[iwar] [fc:Israel.launches.wave.of.attack]

From: Fred Cohen (fc@all.net)
Date: 2001-09-15 13:03:38


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From: Fred Cohen <fc@all.net>
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Date: Sat, 15 Sep 2001 13:03:38 -0700 (PDT)
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Subject: [iwar] [fc:Israel.launches.wave.of.attack]
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Saturday, September 15 8:27 PM SGT Israel launches wave of attacks after
Arafat-Peres talks cancelled Israel launches wave of attacks after
Arafat-Peres talks cancelled GAZA CITY, Sept 15 (AFP) -

Israel launched a wave of land, sea and air strikes against Palestinian
positions Saturday, a day after Prime Minister Ariel Sharon abruptly
cancelled talks between Foreign Minister Shimon Peres and Palestinian
leader Yasser Arafat. 

As the United Nations, the United States and Russia led renewed efforts
to secure the long-anticipated dialogue, Israel mounted assaults along
the Gaza Strip and in the West Bank. 

Two Palestinians were killed and 15 wounded, Palestinian security
sources said. 

Arafat said the attacks were an Israeli attempt to "sabotage" his talks
with Peres aimed at ending a year of bloodshed which has claimed more
than 800 lives. 

"This is intended to sabotage the meeting" Arafat said after talks in
Gaza City with the Russian Middle East envoy Andrei Vdovin. 

"It is an escalation to continue to implement their plan for 'oranim',"
he said, using the Hebrew word for hell. 

Late Friday, Sharon called off talks set for Sunday, considering it
would be "inappropriate" after the terrorist attacks which killed
thousands in the United States. 

"The prime minister didn't cancel the meeting.  He thinks that it's an
inappropriate time if Arafat cannot come through with real measures and
steps to stop the violence," a senior Israeli official told AFP, adding
that the meeting may be held later. 

Hours after the talks were called off, Israeli forces unleashed assaults
on Palestinian targets. 

Overnight, there were incursions into the West Bank town of Ramallah and
the northern Gaza Strip town of Beit Hanun, injuring a total of eight
Palestinians, one of them seriously, Palestinian security sources said. 

There was a third a third incursion at Qarara, east of the central Gaza
Strip Gush Katif settlement bloc, the same sources said. 

Early Saturday, two Palestinians were shot dead by Israeli soldiers near
the Khan Yunis refugee camp in the southern Gaza Strip in circumstances
that have yet to be determined. 

On Saturday afternoon Israel mounted simultaneous land, sea and air
attacks along the Gaza Strip. 

Helicopter gunships destroyed a Palestinian military intelligence
headquarters in Gaza City in the north, security sources and witnesses
said.  Additionally, anti-tank missiles struck a Palestinian police
station at Rafah in the south and shelling from warships destroyed most
of a Palestinian naval building at Nusseirat in the centre. 

Seven people were wounded, one seriously, in the triple strike,
Palestinian hospital sources said. 

Israel confirmed the attacks, with the army saying they were a response
to Palestinian mortar attacks. 

A statement said the targets were used as bases for Palestinian
"terrorists" preparing anti-Israeli attacks. 

UN special envoy to the Middle East Terje Roed-Larsen said Saturday he
hoped an Arafat-Peres meeting would take place "as soon as possible."

Roed-Larsen, who met with Arafat late Friday after earlier talks with
Peres, said he received a commitment from the Palestinian leader that he
would order all branches of the Palestinian security services to ensure
all agreements with Israel "are fully implemented and to prevent any
violations."

At the Friday night meeting with leaders of his security forces, Arafat
urged them "not to give Israel reasons to continue its aggression,"
security sources told AFP. 

The meeting also accused Israel of attempting to "exploit" the September
11 terrorist tragedy in the United States by increasing "its aggression
against the Palestinians," the sources said. 

UN Secretary General Kofi Annan has also been in contact with Arafat and
Peres, Roed-Larsen said in a statement, adding the long-delayed meeting
"could be the last chance to end the fighting" and needed to be well
prepared. 

Israeli public radio repeated Saturday morning that Sharon had cancelled
the meeting, but also announced that Peres would meet with the premier
the same night or on Sunday morning to pressure Sharon to reconsider. 

The report added that Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov had spoken
with Sharon Friday night by telephone but failed to convince him to go
through with the meeting. 

In Washington, US Secretary of State Colin Powell said it was still
important for the Israeli-Palestinian meeting to take place. 

"We believe a meeting is important to get the process started," Powell
told reporters. 

"This (Mideast) conflict isn't going away, and I don't think it's going
to be solved by continuing conflict between the two sides."

A senior Israeli official told AFP that the attacks in the United States
had put international terror in the spotlight, and would change the
conditions for direct ceasefire talks between Peres and Arafat. 

The latest deaths bring to 805 the number of people killed since the
outbreak last September of the Palestinian intifada, or uprising,
including 617 Palestinians and 165 Israelis. 


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