FourWinds10.com - Delivering Truth Around the World
Custom Search

Israelis Turn Up Heat on Hamas, Assad

Ibrahim Barzak ASP Writer

Smaller Font Larger Font RSS 2.0

has already been moved OUT of the Gaza strip!

Sources in the Middle East have told The Hal Turner Show that IDF Cpl. Gilad Shalit, was taken outside of the Gaza strip within hours of his capture and that he is presently being held "in a place the IDF can never find him."

The capture of Cpl. Shalit and the killing of other IDF soldiers with him, took place in direct response to numerous killings of innocent Palestinian civilians over the last two weeks. In one case, an entire Palestinian family was wiped out when Israeli forces shelled a Beach where they were picnicing.

Israel is trying to portray itself as a victim, but they initiated horrific violence against innocent Palestinians over the past two weeks and DESERVE what they are getting in return.

I hope the Palestinians will unleash the Chemical and Biological Weapons in their possession to kill as many of the IDF as possible.

BUZZED!

ISRAELI FIGHTER JETS "BUZZ" HOME OF SYRAIN PRESIDENT!

JEWS GOING INSANE OF CAPTURED IDF SOLDIER

I'm wondering why those fighter jets were not shot down? Where is Syria's air defense? If Israeli planes violate Syrian airspace again, they should be shot down. ~ Hal Turner

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Article

RAFAH, Gaza Strip (AP) -- Israel turned up its pressure for the release of a captive soldier Wednesday, bombing a Hamas training camp in Gaza and sending its warplanes low over the house of Syrian President Bashar Assad, who has sheltered two Hamas leaders.

Fighter jets also knocked out electricity and water supplies for most of the 1.3 million residents of the Gaza Strip. Three bridges also were destroyed to keep militants from moving Cpl. Gilad Shalit, 19, who was taken hostage Sunday by three Hamas-affiliated groups.

No casualties have been reported since the offensive began early Wednesday. The army sent tanks and thousands of troops into Gaza.

The Hamas-led Palestinian government called for a prisoner swap with Israel, saying the Gaza offensive would not secure the soldier's release. Hamas-affiliated militants holding the hostage previously made that demand, but this was the first time the government did.

Tensions escalated Wednesday evening as the military fired artillery near Gaza City - the first time Israel has targeted that area during the offensive. There were no reports of injuries or damage, and the army said it was testing artillery units and had not fired at a specific target.

Palestinians dug in behind walls and embankments as warplanes fired missiles in northern and southern Gaza.

Residents of northern Gaza, preparing for what they feared could be a long military operation, stocked up on food, candles and batteries for radios as a minister warned of a "humanitarian crisis."

The White House continued pressuring Hamas, saying it was the responsibility of the Palestinian government to "stop all acts of violence and terror." But the United States also urged Israel to show restraint.

"In any actions the government of Israel may undertake, the United States urges that it ensures that innocent civilians are not harmed, and also that it avoid the unnecessary destruction of property and infrastructure," White House press secretary Tony Snow said.

It was Israel's first ground offensive since pulling its soldiers and settlers out of Gaza last summer. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said Israel would not balk at "extreme action" to bring Shalit home but did not intend to reoccupy Gaza.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas deplored the incursion as a "crime against humanity," and a leading Hamas politician issued a call to arms against the Israeli troops.

Meanwhile, concerns about the fate of a missing West Bank settler grew after militants claiming to hold him displayed what they said was a copy of his identification card.

Also, a group affiliated with Abbas' Fatah party claimed to hold a third Israeli and threatened to attack an unspecified Israeli embassy within days.

Israeli tanks and soldiers began taking up positions east of Rafah overnight under cover of tank shells, witnesses and Palestinian security officials said. Capt. Jacob Dallal, a military spokesman, said troops moved a mile inside the coastal strip.

He said the army was prepared for a long operation, and "everything is on the table."

Israeli warplanes fired at least nine missiles at Gaza's only power station, cutting electricity to 65 percent of the Gaza Strip, engineers at the station said. The station's three functioning turbines and a gasoline reservoir were engulfed in flames.

Wasfi Kabha, the Palestinian minister of prisoner affairs, said the Israeli attacks were creating a "humanitarian crisis."

"They hit the bridges, they hit the power station, so there will be a problem in water supply and health services," he told the British Broadcasting Corp.

Areas in northern Gaza that receive electricity from Israel still had power, and generators relieved darkness in other places.

The Israeli military said three bridges were attacked "to impair the ability of the terrorists to transfer the kidnapped soldier." Knocking down the bridges cut Gaza in two, Palestinian security officials said.

Witnesses reported heavy artillery shelling near the long-closed Gaza airport outside of Rafah. Warplanes flew low over the strip, rocking it with sonic booms and shattering windows.

Fighter jets repeatedly fired missiles at open fields in northern and southern Gaza in a show of force, the military said. Two missiles hit empty Hamas training camps, witnesses said. Separately, Israel attacked a rocket-making factory in the area.

"We won't hesitate to carry out extreme action to bring Gilad back to his family," Olmert said. "All the military activity that started overnight will continue in the coming days.

"We do not intend to reoccupy Gaza. We have one objective, and that is to bring Gilad home."

The militants who seized Shalit have demanded the release of hundreds of Palestinian women and children held in Israeli jails in exchange for information about Shalit.

Olmert repeated that Israel will not negotiate with militants.

Later, the Palestinian Information Ministry said it was "natural logic" to carry out a prisoner exchange.

"Previous Israeli governments have done so ... and this is what other countries do in conflict situations," the statement said.

High-ranking Hamas officials in exile also demanded a prisoner exchange. If Israelis do not negotiate a swap, Palestinians militants will conclude "that they should capture more soldiers," Hamas' representative in Lebanon, Osama Hamdan, told The Associated Press.

"The message for the resistance is to kill soldiers, even if they have the opportunity to capture them," he said.

Shalit was captured during an attack on a southern Israeli military post by militants, who tunneled under a Gaza crossing and killed two other soldiers. Israel believes the group's Syria-based leaders ordered the operation.

Israeli Justice Minister Haim Ramon said Hamas' Syria-based political chief, Khaled Mashaal, was "not immune" from Israeli reprisal.

"Khaled Mashaal, as someone who is overseeing, actually commanding the terror acts, is definitely a target," Ramon told Army Radio. The station interpreted his comments as meaning Mashaal was a target for assassination.

Israel tried to kill Mashaal in a botched attempt in Jordan in 1997. Two Mossad agents injected Mashaal with poison but were caught. As Mashaal lay dying in a Jordanian hospital, King Hussein forced Israel to provide the antidote in return for releasing the Mossad agents.

Ramon told Israel Radio in a separate interview that he believed diplomacy had run its course.

Israeli fighter jets also flew over Assad's home in an overnight raid near the Mediterranean port city of Latakia in northwestern Syria, military officials said. Israeli television reports said four planes were involved in the low-altitude flight, and Assad was home at the time.

The flight caused "noise" on the ground, the military officials said. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity under military guidelines.

The officials said Assad was targeted because of the "direct link" between Syria and Hamas. There was no immediate reaction from Damascus.

Abbas deplored the Israeli invasion, calling it "collective punishment and a crime against humanity," and he urged the United States and other international negotiators to intervene, according to a statement.

An aide said Abbas called Assad to ask him to persuade Mashaal to free the soldier. Assad promised to do so, the aide said on condition of anonymity because he was discussing private talks.

Deputy Prime Minister Nasser Shaer of Hamas said his government, too, was trying to resolve the situation diplomatically.

"We call for an immediate halt to the invasion, and urge that the soldier's life be spared," Shaer said.

The normally bustling streets in southern Gaza, where the invasion was launched, were eerily deserted, with people taking refuge inside their homes. The Rafah crossing between Gaza and Egypt - Gaza's main link to the outside world - has been closed since Sunday.

Israeli troops, backed by tanks, took over the Gaza airport. Dozens of people living near the airport left their homes, seeking sanctuary in nearby Rafah.

A small grocery near the airport was open, but no one was inside except owner Allah Abu Jazr.

"We want the soldier to return home, just as we want our prisoners to come home," Abu Jazr, 45, said.

Shalit's abduction has threatened to turn devastated relations between Israel and the Hamas-led government into all-out war. Hamas took over the Palestinian Authority after winning parliamentary elections in January and has been under international pressure to renounce violence and recognize Israel.

Complicating matters was a new claim by the Popular Resistance Committees, one of the three groups that carried out Sunday's assault, that it had also kidnapped a Jewish settler, 18-year-old Eliahu Asheri, in the West Bank.

Outside a Gaza City mosque, PRC militants displayed what they said was a copy of Asheri's ID card and reiterated threats to kill him if Israel did not end the invasion.

The group also warned that it had just begun its campaign to seize soldiers.

"The operation of kidnapping soldiers has started and is in a countdown," spokesman Mohammed Abdel Al said.

Separately, a statement obtained by the AP and signed by Abu Fouad, spokesman for the Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades in Gaza, said the group was holding an unidentified 62-year-old Israeli from Rishon Lezion.

The statement said the man was kidnapped Monday and that more evidence would be released later.

Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said police had a missing persons report concerning a man identified as Noah Moskovitch.

In a separate statement, Al Aqsa said it planned to attack an unspecified Israeli embassy soon.