November 10,2008:
Peace deals with the Palestinians still don't work. Despite the
assistance of Fatah, the West Bank is still full of terrorists, and hostile
Palestinians who simply attack any Israelis they can get close to. Hamas cannot,
or will not, control terrorist groups in Gaza, and rockets and mortar shells
continue to be fired from Gaza into southern Israel.
The Israeli
settler movement gets a lot of blame for the friction, but the settlers were
removed from Gaza when Israeli security forces left Gaza three years ago. The
result? Now Gaza has become a terrorist base, spewing "Israel must be
destroyed" propaganda. The settlers believe the Gaza experience justifies
breaking the law to expand the settlements in the West Bank. There, a quarter
million Jewish settlers live among ten times as many Palestinians. Most adult male
settlers belong to the army reserve, and six battalions of police that look
after the West Bank settlements are pro-settler. The settlers believe their
presence prevents West Bank terrorism from becoming stronger, and many
non-settler Israelis agree. But the settlers terrorize the Palestinians around
them, providing endless fodder for pro-Palestinian propagandists. The issue has
split Israel politically, and created a radical fringe of settlers who are
threatening a program of assassinations against Israeli politicians who oppose
the settlements.
Despite the
many breaches of the ceasefire agreement in Gaza, Israel has agreed to continue
talks with Hamas and Fatah. Hamas now says it is willing to make peace with
Israel if there is a return to the 1967 borders. But that means Israel giving
up Jerusalem, which the majority of Israelis will not do. Moreover, Hamas
continues to spew its "Israel Must Be Destroyed" propaganda
internally, especially to children, indicating that their long term goal is not
peace. Hamas also preaches, usually just in its Arab language propaganda, that making
a peace deal with Israel is a good tactic, to take the pressure off Hamas while
forces are built up for a decisive strike against the enemy. But Israel might
go for some kind of peace deal with Hamas, in the hope that the Hamas will
eventually irritate Palestinians sufficiently to trigger an anti-Hamas
backlash. The inability of Hamas to get the Gaza economy going, and the
increasing intrusiveness of the Hamas lifestyle police is a long term liability
for Hamas. Meanwhile
November 8,
2008: Eight more rockets were fired into Israel from Gaza, but Hamas says it is
willing to continue maintaining that the ceasefire still exists, if the
Israelis will.
November 7,
2008: On the Gaza border, Israeli troops exchanged fire with Palestinian
terrorists, who fired to RPG rockets at Israeli troops who were destroying two
Palestinian roadside bombs.
November 6,
2008: Israel completed a four day military exercise in the north, in
preparation for another rocket attack by Hezbollah. Israel is preparing for
Syria to join in next time.
November 5,
2008: Palestinians fired several dozen Kassam rockets into Israel from Gaza, in
retaliation for the Israeli raid yesterday
to take out the Palestinian kidnapping tunnel.
November 4,
2008: Israeli troops entered Gaza for
the first time since the June 19th ceasefire, in order to destroy a 250 meter
long tunnel Palestinian terrorists were digging under the security fence. The
terrorists apparently planned to use the tunnel to try and kidnap Israeli
soldiers for ransom. The Israeli ground operation was accompanied by air
attacks. At least seven Hamas gunmen were killed, mostly by air attack. Two
years ago, Palestinian terrorists in Gaza used a similar tunnel to grab an
Israeli soldier, whose ransom is still being negotiated (Hamas wants hundreds
more convicted terrorists freed than the Israelis are willing to let go).