestinian Cabinet Minister Nabil Shaath. The Fatah movement, to
which the Tanzim belong, distributed a leaflet in Jenin calling for retaliation.
"This assassination will increase our resolve to respond and take revenge," the
leaflet said. Fatah leaders from Jenin warned they had mortar shells and would be
targeting Jewish settlements in the area. To date, mortar attacks have been launched only
from the Gaza Strip. On Saturday, six mortar shells were fired at Jewish communities in
the Gaza Strip, slightly injuring one Israeli. In a rally of some 1,000 supporters of the
Islamic terrorist group Hamas in Palestinian-ruled Ramallah north of Jerusalem,
demonstrators shot a fake mortar shell into a model of a Jewish settlement, which burst
into flames.
Tensions are unlikely to ease ahead of May 15, the day Palestinians mark the creation of
the state of Israel in 1948. They remember Israel`s birth as the "Nakba," or
"Great Catastrophe." Last year, even before the current intifada, the
Palestinians ignited gunbattles and riots to mark the "Nakba."
In some effort at diplomacy, Palestinian negotiator Mahmoud Abbas is expected to meet with
Secretary of State Colin Powell in Washington on Monday or Tuesday. "The purpose of
the meeting is definitely to try to restart the peace process and get out of the situation
we are in now," said Hassan Abdel Rahman, the PLO representative in Washington. Abbas
also hopes to win Yasser Arafat an invitation to the White House, something Israel opposes
and describes as "a reward for terrorism." Bush has met Prime Minister Ariel
Sharon and the leaders of Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon, but Arafat has yet to be invited.
Analysts in Washington say the administration is trying to use an invitation as bait for
Arafat to call off the uprising. Sharon has said that Arafat should not be invited to
Washington before the "full cessation of hostilities." At a news conference on
Friday, President George W. Bush described the cycle of killing as "abhorrent"
and warned: "It`s going to be very difficult for us to be able to bring people to the
peace table so long as there is violence."
This crisis update is a service of CHRISTIAN FRIENDS OF ISRAEL. It is normally written by
David Dolan, who is currently out of Israel on a speaking tour. In his absence, it is
being provided courtesy of israel today magazine. For more information about this monthly
news magazine, visit their web site at: www.israeltoday.co.il
DAVID DOLAN is a Jerusalem-based author and journalist. He has written the monthly Israel
News Digest for CHRISTIAN FRIENDS OF ISRAEL since 1986. His new book ISRAEL IN CRISIS:
WHAT LIES AHEAD? and his previous books ISRAEL AT THE CROSSROADS and THE END OF DAYS may
be ordered by phoning 888-890-6938 in North America, by e mail at
resources@yourisraelconnection.org, or by visiting his web site at www.ddolan.com |