Israel Gaza strikes to go on 'as long as necessary': PM

Israel Gaza strikes to go on 'as long as necessary': PM

JERUSALEM - Agence France-Presse
Israel Gaza strikes to go on as long as necessary: PM

REUTERS Photo

Israel will continue air strikes against Gaza "as long as necessary," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said today, giving no indication that a ground operation was likely for now.
 
"We extracted a high price from them and will continue to do so," he said at the start of the weekly cabinet meeting. "We will act as long as necessary." His comments came as Israeli war planes carried out four air strikes on Gaza on Sunday morning, bringing the death toll in three days of clashes to 18.
 
Violence between Israel and Gaza militants erupted on Friday afternoon when an Israeli strike killed the leader of the ultra-hardline Popular Resistance Committees, sparking a bloody cross-border exchange.
 
Since then, militants fired 124 rockets at Israel, of which 68 were Qassams and 44 were the longer-range Grad variety, a defence ministry statement said.
 
In response, the air force carried out 26 air raids, 15 of which targeted militants who were in the act of firing on Israel. The Iron Dome air defence system set up around the southern cities of Ashdod, Ashkelon and Beersheva intercepted 30 rockets, it said.

 Finance Minister Yuval Steinitz said the flareup meant that Israel would soon have to consider sending troops back into Gaza as it did in Operation Cast Lead, a massive 22-day offensive which ended in mid-January 2009, leaving 1,400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis dead.
 
"Sooner or later, we will probably have to put an end to the Hamas regime, the terror regime, in Gaza," he said at the start of the weekly cabinet meeting.

Israel Gaza strikes to go on as long as necessary: PM

Palestinian girl cries during the funeral of a 12 year old Ayoub Assalya
in Jabaliya  Refugee Camp, in Gaza Strip, Sunday, March 11, 2012.

Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman justified the initial attack against PRC leader Zuhair al-Qaisi, calling him "a ticking bomb" who was about to attack Israel.
 
But he said a ground operation was "not desirable," unless it had the clear goal of overthrowing the territory's Hamas rulers.
 
And Environment Minister Gilad Erdan argued that a ground operation would be a dangerous diversion from Israel's current priority -- preventing a nuclear Iran.
 
"Our defence systems are working well, particularly Iron Dome, and the army has inflicted heavy losses on the terrorists, so for the time being, there is no need for a ground operation," he said.
 
"The Israeli interest is for the world to focus on sanctions on Iran, not on an Israeli military campaign."