A reader from Turkey has offered these shrewd observations. I don’t think Israeli domestic politics is the primary motive for the operation — remember, it was planned back in June — but it is a supporting reason that may have accelerated the Israeli attack.
Would you agree with me that I think the basic stimulus behind the ongoing Israeli operations in Gaza is beyond the worries growing out of the terrorist attacks of Hamas and the weariness of these rockets into the Israeli territory? It is basically an internal problem. As Netanyahu, Livni and Barak are going to run for the elections in February, each of them are trying to show more decisiveness in responding attacks. And each move is pulling others to come into a harder-line position which brings the Israeli politics into a vicious circle.
Israel has rejected a French proposal for a truce to allow aid into Gaza. Using the same line put forward by the US Government on Tuesday, Israeli spokesman Mark Regev insisted on “a real and sustainable solution”, one that would “not [be] a Band-Aid that will just kick the can down the road”.
Regev’s statement, however, hides division in the Israeli Cabinet, which discussed the French proposal for four hours. According to The Daily Telegraph, Minister of Defense Ehud Barak supported the two-day truce but was overruled by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Foreign Minister Tzipi Lvini.
Unnoticed by many, a complicated dance over talks with Syria — on a settlement with Israel, on its position vis-a-vis Lebanon, and on its relations with Iran and Hezbollah — is beginning. For a mix of reasons, some good (finally defusing some of the tension between Tel Aviv and Damascus), some not so good (the mistaken belief that this will mean the isolation of Tehran in the Middle East and the Persian Gulf), serious talks for the first time in almost a decade appear imminent.
Still, Washington firebrands who dreamed of Syrian regime change during the Dubya Years aren’t going down without a fight.
As we feared yesterday, the Israel-Gaza situation has been framed as a military standoff between rocket attacks into southern Israel and Israeli military incursions into Gaza. At least 20 rockets were fired into southern Israel, while two Israeli air raids.
There has been a worrying escalation of rhetoric from Israel, especially from the two candidates — Tzipi Lvini and Benyamin Netanyahu — vying to replace Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. Olmert has been cautious, saying, “A responsible government doesn’t rush into battle, neither does it shy away”; however, both Lvini and Netanyahu have pledged to “topple the Hamas rule in Gaza”.