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GAZA
CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — Israeli strikes hit two media centers in the
Gaza Strip on Sunday, as Israel warned it was widening its range of
targets to go after military commanders of the territory's Hamas
rulers. Palestinian militants meanwhile fired at least one more
long-range rocket at Tel Aviv, the fourth day in a row which the Israeli
heartland has come under fire.
The
fifth day of Israel's campaign against Gaza rocket operations finds it
at a crossroads of whether to launch a ground invasion or pursue
Egyptian-led truce efforts. Israel has said it is not prepared to enter
into a truce without guarantees the rocket fire won't resume.
"The Israeli military is prepared to significantly expand the operation," Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared at the start of the weekly Cabinet meeting.
Early
Sunday, the military carried out dozens of attacks on rocket-launching
sites, a major training base and the two media centers. Israeli gunboats
also fired on militant sites on the Gaza shore line, the military said
without elaborating.
Seven Palestinian civilians were killed in
airstrikes Sunday, including five children ranging in age from one to
11, according to Ashraf al-Kidra, a Gaza health official.
Two
of the children, a 3-year-old girl and a 5-year-old boy, were from the
same family and were killed by an airstrike on the three-story home in
the town of Beit Lahiya. Hamas security officials said three missiles
struck the house, owned by a Gaza family with links to militants' rocket
squads. It was not known if any militants were in or near the house at
the time of the strike. Another strike targeted a Hamas militant in his
car outside his home in the Shati refugee camp near Gaza City, but also killed an 11-year-old girl passing by at the time, al-Kidra said.
The
deaths bring to 53 the number of Palestinians killed since the
operation began on Wednesday. Twenty of the dead were civilians, and
more than 400 civilians have been wounded, al-Kidra said. On the Israeli
side, three civilians have been killed and more than 50 wounded by rocket fire.
The
military said another rocket was fired at Tel Aviv, but was intercepted
by the "Iron Dome" missile defense system. Police spokesman Micky
Rosenfeld said two rockets were fired. It was impossible to immediately
reconcile the two reports.
The
repeated rocket fire on Tel Aviv and Friday's attack toward Jerusalem
have significantly escalated the hostilities by widening the militants'
rocket range and putting 3.5 million Israelis, or half the country's
population, within reach. The attempt to strike Jerusalem also has
symbolic resonance because both Israel and the Palestinians claim the
holy city for a capital.
The strikes on the media centers hit two
high-rise buildings, damaging the top floor offices of the Hamas TV
station, Al Aqsa, and a Lebanese-based broadcaster, Al Quds TV, seen as
sympathetic to the Islamists.A Gaza press association said six Palestinian journalists were wounded, including one who lost a leg. Foreign broadcasters, including British, German and Italian TV outlets, also had offices in the high-rises.
The Israeli military said it was aiming at a communications antenna on the roof of one of the buildings. It had no immediate comment on the other strike.
Bassem Madhoun, an employee of Dubai TV, said two missiles scored a direct hit on Al Aqsa TV's 15th floor offices in one of the buildings.
Building
windows were blown out and glass shards and debris were scattered on
the street below. Some of the journalists who had been inside the
building at the time took cover in the entrance hallway.
Mohammed
Shrafi, a Palestinian cameraman, said he was in the street filming when
he was hit by shrapnel coming down from the building.Asked why Israel was targeting media centers, he replied, "They want to keep us from telling the truth."
Israel's military spokesman. Brig. Gen. Yoav Mordechai, warned that Israel would go after Hamas commanders Sunday, in addition to rocket squads, in "more targeted, more surgical and more deadly" attacks.
Mordechai, the Israeli military spokesman, told Army Radio that despite truce efforts, the military has been ordered to intensify its attacks, following a late-night meeting led by Netanyahu and Defense Minister Ehud Barak.
"I imagine in the next few hours, we will see ongoing targeted attacks on gunmen and Hamas commanders," Mordechai said. "More targeted, more surgical and more deadly."
Israel launched its military campaign on Wednesday, after months of renewed rocket fire from Gaza, by assassinating Hamas' military chief in an airstrike. Since then, it has relentlessly targeted suspected rocket-launching and storage sites.
While Israel was suggesting the campaign might heat up, Gaza Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh
of Hamas spoke for 20 minutes by phone Sunday with Egyptian President
Mohammed Morsi, who is trying to broker a cease-fire between Israel and
Hamas, according to Haniyeh's office.
Haniyeh
told Morsi he supports such efforts, provided Hamas receives
"guarantees that will prevent any future aggression" by Israel, his
office said in a statement.
A
quick agreement appears unlikely because the two sides are far apart in
their demands. Hamas is linking a truce deal to a complete lifting of
the border blockade on Gaza imposed by Israel and Morsi's pro-Western
predecessor, Hosni Mubarak, in 2007, after the Islamists seized the
territory by force. Hamas also seeks Israeli guarantees to halt targeted
killings of its leaders and military commanders.
Israeli
officials reject such demands. They say they are not interested in a
"timeout," and want firm guarantees that the rocket fire will finally
end. Past cease-fires have been short lived.
Israeli
Defense Ministry director Udi Shani told Army Radio that Israel's
operation against Gaza militants was not meant to topple the Islamic
militant Hamas, but to cripple its capabilities to attack Israel.
"If
we don't achieve our goals from the air, we will have to enter by
ground," Shani said. "I hope in the coming days it will be decided."
In Iran, Israel's arch-foe, parliament speaker Ali Larijani urged Islamic countries to send weapons for Palestinians.
"Today, serious military help is expected. Why can the United States and the West hand over weapons to the Zionist regime, or Israel, but weapons should not be given to Palestine?" state radio broadcast Larijani telling parliament.
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