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Gaza War (2008–2009)

Gaza War
Part of the Gaza–Israel conflict, Israeli–Palestinian conflict, and the Iran–Israel proxy conflict

Map of Gaza
Date27 December 2008 – 18 January 2009
(3 weeks and 1 day)
Location
Result

Israeli military victory[2][3][4][5]

Belligerents

Israel

 Gaza Strip[1]

Commanders and leaders

Ehud Olmert
Prime Minister
Ehud Barak
Minister of Defense
Gabi Ashkenazi
Chief of General Staff
Yoav Galant
Southern Command
Ido Nehoshtan
Air Force
Eli Marom
Navy
Eyal Eisenberg
Gaza Division

Yuval Diskin
Internal Security Service

Khaled Mashal[9]
Ismail Haniyeh
Said Seyam (KIA)
Mohammed Deif
Abu Zakaria al-Jamal (KIA)
Ahmed Jabari
Tawfik Jaber (KIA)[10]
Osama Mazini
Nizar Rayan (KIA)[10]

Mahmoud al-Zahar
Ramadan Shallah
Strength

IDF: 4,000[11]–20,000[12] deployed in ground invasion and tens of thousands of reservists mobilized[13] (176,000 total active personnel)[14]

Hamas (Izzedine Al-Qassam Brigades and paramilitary police): 20,000 (est. total)[18][19]
Other Palestinian paramilitary forces: 10,000[20]

Casualties and losses

Total killed: 13
Soldiers: 10 (friendly fire: 4)[28]
Civilians: 3

Total wounded: 518
Soldiers: 336[29]
Civilians: 182[29]

Total killed: 1,166–1,417[fn 1]

Militants and police officers:
491* (255 police officers, 236 fighters) (PCHR),[32][33] 600* (B'Tselem),[31] 709 (IDF),[30] 600–700 (Hamas)[34]
Civilians: 926 (PCHR),[32] 759 (B'Tselem),[31] 295 (IDF)[30]
Total wounded: 5,303 (PCHR)[32]

Total captured: 120 (IDF)

One Egyptian border guard officer killed and three wounded, and two children wounded.[35][36]
Over 50,800 Gaza residents displaced.[37]

Over 4,000 homes destroyed; around $2bn worth of damage to Gaza[38]
*255 (PCHR)[32] or 265 (B'Tselem)[31] police officers were killed.

The Gaza War, also known as Operation Cast Lead (Hebrew: מִבְצָע עוֹפֶרֶת יְצוּקָה),[39] also known in the Muslim world as the Gaza Massacre (Arabic: مجزرة غزة),[40][41][42] and referred to as the Battle of al-Furqan (معركة الفرقان) by Hamas,[43][44] was a three-week armed conflict between Gaza Strip Palestinian paramilitary groups and the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) that began on 27 December 2008 and ended on 18 January 2009 with a unilateral ceasefire. The conflict resulted in between 1,166 and 1,417 Palestinian and 13 Israeli deaths (including 4 from friendly fire).[45]

The Israeli government's stated goal was to stop indiscriminate Palestinian rocket fire into Israel[46] and weapons smuggling into the Gaza strip.[47][48][49] Hamas stated its rocket fire, which resumed in November 2008, was in response to an Israeli raid of a tunnel leading from Gaza, which it characterized as a ceasefire violation.[50][51] Israel said the raid was a preemptive strike against a tunnel they believed would be used to abduct Israeli soldiers guarding the border.[50][52] In the initial air assault, Israeli forces attacked police stations, military targets including weapons caches and suspected rocket firing teams, as well as political and administrative institutions in the opening assault, striking in the densely populated cities of Gaza, Khan Yunis and Rafah.[53] After hostilities broke out, Palestinian groups fired rockets in retaliation for the aerial bombardments and attacks.[54] The international community considers indiscriminate attacks on civilians and civilian structures that do not discriminate between civilians and military targets as illegal under international law.[55][56][57]

An Israeli ground invasion began on 3 January. On 5 January, the IDF began operating in the densely populated urban centers of Gaza. During the last week of the offensive (from 12 January), Israel mostly hit targets it had damaged before and struck Palestinian rocket-launching units.[15] Hamas intensified its rocket and mortar attacks against mostly civilian targets in southern Israel, reaching the major cities of Beersheba and Ashdod for the first time during the conflict.[58][59][60] Israeli politicians ultimately decided against striking deeper within Gaza amid concerns of higher casualties on both sides and rising international criticism.[citation needed] The conflict ended on 18 January, when the IDF first declared a unilateral ceasefire, followed by Hamas' announcing a one-week ceasefire twelve hours later.[6][7] The IDF completed its withdrawal on 21 January.[61]

According to the Shin Bet, after the conflict, there was a decrease in Palestinian rocket attacks.[62] In September 2009, a UN special mission, headed by the South African Justice Richard Goldstone, produced a report accusing both Palestinian militants and the IDF of war crimes and possible crimes against humanity, and recommended bringing those responsible to justice.[63] In January 2010, the Israeli government released a response criticizing the Goldstone Report and disputing its findings.[citation needed] In 2011, Goldstone wrote that he no longer believed that Israel intentionally targeted civilians in Gaza.[64] The other authors of the report, Hina Jilani, Christine Chinkin, and Desmond Travers, rejected Goldstone's re-assessment.[65][66] The United Nations Human Rights Council ordered Israel to conduct various repairs of the damages. On 21 September 2012, the United Nations Human Rights Council concluded that 75% of civilian homes destroyed in the attack were not rebuilt.[67]

Background

The Gaza Strip is a coastal strip of land on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea bordering Egypt and Israel. Following the death of Yassar Arafat in November 2004, his successor to the Palestinian Authority, President Mahmoud Abbas, and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon signed a ceasefire agreement on 8 February 2005, essentially bringing an end to the Second Intifada.[68] On 17 March 2005 the 13 main Palestinian factions including Hamas and Islamic Jihad agreed to be bound by the February agreement, conditional on cessation of Israeli attacks.[69] Israel maintains that its occupation of Gaza ended following the completion of its unilateral disengagement plan in September 2005.[70][71] Because in the post-disengagement period (after 2005) Israel has continued to control and occupy Gaza's airspace and territorial waters, and continues to restrict or prohibit the movement of people or goods in or out of Gaza[57][72] and to unilaterally dictate what Gazans may do in a border strip of variable and undefined width in their own territory,[73][74] the UN, the International Criminal Court[75] Human Rights Watch,[76] and many other NGOs consider Israel still to be the occupying power.[57][72][77]

Hamas refrained from firing rockets toward Israel for 14 months in accordance with the February ceasefire agreement, until IDF naval shelling hit a Gaza beach, killing seven civilians, on 10 June 2006.[78]

Israel and the Quartet failed to anticipate Hamas's electoral victory in the January 2006 legislative elections, which the U.S. had pushed for. The victory permitted the formation of a Hamas-led Palestinian Authority government in March 2006. The Quartet (the United States, Russia, United Nations, and European Union) conditioned future foreign assistance to the Hamas-led PA on the future government's commitment to nonviolence, recognition of the state of Israel, and acceptance of previous agreements.[79] Hamas rejected the demands, calling the conditions unfair and endangering the well-being of Palestinians,[80] leading to Quartet suspension of its foreign assistance program and to Israel imposing economic sanctions.[81] In a widely cited article,[82][83][84][85] David Rose outlined material suggesting that the United States and Israel then attempted to have the Palestinian National Authority stage a coup to overturn the election results, a manoeuvre Hamas is said to have preempted in Gaza with its takeover from Fatah.[79][86][87]

In June 2007, following Hamas's takeover of Gaza from Fatah, Israel imposed a ground, air, and maritime blockade, and announced it would allow only humanitarian supplies into the Strip.[88][89] Palestinian groups were partially able to bypass the blockade through tunnels, some of which are said to have been used for weapons smuggling.[90] According to a US diplomatic cable that quoted Israeli diplomats, Israel's policy was to "keep Gaza's economy on the brink of collapse".[86][91] After a three-and-a-half-year legal battle waged by the Gisha human rights organization, the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) finally released a 2008 document that detailed its "red lines" for "food consumption in the Gaza Strip," in which a calculation was made of the number of calories needed to be provided to Gaza by external sources to avoid malnutrition. COGAT said that the document was a draft, and never discussed nor implemented. An Israeli appeal court disagreed.[92][93][94][95]

Between 2005 and 2007, Palestinian groups in Gaza fired about 2,700 locally made Qassam rockets into Israel, killing four Israeli civilians and injuring 75 others. During the same period, Israel fired more than 14,600 155 mm artillery shells into the Gaza Strip, killing 59 Palestinians and injuring 270. According to the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, between 2005 and 2008, 116 Israelis, including civilians and Israeli security forces, which includes Israeli police, Israeli Border Police and members of the armed services, were killed in both Israel and the Palestinian Territories in "direct conflict related incidents" and 1,509 were injured.[96] During this time, 1,735 Palestinians, including civilians and militants from various groups, were killed and 8,308 wounded in "direct conflict related incidents".[96]

2008 six-month ceasefire

 
Palestinians killed by the IDF in Gaza (red) and Israelis killed by Palestinians in Israel (blue) during January–December 2008 according to B'Tselem
 
Rocket hits in Israel, January–December 2008[97]

Israel had been preparing to intervene militarily in the Gaza Strip since March 2007.[98] In June as talks for a negotiated agreement between the two parties were underway, the defense minister Ehud Barak ordered the IDF to prepare operational plans for action within the Strip.[99] On 19 June 2008, an Egyptian-brokered six-month "lull" or pause in hostilities between Israel and Hamas went into effect.[100] The agreement had no mutually agreed text or enforcement mechanism and eventually collapsed.[101] The lull agreed to was thought necessary to allow time for the IDF to prepare its operation.[99][102]

The agreement required Hamas to end rocket and mortar attacks on Israel, while that country would cease attacks on and military incursions into Gaza, plus progressively ease the blockade of Gaza over a thirteen-day period.[103]

Points on which there was not mutual agreement included an end to Hamas' military buildup in Gaza and movement toward the release of Corporal Shalit.[104][105]

Hamas called on all of Gaza's militant groups to abide by the truce, and was confident they would do so.[106][107][108][109] Defense Ministry Official Amos Gilad, the Israeli envoy to the talks, stressed that Israel demanded a ceasefire, meaning that even one single rocket fired will be seen as a violation of the agreement. He added that Egypt, on its side, was committed to preventing the smuggling activity from Gaza.[110] Gilad also said that Israel would hold Hamas responsible for attacks from Gaza.[106] In a British Foreign Affairs Committee investigation, Dr Albasoos said that "Unfortunately, on 4 November 2008, the Israeli army killed six Palestinians. I was leaving the Gaza Strip to come to the UK that same night. I remember when the Israeli army invaded the middle area of the Gaza Strip, killing six Palestinians. It was outrageous from their side to come and breach that ceasefire. I believe that Palestinian political factions, including Hamas, committed to that ceasefire and still have the intention to renew it in the near future, as soon as possible." In rebuttal, Ms Bar-Yaacov said that "The Israelis had added a condition to the tahdia (truce), being concerned that Hamas was building tunnels to go under the Israeli border and kidnap more Israeli soldiers. The condition stated that if Hamas came within 500 metres of the border, they (the IDF) would attack and that is exactly what happened (on 4 November 2008)."[111] British barrister and professor Geoffrey Nice, and General Nick Parker, opined during a lecture that "Building a tunnel was not a breach of the ceasefire but the armed incursion into Gaza definitely was.".[112]

Implementation

Pre-5 November 2008: "The ceasefire has brought enormous improvements in the quality of life in Sderot and other Israeli villages near Gaza, where before the ceasefire residents lived in fear of the next Palestinian rocket strike. However, nearby in the Gaza Strip, the Israeli blockade remains in place and the population has so far seen few dividends from the ceasefire."[113]

Hamas was careful to maintain the ceasefire.[114][115] Despite Israel's refusal to comply significantly with the truce agreement to end the siege/blockade, Hamas brought rocket and mortar fire from Gaza to a virtual halt during the summer and fall of 2008.[116] Hamas "tried to enforce the terms of the arrangement" on other Palestinian groups, taking "a number of steps against networks which violated the arrangement," including short-term detention and confiscating their weapons, but it could not completely end the rocket and mortar shell attacks by these rogue factions in Gaza. Hamas had sought support in Gazan public opinion for its policy of maintaining the ceasefire.[117] On 2 August there were massive clashes in Gaza City after Hamas had stepped up its campaign to curb Fatah from attacking Israel[118]

The truce started uneasily with the UN recording seven IDF violations of the ceasefire between 20 and 26 June. On various occasions Israeli forces shot at farmers, wood collectors and fishermen in Gaza territory, seriously injuring two farmers. Subsequently, between 23 and 26 June, nine Qassam rockets were fired at Israel in three separate violations by Palestinian groups not affiliated with Hamas. No Israelis were injured.[119][120][121][122] Islamic Jihad reportedly fired the rockets in retaliation for Israeli assassinations of their members in the West Bank.

According to sources close to the ceasefire negotiations, after 72 hours from the start of the ceasefire, the crossing points would be opened to allow 30 per cent more goods to enter the Gaza strip. Ten days after that (i.e. thirteen days after the ceasefire began), all crossings would be open between Gaza and Israel, and Israel will allow the transfer of all goods that were banned or restricted to go into Gaza.[103] Therefore, besides firing on and killing Gaza citizens, Israel failed further to comply with these truce obligations to ease the blockade that were crucial to all groups in Gaza. Islamic Jihad put pressure on Hamas to press Israel to comply with this vital part of the truce.[123] The Carter Center recorded, based on U.N. OCHAO data, that instead of easing the blockade according to the agreed schedule, "... despite the 97% drop in attacks, the truce did not do much to ease the siege of Gaza. Imports increased only marginally ... only 27% of the amount of goods entering in January 2007" were allowed through at best. No exports were allowed. After the June 2008 ceasefire, the number of Palestinians entering and exiting Gaza at the Rafah crossing with Egypt increased slightly, with 108 people leaving in August 2008, but this number decreased soon after to only one in October 2008. The passage of Gazans through the Erez crossing reveal similar low numbers.[116] Historian Ian Bickerton argues that Israel's failure to comply with the terms of the truce made conditions harder in Gaza.[124]

Even though not part of the generally accepted truce terms,[103] by 23 June 2006 Hamas and Israel began talks, via an Egyptian intermediary, regarding the release of the captured IDF soldier, Shalit.[118]

"As of 15 August, the UN reported that Israel was allowing a few new items into Gaza (including limited supplies of cement, clothes, juices, and agricultural materials) but said that overall humanitarian conditions had not significantly improved since the cease-fire began". After a few weeks of calm, clashes resumed. On 12 September the IDF shot and seriously wounded an unarmed Palestinian who strayed close to the border. A retaliatory rocket was fired. On 16 September IDF troops entered central Gaza to bulldoze land along the border fence. On 23 September, the UN reported, “Although the cease-fire has afforded the populations in southern Israel and Gaza greater security, there has been no corresponding improvement in living conditions for the population in Gaza.[118] After the initial increase of goods allowed into Gaza to 30% of the 2007 levels, OCHAO data shows that the through-flow then fell rapidly through the September–October lull in rocket fire to below even pre-June levels.[116][118]

Notwithstanding Hamas not having fired a single rocket during the truce prior to 5 November 2008,[114] Israel accused Hamas of bad faith and of violations of the Egyptian-mediated truce. Even though neither was included as Hamas obligations under the generally accepted terms of this truce,[103] Israel noted that rocket fire from Gaza never stopped entirely ("between June 19 and November 4, 20 rockets,[125] and 18 mortar shells[126] were fired at Israel") and that weapons smuggling was not halted,[127] Hamas, in turn, accused Israel of non-compliance with the truce by never allowing the major renewal of goods' flow into Gaza and of conducting raids that killed Hamas fighters.[101][128]

During October 2008 Israel-Palestinian violence fell to its lowest level since the start of the al-Aqsa intifada in September 2000.[118] One rocket and 1 mortar shell were fired at Israel in October.[129] However, during the same period several Israeli violations were reported: In South Gaza on 3 October the IDF fired on two unarmed Palestinians near the border and sent soldiers into the strip to arrest them and detain them in Israel. On 19 October IDF bulldozers entered Gaza. On 27 October IDF soldiers fired into Gaza for unknown reasons damaging a school in Khuza'a and injuring one child. Palestinian fishing boats off the Gaza coast were fired upon on four separate occasions during the month wounding two fishermen, one of them seriously.[118] According to Mondoweiss, for the entire duration of the 2008 Hamas–Israel cease-fire – even after the Israeli raid of a Hamas tunnel on 4 November – not a single person was killed by rocket or mortar fire into Israel.[130]

Pre-operation actions

4 November IDF cross-border raid

On 4 November 2008, Israel launched a cross-border military raid (variously also referred to as an attack / invasion / incident / military event / incursion) code named Operation Double Challenge into a residential area of Dayr al-Balah in central Gaza to destroy the opening of a cross-border[131] tunnel concealed within a building 300 meters from the fence on the Gaza Strip border.[citation needed] Professor Sir Geoffrey Nice QC and General Sir Nick Parker observed that "Building a tunnel was not a breach of the ceasefire but the (IDF) armed incursion into Gaza definitely was."[112][132] Various outlets and authors reported this Israeli action as breaking the June truce.[128][114][133] According to the Telegraph, writing as Cast Lead began, the 4 November operation "sealed the fate of the ceasefire".[134] Author Avi Shlaim wrote in 2015 that the "...ceasefire had a dramatic effect in de-escalating the conflict.....It was Israel that violated the ceasefire. On 4 November 2008 the (IDF) launched a raid into Gaza and killed 6 Hamas fighters. That was the end of the ceasefire." and that Hamas had set a "good example" in respecting the ceasefire.[132] The raid, according to Mark LeVine was unprovoked.[135] Israel stated its aim was to destroy what it said was a tunnel on the Gaza-Israel border dug by militants to infiltrate into Israel and abduct soldiers. While accusing Hamas of plotting to dig a tunnel under the border, Israeli defense official was quoted in The Washington Times as separately acknowledging that Israel wanted to "send Hamas a message".[118] According to Israel, the raid was not a violation of the ceasefire, but a legitimate step to remove an immediate threat. The 2009 Report of the United Nations Fact-Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict noted that "the ceasefire began to founder on 4 November 2008 following an incursion by Israeli soldiers into the Gaza Strip". [136]

Tunnel threat

Dr. Ido Hart, an Israeli defence analyst specialising in underground warfare, defined three types of Gaza tunnels, namely those intended for 'smuggling' from Egypt, those which are 'defensive' in nature designed for storage and protection, and those that are 'offensive' permitting cross-border penetrations into Israel by Gaza militants. "Once you find the entrance, you have to climb inside to know whether it is a defensive or offensive tunnel".[137] Defensive tunnels have served as an 'escape hatch' for senior Hamas officials during Israeli invasions.[138] "The purpose of the defensive tunnels is to enable the Hamas command structure to reside safely underground while their armed forces conduct a mobile defence against Israeli forces.[139] Robert Pastor, who was intimately involved in the indirect 2008 Hamas-Israel negotiations, stated "There is some dispute as to whether that tunnel was intended to capture an Israeli soldier or whether it was a defensive tunnel to protect against an Israeli incursion.[140] Later, once a new ceasefire had been negotiated, Pastor was quoted as saying that "Hamas officials asserted, however, that the tunnel was being dug for defensive purposes, not to capture IDF personnel" and furthermore that an IDF official had confirmed that fact to him.[117]

The IDF allegation that the 'tunnel' attacked by it on 4 November 2008 was 'offensive', aimed at abducting IDF soldiers and posing an imminent threat, was also reported with doubt by various other players and commentators, such as UNISPAL that wrote "IDF special forces had entered the area to blow up a tunnel dug by Hamas for allegedly kidnapping IDF soldiers."[141] Another example is the Israeli daily Ha'aretz that wrote "(The tunnel was) dug ostensibly to facilitate the abduction of Israeli soldiers, (but the tunnel) was not a clear and present danger".[142] Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter wrote, "Israel launched an attack in Gaza to destroy a defensive tunnel being dug by Hamas inside the wall that encloses Gaza."[143] The Journal of Palestine Studies favourably referenced Norman Finkelstein: "Israel broke the cease-fire by killing seven Palestinian militants, on the flimsy excuse that Hamas was digging a tunnel to abduct Israeli soldiers, and knowing full well that its operation would provoke Hamas into hitting back."[144] Noam Chomsky observed: "The pretext for the raid was that Israel had detected a tunnel in Gaza that might have been intended for use to capture another Israeli soldier; a 'ticking tunnel' in official communiques. The pretext was transparently absurd, as a number of commentators noted. If such a tunnel existed, and reached the border, Israel could easily have barred it right there."[145]

Raid

A paratroopers reconnaissance battalion commanded by Yaron Finkelman, supported by tanks and bulldozers crossed the border and penetrated about 250 meters into the Gaza Strip to destroy the tunnel.[146] A firefight broke out, in which one Hamas fighter was killed. Hamas responded with a barrage of mortar and rocket fire at Israeli troops. Three Israeli airstrikes on Hamas mortar and rocket positions then killed five Hamas fighters. According to eyewitnesses, another three Hamas fighters were wounded in an Israeli UCAV strike over the el-Burejj refugee camp.[147] Three Israeli soldiers were also wounded during the operation. Hamas said it would take revenge for what it perceived as an act of Israeli aggression that had violated the truce.[147][148] Hamas launched 35 rockets into southern Israel in what was described by Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum as a "response to Israel's massive breach of the truce", stating that "The Israelis began this tension and they must pay an expensive price. They cannot leave us drowning in blood while they sleep soundly in their beds."[128][149] The blockade of Gaza was tightened further the following day.[135]

Immediate repercussions

The intensity of rocket attacks targeted at Israeli cities near Gaza sharply increased after the 4 November 2008 cross-border IDF attack, approaching pre-truce levels. Clashes between Israeli troops and Palestinian militants also took place along the border, during which 11 Palestinian militants were killed.[150] According to CAMERA, in the period between 4 November incident and mid-December, more than 200 Qassam rockets and mortar shells landed in the western Negev region, most fired immediately after the 4 November tunnel raid by the IDF, and thereafter decreasing to a "few per day".[151] Israel had frequently shut down the crossings in response to rocket attacks on its towns.[152]

December repercussions

On 13 December, Israel announced that it favored extending the cease-fire, provided Hamas adhered to the conditions.[152] On 14 December, a Hamas delegation in Cairo proposed that Hamas was prepared to stop all rocket attacks against Israel if the Israelis would open up the Gaza border crossings and pledge not to launch attacks in Gaza,[153] as per the original June 2008 truce terms, to that date not complied with by Israel.[103] On the same day, Hamas officials said that earlier reports, quoting Khaled Meshaal as saying there would be no renewal of the truce, were inaccurate. A Hamas spokesman said that the lull would not be renewed, "as long as there is no real Israeli commitment to all of its conditions".[154] A spokesman for the Israeli Prime Minister replied that Israel was committed to the truce but "it's clear there can't be a one-sided ceasefire, ... where rockets are everyday coming from the Gaza Strip targeting Israeli civilians."[154]

On 17 December, a 40-year-old Palestinian was killed by IDF fire in Northern Gaza.[155] The following day, 18 December, Hamas declared the end of the cease-fire, a day before the truce officially expired.[156] More than 20 rockets were fired from Gaza into southern Israel on that day.[157]

On 19 December, Hamas refused to enter talks to renew the six-month truce and a Hamas spokesman announced that it would not extend the cease-fire.[155][157] The spokesman, Ayman Taha, specified that Hamas's refusal was "because the enemy did not abide by its obligations" to ease a crippling blockade of the Gaza Strip, and had not halted all attacks.[158] Palestinian sources said that Hamas wanted to renew the truce, but only on improved terms – a complete opening of the border crossings with Israel, the opening of the Rafah border crossing with Egypt, a complete ban on Israeli military activity in Gaza and an extension of the truce to the West Bank as well. Israel was not ready to accept these terms.[155] This was confirmed by Yuval Diskin, head of Shin Bet (Israel's internal security agency), at an Israeli cabinet meeting on 21 December. Diskin said he thought Hamas was "interested in continuing the truce, but wants to improve its terms ... it wants us to lift the siege of Gaza, stop attacks, and extend the truce to include the West Bank".[159] Three Qassam rockets fired from the northern Gaza Strip landed in Israel.[160]

On 22 December, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said that his country will not accept the ongoing rocket fire from the Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip, Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, who had supported the truce until recently, suggested that military actions be taken against the Hamas government in Gaza.[161]

On 23 December, senior Hamas leader Mahmoud al-Zahar said that Hamas was willing to renew the cease-fire under the original terms, demanding an Israeli commitment to refrain from any military operation in the Strip and to keep the border crossings open. Speaking with Egyptian newspaper al-Ahram, al-Zahar said that the movement would reassess the situation in Gaza once the 24 hours during which Hamas vowed to halt rocket fire had ended.[162] Despite the temporary ceasefire declared by the armed Palestinian factions, eight Qassam rockets and eight mortar shells hit the Negev.[163][164] Also that day, Israeli Defense Forces killed three Palestinian militants, stating they were planting explosives on the border.[165]

On 24 December, an Israeli airstrike hit a group of militants in the Gaza Strip. An Israeli military spokesman said that the militants had fired mortars at Israel. Palestinian medics said that one Hamas militant was killed in the strike and two other Palestinians were wounded, including a cameraman from Hamas' television station.[166] On that day, Hamas military wing issued a statement saying that it began an operation code-named "Operation Oil Stain". 87 Palestinian mortar shells, Katyusha and Qassam rockets hit the Negev.[167][168] Hamas said that it would expand the "Oil Stain" and put thousands of Israelis "under fire". Hamas said it was ready for the war: "far greater than surrendering to Israeli threats and that they became much more prepared to counter Israeli aggression and to defend themselves than in the past."[167]

On 25 December, after Israel had "wrapped up preparations for a broad offensive", Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert delivered a final warning in an interview with the Arabic language satellite channel al-Arabiya. He said "I am telling them now, it may be the last minute, I'm telling them stop it. We are stronger."[169] Another 6 Qassams landed in southern Israel.[170]

Proceeding

Israeli offensive

Israel began planning for a military operation as early as six months before the conflict by collecting intelligence on potential targets. The IDF also engaged in a disinformation campaign to give Hamas a false sense of security and to take them by surprise. Defense minister Ehud Barak stated that the offensive was the result of Israel's "patience running out" over the rocket attacks,[171][172] which had been restarted by Hamas after Israel destroyed a tunnel on 4 November.[128][101] According to Israeli officials, its subsequent 27 December offensive took Hamas by surprise, thereby increasing militant casualties.[172]

Air strikes

 
Israeli F-16I of the 107th Squadron preparing for takeoff

At 11:30 am on 27 December 2008, Israel launched the campaign titled Operation Cast Lead. It began with an opening wave of airstrikes in which F-16 fighter jets and AH-64 Apache attack helicopters[173] simultaneously struck 100 preplanned targets within a span of 220 seconds. There was a 95% success rate with zero misses in the opening attack according to the Israeli Air Force.[174] Thirty minutes later, a second wave of 64 jets and helicopters struck at an additional 60 targets. The air strikes hit Hamas headquarters, government offices and 24 police stations.[15][175] An Israeli UAV airstrike on the police headquarters of Gaza City killed 40 people, including several dozen police cadets at their graduation ceremony.[176] Approximately 140 members of Hamas were killed, including Tawfik Jaber, head of Hamas' police force.[177][178] Another estimate puts the death toll of the police academy strike at 225 Hamas militants killed and 750 injured.[179] Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni told reporters that Israel would strike all targets associated with what she called the "illegitimate, terrorist government of Hamas".[174]

At least 225–230 Palestinians were killed and more than 700 injured on the first day of air strikes. Civilians, including children, were among the casualties.[178] Although media reported that most of the dead were "Hamas security forces" or "Hamas operatives",[180][181] police officers are, according to B'Tselem, presumed to be civilians and likely not legitimate objects of attack under international humanitarian law.[182] Human rights groups critically note that the attacks began around the time children were leaving school.[183] The Israeli attack was the deadliest one-day death toll in 60 years of conflict between the Israelis and Palestinians, a day that was called the "Massacre of Black Saturday" by Palestinians in Gaza.[184][185] Hamas responded with a rocket barrage on Southern Israel, and Palestinian factions in the Gaza Strip kept Southern Israel under constant rocket fire during the entire war. Beersheba suffered two rocket attacks, the farthest Palestinian rockets had ever reached. Palestinian rocket fire killed three Israeli civilians and one soldier in the early days of the conflict.[186]

In the weeks following the initial air raids F-16Is and AH-64 Apaches continued to target Hamas facilities while also inflicting severe damage to Palestinian infrastructure.[187] Israel used the 2000-pound Mark 84 Joint Direct Attack Munition to attack buildings and tunnels along the Gaza-Sinai border. The 500-pound variant was used against underground bunkers.[174] Israel also used the new PB500A1 laser-guided hard-target penetration bomb, which was developed by Israel Military Industries, and is based on the 1000-pound Mark 83. There were unconfirmed reports of the IAF also using the GBU-39 Small Diameter Bomb for the first time.[2] Israeli aircraft also used synthetic aperture radar targeting pods and high-resolution imaging pods.[174] After being grounded six months prior, the Israeli fleet of AH-1F Cobra helicopter gunships were rushed back into service for the operation.[188] The Israeli Air Force also used unmanned aerial vehicles firing Israeli-manufactured Spike missiles.[citation needed]

According to the IAF, 80% of the bombs used by the IAF were precision weapons, and 99% of the air strikes hit their targets.[189] A study by the Center for Strategic and International Studies points out that when possible, IAF executed strikes using the smallest precision-guided weapons, and coordinated air strikes and the use of artillery weapons using GPS, in a systematic effort to limit collateral damage.[89] In a 2009 interview, Major General Ido Nehushtan said that the only use of non-precision-guided munitions from the Israeli Air Force was in open areas.[190] He went on to say: "We had to find ways to do things as precisely and proportionately as possible, while focusing on how to differentiate between terrorists and uninvolved civilians."[190]

The IDF also targeted homes of Hamas commanders, noting: "Destruction of hundreds of Hamas leaders' homes [is] one of the keys to the offensive's success. The homes serve as weapons warehouses and headquarters, and shelling them has seriously hindered Hamas capabilities."[191] Several high-ranking Hamas commanders were killed, including Nizar Rayan, Abu Zakaria al-Jamal, and Jamal Mamduch. Hamas leaders often died along with their families in their homes. According to a Hamas spokesperson and Rayyan's son, the IDF warned Rayan, by contacting his cell phone, that an attack on his house was imminent.[192][193] Some Hamas leaders hid in the basements of the Shifa Hospital complex in Gaza City in the belief that they would be protected by human shields.[194] Hamas Interior Minister Said Seyam, Hamas Interior Ministry Security Director Saleh Abu Sharkh, and local Hamas militia leader Mahmoud Abu Watfah were killed on 15 January in an Israeli airstrike in Jabalia.[195]

 
Destroyed building in Rafah, 12 January 2009

Among IDF's measures to reduce civilian casualties were the extensive use of leaflets and phone messages to warn Palestinians, including families in high-risk areas and families of Hamas personnel, to leave the area or to avoid potential targets.[89][196][197] Israel used A-4 Skyhawks to deliver more than 2 million leaflets urging the population to evacuate.[190] In a practice codenamed roof knocking, the IDF issued warning calls before air strikes on civilian buildings. Typically, Israeli intelligence officers and Shin Bet security servicemen contacted residents of a building in which they suspected storage of military assets and told them that they had 10–15 minutes to flee the attack.[174][198][199] At several instances, the IDF has also used a sound bomb to warn civilians before striking homes.[196] In some cases, IDF commanders called off airstrikes, when residents of suspected houses have been able to gather on its roof.[196] IAF developed small bomb that is designed not to explode as it was aimed at empty areas of the roofs to frighten residents into leaving the building.[89][197] Israel's military used low-explosive missiles to warn civilians of imminent attack and to verify that buildings were evacuated before attacks.[190] Some of the attacks took place sooner than the warning suggested and many calls were not followed up with attacks.[8] The Israeli Government report notes that while the warning systems implemented by the IDF did not eliminate all harm to civilians, they were apparently effective, because in many incidents aerial video surveillance by IDF forces confirmed the departure of numerous residents from targeted areas as a direct result of the warnings before the attacks. While Israel is not a party to the Protocol I, Israel accepts its provisions as reflective of customary international law.[citation needed]

By 3 January 2009, the Palestinian death toll stood at 400, with 25% estimated to be civilian casualties.[200] The air offensive continued throughout the ground invasion that followed, and as of 15 January Israeli forces had carried out 2,360 air strikes.[201] No safe haven or bomb shelters existed, making this one of the rare conflicts where civilians had no place to flee.[202] The IAF had so far carried out 555 aerial sorties and 125 helicopter missions, and dozens of UAV flight hours were logged.

Naval operations

The Israeli Navy attacked Hamas' rocket launchers and outposts, command and control centers, a Hamas patrol boat, and the office of Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh, using the Typhoon Weapon System and Surface to surface missiles.[203][204] The navy coordinated with other Israeli forces and used powerful shipboard sensors to acquire and shell targets on land.[174][205] Records of the attacks published by the navy indicate that for the first time vessels were equipped with Spike ER electro-optically guided anti-armor missiles. Videos of an attack showed precision hits from a Typhoon stabilizing gun despite a rolling sea. Versions of the Spike were also used by ground units[2] and possibly by helicopters or unmanned aerial vehicles.[206] Shayetet 13 naval commandos were also deployed to attack targets on land,[21] and reportedly attacked an Iranian ship loaded with arms for Hamas, which was docking in Sudan.[207] On 28 December, Naval vessels shelled the Port of Gaza.[186]

On 29 December, the Free Gaza Movement relief boat Dignity carrying volunteer doctors with 3.5 tons of medical supplies, human rights activists (Among them Caoimhe Butterly and former US Representative Cynthia McKinney), and a CNN reporter was involved in an altercation with Israeli patrol boats. The captain of the Free Gaza vessel said that their vessel had been rammed intentionally and that there had been no warning before it had been rammed.[208] An Israeli spokesman disputed this, and said the collision was caused by the Dignity attempting to outmaneuver the patrol boats after disobeying Israeli orders to turn back.[209]

On 4 January the Israeli Navy extended its blockade of the Gaza Strip to 20 nautical miles.[210]

Throughout the war, the Israeli Navy employed Sa'ar 4.5 class missile boats and Super Dvora Mk III class patrol boats.

Ground invasion

IDF infantry and armor units amassed near the Gaza border on 28 December, engaging in a blockade of the strip. On 29 December, a Palestinian mortar attack hit an Israeli military base along the Gaza border, killing one soldier and wounding several others.[citation needed]

 
Explosion in Gaza, 12 January 2009[211]
 
ISM photo:"Damage to the Zeitoun neighbourhood"

On the evening of 3 January Israel began the ground operation with a massive artillery barrage all along the Gaza boundary, and ground forces were sent into Gaza for the first time since the start of the conflict.[212][213][214] The ground invasion, termed the 'second stage' of Operation Cast Lead, sought to control open areas and encircle towns and refugee camps from which militants continued to launch rockets, but not penetrate densely populated areas.[15]

The Paratroopers, Golani, and Givati brigades simultaneously entered the Gaza Strip from several unexpected directions to avoid reported booby traps while also outflanking opposing forces. The 401st Armored Brigade used Merkava Mark IV tanks to quickly block access from Rafah and Khan Yunis to Gaza City, cutting supply lines to Hamas from the south.[2] The move put psychological pressure on Hamas while also forcing combatants to withdraw from the front line. Israeli forces took strategic hilltops to better control areas.[212]

 
Weapons found in a mosque during Operation Cast Lead, according to the IDF

The Israeli advance was spearheaded by Combat Engineering Corps sappers opening routes and allowing the ground forces to advance while dismantling booby traps set up in great numbers by Hamas, often set to detonate upon entry to a building. Improvised explosive devices (IED) were a concern for Israeli soldiers.[25] One Israeli commander said that booby traps were found in a mosque and one-third of the houses. He said that some of the traps were designed to assist in taking IDF soldiers captive. All such attempts failed.[3][215] The IDF used D9 armored bulldozers to ensure that paths were cleared of IEDs. These bulldozers were also used to destroy tunnels. The unmanned, remote-controlled version of the D9 (called Black Thunder) were also used. In one case an armored D9 knocked down a door, which triggered an explosion of a building full of explosive on top of the D9. The D9 survived the explosion and building's collapse. Combat engineers that inspected the rubbles found a tunnel, cache of weapons and remains of a suicide bomber.[216] Viper miniature robots were deployed by Israeli forces for the first time. These were used for various tasks including the disabling of IEDs. Along with blocking mobile phone communication, the IDF employed electronic jamming equipment to disable remote operated explosives.[188] Among others, The IDF used the new Bull Island system for the first time to identify booby traps in buildings. Bull Island uses a camera shaped like a tennis ball that can be thrown into a building to transfer 360-degree imagery to the troops outside of the structure.[15][17]

Israeli artillery units worked closely with battalion commanders.[205] For the first time, the Sheder Ham digitized data, mapping, and command-and-control system linked the Artillery Corps into the Army's overall C4I network.[188] Israel artillery fired approximately 7,000 rounds during the conflict. An Israel Defense Forces colonel stated that tactics and procedures had to suit the difficult urban environment. The number of rounds in the 22-day conflict was 5% of the total fired during the 34-day Lebanon war. Under the condition of anonymity, another officer said that close air support missions accounted for more than 90% of rounds fired. He also said that about half of those were MA25A1 incendiary-based smoke rounds used to mask troop movements.

The Oketz Unit, the IDF's dog-handling corps, performed 33 successful missions during the war, with specially trained sniffer and attack dogs and their handlers leading advancing forces. In every mission that involved Oketz dogs, there were no casualties among soldiers. Three dogs were killed by enemy fire during the war.[217]

Hamas guerrillas sometimes emerged from tunnels to fire at IDF soldiers, then pulled back to lure troops into built-up areas. In one case, a Palestinian dressed in an Israeli Army uniform opened fire on a group of soldiers, but was killed before he could cause any casualties. In several instances, would-be suicide bombers with explosive vests charged Israeli soldiers, but all were killed before they could reach their targets.[citation needed]

Israeli ground troops entered Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun in northern Gaza in the early hours of 4 January.[218] Israeli forces reportedly bisected Gaza and surrounded Gaza City,[213] but restricted their movements to areas that were not heavily urbanized.[citation needed] The IDF stated that it had targeted forty sites, including weapons depots and rocket launch sites. The Israeli military said that 50 Hamas fighters were killed and dozens more wounded.[219] At least 25 Palestinian rockets were fired into Southern Israel, wounding a woman in Sderot.[186] One Israeli soldier was killed and 19 other soldiers were wounded in Jabalia when a mortar shell fired by Hamas fighters landed on their patrol.

As Israeli tanks and troops seized control of large parts of the Gaza Strip, tens of thousands of Gazans fled their homes amid artillery and gunfire, and flooded into the inner parts of Gaza city.[220] On 5 January, IDF forces began operating in the densely populated urban centers of Gaza. Gun battles broke out between the IDF and Hamas on the streets of Gaza as the IDF surrounded the city.[221][222] IDF combat units were sent in to capture Hamas fighters, and were met with grenades and mortar fire. The Israeli military said that 80–100 Hamas fighters were killed and 100 captured during heavy ground fighting. Some 40 rockets and mortar shells were fired at Israel, injuring four civilians.[223] Israel continued to launch airstrikes and naval bombardments.

 
IDF forces discover weapons in a mosque during Operation Cast Lead in the Gaza Strip

On 6 January, heavy fighting took place between Israeli troops and Palestinian militants on the outskirts of the northern district of Gaza City, while Israeli helicopter gunships pounded militant positions. The IDF reportedly widened its attacks to Khan Yunis in southern Gaza, after heavy fighting on the edges of Deir al-Balah in central Gaza.[186] The Al Fakhura school was hit by Israeli mortar fire, and reports on deaths and if militants were among the casualties varied.[224][225][226] The attack was originally reported as being on the school.[227] In northern Gaza City, Palestinian gunmen ambushed an Israeli patrol, killing one soldier and wounding four. The patrol returned fire, hitting some of the gunmen,[228] while in Jabalya, an Israeli tank fired a shell into an abandoned building as Golani Brigade soldiers were taking cover in it, killing 3 soldiers and wounding 24. The casualties were extracted under the cover of heavy artillery fire and helicopters dropping illumination bombs.[229] In a separate friendly fire incident, an Israeli officer was killed by a misdirected artillery shell. In all, at least 70 Palestinians and 5 Israelis were killed on 6 January.[186]

Arms interdiction and the Sudan strike

In January and February 2009, there was a series of two air strikes in Sudan and one in the Red Sea allegedly conducted by Israel against a convoy of 17 trucks containing Iranian arms, possibly Fajr-3 artillery rockets, being smuggled to the Gaza Strip through Sudan. A total of 39 were reported killed, with Iranian Revolutionary Guard operatives possibly among the dead.[230][231] The attack was widely reported to have been conducted by Israeli aircraft, while the Israeli government hinted that it was behind the attack.[232] Naval commandos from the elite Shayetet 13 unit were reportedly involved in the operation, which included an attack on an Iranian arms ship docking in Port Sudan.[233]

Attack on Gaza City

 
White phosphorus artillery shell exploding over Gaza City on the 11 January

On 7 January, Israel carried out 40 airstrikes overnight. Dozens of other targets were attacked by aircraft and artillery during the day, and the Gaza-Egypt border was bombed after Israeli aircraft dropped leaflets onto Rafah, urging the residents to leave. A total of 20 Palestinians were killed. A total of 20 rockets were fired into Southern Israel.[186] Israel temporarily halted its attacks for three hours to provide a "humanitarian respite".[234] On 8 January, an exchange of fire took place in Gaza City. Hamas suffered heavy losses, but an Israeli officer of the Golani Brigade was also killed. In Northern Gaza, snipers opened fire on Israeli forces conducting an operation, killing an Israeli soldier. Another Israeli soldier was lightly wounded. The IDF soldiers identified the origin of the fire and returned fire, directly hitting the snipers. In another incident, several mortar shells were fired at Givati Brigade soldiers, who responded with mortar fire and were aided by IAF airstrikes.[citation needed] In Central Gaza, a force of IDF soldiers entered a building near the Kissfum crossing. As the force entered, Hamas fighters fired an anti-tank rocket at them, killing one Israeli officer and wounding one soldier. Israeli aircraft also hit more than 40 Hamas targets in Gaza.[235] Israeli troops shot and killed Hamas commander Amir Mansi and wounded two other Hamas fighters as they operated a mortar.[236] The IAF attacked over 60 Hamas targets. A rocket fired from Gaza wounded seven IDF soldiers in Southern Israel. On 10 January, the Israeli military said that another 40 sites were targeted, and that 15 Hamas fighters were killed.[237] On 11 January, the IDF started the third stage of the operation with an attack on the suburbs of Gaza City. Israeli forces pushed into the south of the city and reached a key junction to its north. During their advance, Hamas and Islamic Jihad fighters ambushed Israeli troops at several locations, and heavy fighting ensued, in which 40 Hamas and Islamic Jihad fighters were killed.[177] Additionally, the IAF reported that Hamas operatives had tried to shoot down an IAF plane with anti-aircraft missiles for the first time since operations in Gaza began. Heavy machine gun fire against helicopters had also been unsuccessful.[26] Two Hamas fighters were killed by an Israeli airstrike in the Southern Gaza Strip. A Palestinian woman was also killed by Israeli artillery fire.[238] Israeli forces continued to push deeper into heavily populated areas around Gaza City. Fierce clashes were reported in the Southern suburb of Sheikh Ajleen.[186] On 12 January, nearly 30 rockets and mortars were fired at Southern Israel, damaging a house in Ashkelon.

 
Palestinians in a Gaza city neighbourhood on Day 18 of the War in Gaza[239]

On 13 January, Israeli tanks continued their advance toward the headquarters of Hamas' preventive security building from the al-Karramah neighborhood in the northwest and the Tel al-Hawa neighborhood in the northeast. The Israeli Army also said that 25 mortars and rockets were fired into Southern Israel.[186][240] Before dawn, during the night, Israeli troops and tanks supported by artillery and helicopters advanced 300 metres into Tel al-Hawa, a neighborhood with several high-rise buildings, while Israeli gunboats shelled Hamas targets along the coast.[citation needed] As troops entered the narrow streets, heavy street fighting with militants ensued leaving three Israeli soldiers wounded and 30 Hamas militants dead or wounded, according to the IDF. By morning IDF soldiers were still advancing slowly towards the city center and several buildings were in flames in Tel al-Hawa, where most of the fighting took place. Five Israeli soldiers were wounded during clashes with militants, and an officer was severely wounded by an explosion inside a booby-trapped building.[241] The push into the neighborhood was Israel's deepest incursion into Gaza City. There was widespread desertion by members of the Qassam Brigades in the face of the IDF advance.[3]

On 15 January, Israeli artillery started an intense bombardment of the city while fighting was still going on in the streets. Troops and tanks advanced deeper into the city following the shelling. The Israeli military claimed to have killed dozens of militants since breaching the city limits four days earlier, while they suffered 20–25 soldiers wounded. Among buildings hit by shellfire was the al-Quds hospital, Gaza's second-largest, in the Tel al-Hawa neighborhood. At least 14 rockets were fired from Gaza into Israel, wounding five and severely damaging a house in Sderot.[186]

Almost all members of Hamas' approximately 100-man strong "Iranian Unit" were killed during a battle in the Zeytoun neighborhood on 15 January. Members of the military wing had previously travelled to Iran for training by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. According to Palestinian sources, Iran was preparing for an end to the fighting and promised money and resources to rebuild military capabilities and infrastructure destroyed during the fighting.[242]

The headquarters of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) was also shelled on 15 January. There were 3 people injured and tons of food and fuel intended for 750,000 Palestinian refugees were destroyed.[243] The Associated Press initially reported that an anonymous Israeli military official stated that Gaza militants had fired anti-tank weapons and machine guns from inside the compound. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said "it is absolutely true that we were attacked from that place, but the consequences are very sad and we apologize for it, I don't think it should have happened and I'm very sorry." After UNRWA dismissed this as "nonsense", Israel ordered an army investigation into the incident.[244] Israeli officials afterwards "came forward to say that preliminary results showed that the militants ran for safety inside the U.N. compound after firing on Israeli forces from outside".[245]

On 16 January, more than 50 Israeli airstrikes were carried out against militants, tunnels, and a mosque suspected of being used as a weapons store. Israeli forces continued their push into Gaza City, while Israeli Navy vessels shelled militant targets in support.[234] About 10 rockets were fired into Southern Israel.[186] Palestinian militants fired 15 rockets into Israel, wounding eight people including a pregnant woman.

The Givati Brigade penetrated the deepest into Gaza City. The brigade's reconnaissance battalion swept into the Tel al-Hawa neighborhood and took over two 15-story buildings in search of Hamas operatives two days before the cease fire went into effect. About 40 Palestinian fighters were killed during the operation. The commander of the brigade, Colonel Ilan Malka, was critical of Hamas' use of civilian houses and said that he "took many steps to prevent our soldiers from getting hurt". Malka told reporters that the IDF had initially predicted each battalion would lose six or seven soldiers.[246]

The Israeli government considered a third phase of the operation with the intent of dealing a "knock out blow" to Hamas. Military and intelligence assessments indicating that shifting the goal to destroying Hamas would require additional weeks of deep ground incursions into urban areas and refugee camps. This was expected to result in heavy casualties on both sides and among civilians, reduce the strong domestic support for the war, and increase international criticism.[15]

Humanitarian ceasefires

Due to the number of civilian casualties and the deteriorating humanitarian situation, Israel faced significant international pressure for a ceasefire, the establishment of a humanitarian corridor, access to the population of Gaza and the lifting of the blockade.[247] On 7 January, Israel opened a humanitarian corridor to allow the shipment of aid into Gaza. The Israeli army agreed to interrupt fighting for three hours and Hamas agreed not to launch rockets during the pause.[248][249][250] Israel repeated the ceasefire either daily or every other day. Aid officials and the UN praised the truce, but said it was not enough as fighting usually resumed immediately following the humanitarian ceasefires.[248][251][252][253] An Israeli Government report, published in July 2009, notes that during the period between 8 and 17 January, Hamas fired a total of 44 rockets and mortars at Israel during humanitarian pauses.[citation needed] An independent report commissioned jointly by the Israeli NGO Physicians for Human Rights and the Palestinian Medical Relief Society notes that according to testimonies by local witnesses, there were several cases where IDF ground forces breached the daily ceasefire agreement.[254]

Palestinian paramilitary activity

 
According to Human Rights Watch rockets from Gaza were fired from populated areas.[255]

According to Abu Ahmed, the official media spokesman of the Al-Quds Brigades, the military wing of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad movement, Palestinian paramilitary factions in Gaza worked together, operationally and otherwise, to repel the Israeli attack on Gaza. Abu Ahmed told Asharq al-Awsat during the war that, "everybody helps everybody else with regards to food, weapons, and first aid; there is no difference between a member 'Al Quds Brigade' or 'Al Qassam Brigade [military wing of Hamas]' or 'Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade' or 'Abu Ali Mustafa Brigade [military wing of Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine or PFLP]'. For everybody's goal is the same and their compass is pointing in the same direction, and that is to drive out the occupation and defeat them, and disrupt their plan to dissolve the Palestinian Cause."[256] Hamas said that "rockets fired from Gaza were meant to hit military targets, but because they are unguided, they hit civilians by mistake."[257]

Political representatives for Hamas, Islamic Jihad, the PFLP, Saiqa, the Popular Struggle Front, the Revolutionary Communist Party, Palestinian Liberation Organization, Fatah's 'Intifada' faction, and a number of other Palestinian factions in Syria formed a temporary alliance during the offensive as well. They issued a joint statement refusing "any security arrangements that affect the resistance and its legitimate right to struggle against the occupation", and refusing proposals suggesting international forces be sent to Gaza. The coalition also affirmed that any peace initiatives must include an end to the blockade, and an opening of all of Gaza's crossings, including the Rafah crossing with Egypt.[1]

Preparation

 
A Grad rocket hitting Beersheba

Hamas used the months leading to the war to prepare for urban warfare, which was to give them a chance to inflict casualties on the Israeli military.[258] Militants booby-trapped houses and buildings and built an extensive system of tunnels in preparation for combat.[259] A Hamas fighter reported that the group had prepared a tunnel network in Gaza city that would allow Hamas to engage the IDF in urban warfare.[260] IDF commanders said that many Hamas members have dug tunnels for themselves under their homes and hid weapon caches in them.[261] Some houses were booby-trapped with mannequins, explosives and adjacent tunnels: Israeli officers said that houses were set up this way so that "Israeli soldiers would shoot the mannequin, mistaking it for a man; an explosion would occur; and the soldiers would be driven or pulled into the hole, where they could be taken prisoner." A colonel estimated that one-third of all houses encountered were booby-trapped.[215] IDF Brigadier-General Eyal Eisenberg said that roadside bombs were planted in TV satellite dishes, adding that Hamas booby-trapping of homes and schools was "monstrous" and "inhumane".[262] Ron Ben-Yishai, an Israeli military correspondent embedded with invading ground forces, stated that entire blocks of houses were booby-trapped and wired in preparation for urban confrontation with the IDF. Israel said a map showing the deployment of explosives and Hamas forces in the al-Atatra neighborhood in northern Gaza was found. The map reportedly showed that Hamas placed many explosives and firing positions in residential areas, several mosques, and next to a gas station.[263] Israel deployed the elite Sayeret Yahalom combat engineering unit throughout the brigades with new equipment including miniature robots and improved wall-breaching munitions to counter the booby-traps.[2]

 
An example of a weapons cache found in northern Gaza

According to Jane's Defence Weekly, armed groups in Gaza counted domestically produced anti-armor RPGs like al-Battar and Banna 1 and Banna 2 in their arsenal.[264] Hamas and Islamic Jihad also manufactured a variety of improvised explosive devices (IEDs), some of which were anti-personnel bombs and others were planted on the sides of roads or underground to be activated against tanks and armored personnel carriers. According to The Jerusalem Post, some of the IEDs were manufactured from medicine bottles transferred to the Gaza Strip as humanitarian aid by Israel.[265] The same newspaper also reported that Hamas representatives said they were fighting with the aid of armored vehicles and weapons confiscated from the Palestinian National Authority, given by Israel, the United States and other countries.[266]

 
A weapons cache in found in northern Gaza

At least one Palestinian witness told an Italian reporter that on many roofs of the tall buildings that were hit by Israeli bombs, including UN building, there were rocket-launchers or Hamas look-outs.[267][268] On 27 January, the Shin Bet released details given by Hamas captives, including the militants' use of mosques for weapon caches and military training. Militants admitted to the location of Hamas weapon storage sites, in tunnels, in the homes of activists, and in citrus groves and mosques, and told of theory instruction given in mosques as well.[269] Following the visit of the British Army veteran Colonel Tim Collins to the ruins of one of the mosques targeted by the IDF in Rafah, he said that in his view the evidencies of the secondary explosion, that could have indicated weapon's storage in the mosque, are present.[270]

Palestinian rockets in Gaza

According to Human Right Watch, On 24 December 2008, a rocket struck a bedroom of a family living in the Tel al-Hawa area in southern Gaza City, critically wounding one man. The brother of this victim told after the incident no armed group came to apologize. "I was next door in my home when this all happened. When one of those responsible tried to bargain for the shrapnel, I said that if no one took responsibility I will go to the courts, so Hamas came to me privately and admitted it." On 26 December 2008, a Palestinian rocket struck north of Beit Lahiya, a house was hit killing two cousins and wounding another. The grandfather described the rocket as about one meter in length; according to Human Rights Watch examination the diameter of the pipe is 120 mm. The grandfather said the rocket was taken by Hamas policemen for investigation: "After he left, the war started and we never heard from him again. We got the compensation given to all victims of the war."[255]

Rocket attacks into Israel

 
Kindergarten classroom in Beersheba hit by Grad rocket from Gaza[271]

After the initial Israeli aerial assault, Hamas quickly dispersed both its personnel and weapons and equipment.[272] According to Human Rights Watch rockets from Gaza were fired from populated areas, an Islamic Jihad fighter said: "the most important thing is achieving our military goals.... We stay away from the houses if we can, but that's often impossible."[255] According to BBC, Palestinian groups had been firing "in response to Israeli massacres".[54] The strike range of Hamas rockets had increased from 16 km (9.9 mi) to 40 km (25 mi) since early 2008 with the use of improved Qassam and factory-made rockets.[273] These attacks resulted in civilian casualties and damage to infrastructure.[274] Rockets reached major Israeli cities Ashdod, Beersheba and Gedera for the first time, putting one-eighth of Israel's population in rocket range.[275] On 3 January 2009 Ma'an News Agency reported: "The Al-Qassam Brigades, military wing of Hamas, said that after a week since the start of the 'Battle of Al-Furqan [the criterion]' it has managed to fire 302 rockets, at an average of 44 rockets daily."[54] As of 13 January 2009, Palestinian militants had launched approximately 565 rockets and 200 mortars at Israel since the beginning of the conflict, according to Israeli security sources.[276] A source close to Hamas described the movement's use of stealth when firing: "They fired rockets in between the houses and covered the alleys with sheets so they could set the rockets up in five minutes without the planes seeing them. The moment they fired, they escaped, and they are very quick."[277] It is reported that 102 rockets and 35 mortars were fired by Fatah, Hamas' chief rival.[278]

Besides the rockets fired by the Qassam Brigades of Hamas, other factions claimed responsibility for rockets fired into Israel and attacks on Israeli soldiers, including Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades (affiliated with Fatah), the Abu Ali Mustapha Brigades, the Quds Brigades and the Popular Resistance Councils.[1] A Fatah official stated that the rocket attacks by his faction contradicted the official position of Mahmoud Abbas, Fatah leader and President of the Palestinian National Authority. Abbas had called on all sides to cease hostilities unconditionally.

Militants fired over 750 rockets and mortars from Gaza into Israel during the conflict.[279] Bersheeba and Gedera were the farthest areas hit by rocket or mortars.[279] The rockets killed three civilians and one IDF soldier and wounded 182 people, with another 584 people suffering from shock and anxiety.[citation needed] The rockets also caused property damage, including damage to three schools.[271][280][281] Senior Hamas official Mahmoud al-Zahar stated during the operation "they [Israeli forces] shelled everyone in Gaza.... They shelled children and hospitals and mosques, ... and in doing so, they gave us legitimacy to strike them in the same way."[282]

Human Rights Watch noted in the open letter to Ismail Haniyeh that despite his Foreign Ministry stance as part of response to the Goldstone Report, Palestinian armed groups remain responsible for firing rockets indiscriminately or deliberately at Israeli civilian objects. HRW also noted that Palestinian militants put Palestinian civilians at risk of Israeli counter-attacks by launching rockets from populated areas.[283] The UN fact finding mission stated that the firing of rockets at Israel constituted a deliberate attack against the civilian population and was in violation of international law.[53]

After the war, the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades revealed new rockets it used during Israel's military operation and published pictures of weapons (Tandem and RPG-29 anti-armor rockets) that it could secretly smuggle to Gaza.[284]

 
Repairs being made to water pipe after it was hit a by a rocket

Besides being hit with rockets fired from Gaza, Israel experienced other attacks along the borders with Lebanon and Syria.[285]

Unilateral ceasefires

On 17 January, Israeli officials announced a unilateral ceasefire. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert declared the ceasefire effective that night, at 00:00 GMT on 18 January.[286] The ceasefire consisted of two phases: "First a ceasefire is declared. If Hamas stops firing rockets then Israel pulls its forces out of the Gaza Strip. If rocket fire resumes then the IDF goes back in, this time with the international backing gained by having tried a truce." Olmert declared that the military objectives had been met.[287][288] Hamas initially "vowed to fight on",[289] and responded that any continued Israeli presence in Gaza would be regarded as an act of war. Farzi Barhoum, a Hamas spokesman, said before the ceasefire began, "The occupier must halt his fire immediately and withdraw from our land and lift his blockade and open all crossings and we will not accept any one Zionist soldier on our land, regardless of the price that it costs."[290] Palestinian militants resumed rocket fire into southern Israel the following Sunday morning, four of the six fired landed in or near Sderot.[291][292] The Israeli military returned fire and launched an air strike against the rocket launching site in northern Gaza.[293]

On 18 January Hamas, Islamic Jihad and other paramilitias said they would stop launching rockets into Israel for one week and demanded "the withdrawal of the enemy forces from the Gaza Strip within a week, along with the opening of all the crossings for the entry of humanitarian aid, food and other necessities for our people in the Gaza Strip".[294][295][296] Three days later, the last Israeli troops left Gaza.[297]

Since the unilateral ceasefires were declared on 17 January, militants have fired rockets and mortar shells from Gaza,[298][299] and the IDF has launched airstrikes against Gaza.[300]

Continued negotiations

Egyptian mediators held discussions with Israel and Hamas about extending the cease-fire by a year or more. Hamas and Fatah met to allow both to play a role in rebuilding.[301] Israel began pressuring Egypt to do more to stop weapons smuggling into Gaza, the halting of which is one of Israel's central demands in extending a cease-fire. On 27 January 2009, Foreign Minister of Egypt Ahmed Aboul Gheit discouraged Britain, France and Germany from sending warships to patrol the waters off Gaza, which the three European nations felt could help halt seaborne smuggling. Gheit said such efforts would harm Europe's relations with the Arab world. Egypt also opposed proposals for European troops to be stationed on the border between Gaza and Egypt to monitor smuggling tunnels.[302]

Israel, along with many Western and some Arab countries, wanted international aid groups to control aid from donations around the world, so that Hamas would not receive credit for the rebuilding. To speed up reconstruction, Hamas agreed that it would not insist on collecting reconstruction money itself and would allow donated money to flow through different avenues based on the various alliances, although Hamas ultimately expected to administer the aid. But advisors to senior Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh said Israel's willingness to open the border for humanitarian aid only was unacceptable, as Hamas would need much more to rebuild its economy and provide relief for citizens. Haniyeh aides said the cease-fire is contingent on a full border opening.[301]

Shortly after becoming President of the United States, Barack Obama directed newly appointed special envoy to the Middle East George J. Mitchell to visit Israel, the West Bank, Egypt, Jordan, Turkey and Saudi Arabia for peace talks. Mitchell began his meetings in Cairo on 27 January 2009, and Obama said his visit was part of the President's campaign promise to listen to both sides of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict and work toward a Middle East peace deal. Mitchell did not plan to talk to Hamas, but instead focus on talks with the more moderate Palestinian Authority.[302] A spokesman for Haniyeh said he respected Mitchell, but was disappointed with the envoy's decision not to hold discussions with Hamas.[301]

Ehud Olmert stated that Israel would not agree to a long term truce or lift the blockade on Gaza without the freeing of Gilad Shalit, an IDF soldier held captive in Gaza since June 2006.[303][304] Hamas demanded that Israel release 1,400 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for Shalit and such negotiations be kept separate from ceasefire negotiations.[305]

Post-war military assessment

The war was an Israeli tactical victory and a significant tactical defeat for Hamas.[4][306][307] Al-Qassam Brigades reported in "The outcome of al-Qassam operations during the Battle of al-Furqan" they killed 102 Israeli soldiers. On 19 January 2009, a spokesperson for the group said on al-Arabiya "Israel lost 'at least 80 soldiers' in the fighting" and said about Hamas losses "only 48 fighters slain in Israel war". According to United Nations report of the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission of Human Rights Council, which was on General Assembly's agenda on 29 October 2009: "The large discrepancy in the data confirms the Mission's observations below in the report about the reliability of the information about the Gaza military operations posted on websites of al-Qassam and other Palestinian armed groups."[308] In November 2010, the Hamas Interior Minister acknowledged that around 700 militants either part of Hamas or affiliated factions were killed in the war.[309]

Several senior Hamas military commanders and politburo members were killed, as well as approximately 50 explosives experts.[3] Hamas experienced "widespread desertion" in the face of the Israeli advance.[3] Hamas also lost a very large amount of weaponry and equipment; key storage facilities were discovered under mosques and public buildings.[3] A former Shin Bet deputy director who co-authored a report on the war noted, "Hamas had planned to stand and fight, but the Iz al-Qassam Brigades proved unequal to the task ... and consequently they failed to match the public image Hamas has tried so hard to present of stalwart, proficient Islamic warriors."[307]

In addition, the Israeli operation greatly curtailed years of Hamas rocket fire, returning a sense of normalcy to Southern Israel.[310] In the year before the war, Hamas had fired over 3,300 rockets at Israel's Gaza periphery towns. That number dropped to less than 300 in the ten months following the conflict.[311]

Defense analyst David Eshel stated, "The success of Operation Cast Lead in the densely populated Gaza Strip shows that an industrial military that coordinates operations among land, air and sea units, makes effective use of advanced technology, and shares intelligence and leads from the front can decisively defeat an asymmetrical enemy." He further noted, "Israel used a variety of tactics to outflank and defeat Hamas in its own territory. These included long-term planning, meticulous intelligence-gathering, deception and disinformation."[2] As a result of its poor performance, Hamas relieved at least two brigade commanders on Iranian advice, and reportedly stripped 100 fighters of their membership. The organization decided to initiate a thorough investigation of the conduct of its fighters during the operation.[3][312] Hamas' leadership modified its tactical doctrine. The Qassam Brigades intensified military training at its various training camps and military academy in the Nuseirat refugee camp. The new training was thought to be more offensive, with a focus on hitting the rear of an IDF force. Hezbollah operatives were suspected of involvement in the program. In contrast to the pre-war period, when Hamas openly displayed its capabilities, the nature of the program was kept classified.[3]

The Israeli army said it destroyed about 80% of the tunnels between Gaza and Egypt that were being used to bring in weapons and rocket components. Residents in Rafah said they cleared away debris and discovered that many of the tunnels were intact, though they acknowledged the destruction of many.[313]

Casualties

Human Rights organizations and the UN counted just above 1,400 Palestinian deaths,[32][31][314] Israel acknowledged 1,166 deaths.[30][315]

According to PCHR, among the Palestinian deaths were 926 unarmed civilians, 255 police officers, and 236 fighters.[32] B’Tselem counted 248 killed police officers.[31] Al Mezan Centre for Human Rights said in January 2009, that 1,268 people were killed, among them 288 children and 103 women, and 85% of those killed were not combatants. The IDF tallied 295 killed civilians, least 709 armed militants and 162 undetermined.[30][315]

The Hamas Interior Minister Fathi Hamad stated that between 200 and 300 Hamas fighters, another 150 security forces and 250 policemen were killed.[309][316]

During the war, 3 Israeli civilians were killed by rocket attacks. A total of 10 Israeli soldiers were killed in the war, of whom 6 were killed by enemy action and 4 were killed by friendly fire.[31][28]

Civilians versus combatants

During the 2008–2009 Gaza fighting I personally erased a key detail—that Hamas fighters were dressed as civilians and being counted as civilians in the death toll—because of a threat to our reporter in Gaza. (The policy was then, and remains, not to inform readers that the story is censored unless the censorship is Israeli. Earlier this month, the AP's Jerusalem news editor reported and submitted a story on Hamas intimidation; the story was shunted into deep freeze by his superiors and has not been published.)

In any conflict, the ratio of combatant and civilian deaths is a highly sensitive topic. During the fighting in the Gaza War, the main source for the number of Palestinian casualties was Hamas' Ministry of Health in Gaza. The ICRC used these figures, but at a later stage it made its own assessment.[318] Because Israel allowed very few international workers and journalists in Gaza during much of the conflict, it has been difficult to verify the figures independently.[318]

In The Jerusalem Post, Israeli-Arab journalist Khaled Abu Toameh suggested that killed fighters in civilian clothes led to the over-counting of civilian casualties and under-counting Hamas military casualties, as Palestinian casualties arrived at hospitals without weapons or any other signs revealing they were fighters.[319]

B'Tselem wrote that its fatalities classification was based on the guidelines of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) published in June 2009. The PCHR civilian count includes Hamas members killed in what the PCHR assessed were non-combat situations. The Al Mezan centre defined combatants as "those taking up arms against Israeli troops".[318] The Israeli International Institute for Counter-Terrorism[320] and SPME[321] have contested the classifications of B'Tselem and PCHR.

Gazan police

During the conflict Israel targeted numerous police facilities in Gaza. Many of these attacks occurred during the first minutes of the operations resulting in the deaths of 99 policemen and nine other members of the public.[53][322] The attacks on Police during the first day of the operation included the bombing of a police cadet graduation ceremony, killing scores of police cadets along with family members who had come to attend the celebration. Police cadets killed in the incident included traffic police and musicians in the police orchestra.[323][324] The UN fact finding mission established that approximately 240 Gaza policemen were killed by Israeli forces during the course of the conflict constituting over one sixth of the total Palestinian casualties.[53] According to Ayman al-Batniji, spokesperson for the Palestinian Police Force in Gaza, almost 251 policemen were killed within the first few hours of the attack which also left more than 700 others injured, including those who could never return to work due to losing their legs and other limbs.[325]

Legality

The UN Fact Finding Mission analysed the police institutions in Gaza from the time Hamas gained control. They concluded that the Gaza police were a civilian law-enforcement agency and that Israel's blanket targeting of the Gaza police was therefore a violation of international humanitarian law.[53]

Human Rights Watch stated that police are presumptively civilians but on a specific case-by-case basis can be considered valid targets if formally incorporated into the armed forces of a party to a conflict or directly participate in the hostilities. They stressed that blanket decisions must not be made about police being legitimate targets and that a decision that police and police stations are legitimate military targets depends on whether those police play a role in fighting against Israel, or whether a particular police station is used to store weapons or for some other military purpose.[326] B'Tselem also states that police officers are presumed to be civilians and likely not legitimate objects of attack under international humanitarian law.[182]

Israeli views

The Israeli Orient Research Group reported that 78 of the 89 killed during this first IAF strike were terror operatives, many of them belonging to the militant group, al-Qassam Brigades.[citation needed] The Jerusalem Centre for Public Affairs further reported that 286 of the 343 police officers killed during the offensive were members of terror organizations and that another 27 fighters belonged to units undergoing infantry training.[citation needed] It noted that the security apparatuses participated in terror activity and that the Hamas leadership presented these organizations as at the forefront of the jihad for liberating all of Palestine.[327][328]

The IDF made clear that it regards police under the control of Hamas in Gaza to be equivalent to the enemies armed fighters, including them in the militant's count.[53][315] A government paper published pictures of four men that were killed during the military operations that they claim were downloaded from Palestinian websites. The men are identified in the different pictures as both policemen and members of al-Qassam Brigades.[329] Israeli Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center (ITIC) alleged that the distinction between the internal security forces and Hamas military wing is not sharply defined and cites Gaza police officials who said that police were instructed to fight the enemy in case of an invasion into the Gaza Strip.[330][331] Many security force members were reported to "moonlight" with the militant group, Izzidin al-Qassam Brigades.[332]

Gazan rockets

During the conflict, Palestinian groups fired rockets targeting Israeli civilians in the cities of Ashdod, Beersheba and Gedera placing 1/8 of the Israeli population at risk. The military wing of Hamas said that after a week from the start, it had managed to fire 302 rockets, at an average of 44 rockets daily. 102 rockets and 35 mortars were fired by Fatah at Israel. Over 750 rockets and mortars were fired from Gaza into Israel during the conflict wounded 182 civilians, killing 3 people, and causing minor suffering to another 584 people suffering from shock and anxiety. Several rockets landed in schools and one fell close to a kindergarten, all located in residential areas. The UN fact finding mission stated that this constituted a deliberate attack against the civilian population and was unjustifiable in international law.[271][279]

Aftermath

Israel was victorious militarily, but its reputation was harmed.[5] The international community continued to isolate Hamas (except for Iran and Syria), because it rejected the Quartet demands to recognize Israel, accept the Oslo accords peace initiative and abandon violence in exchange for international recognition as representatives of the Palestinian people.[333] In the months following the war, Hamas suspended its use of rockets and shifted focus to winning support at home and abroad through cultural initiatives and public relations, with the aim to build a "cultural resistance". Hamas officials stated that "The current situation required a stoppage of rockets. After the war, the fighters needed a break and the people needed a break."[334]

Propaganda and psychological warfare

Hamas

Before and during the conflict, Hamas' senior representatives released a number of statements designed to avert Israeli decision-makers from launching any military operation in Gaza and to cause demoralization among Israelis. Before the end of the pre-conflict ceasefire, Hamas boasted that it had countless surprises awaiting Israeli troops, should they advance.[335] Hamas representatives threatened on several occasions to abduct Israeli soldiers, and during the ground invasion tried to spread rumors that it actually had captured or killed more Israeli soldiers.[336]

On a video broadcast on Al-Aqsa TV on 10 January showing the names of Israeli towns hit by rockets, it was implied Tel-Aviv is the next target and that 'all options are open'.[337] Also, Hamas sent messages in Hebrew to Israeli citizens' mobile phones warning: "Rockets on all cities, shelters will not protect you."[338][339]

Hamas instrumentalized the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit as a form of psychological weapon, declaring that he had been wounded by Israeli fire, later announcing that his condition was no longer of interest to them.[335]

According to IDF spokesman, Hamas' ruses in the battlefield included booby traps throughout Gaza's neighborhoods, such as mannequins placed at apartment entrances and rigged to explode when the soldiers approach.[336]

Arab television stations reported Hamas-provided statistics for Israeli casualties on the assumption that Israel is distorting its own figures of soldiers killed and wounded.[340]

A study by the Center for Strategic and International Studies notes that Hamas propaganda both rejected Hamas responsibility for the fighting and used it to attack the Palestinian Authority.[89]

Dr. Tal Pavel from Israeli think-tank International Policy Institute for Counter-Terrorism (ICT) said that Hamas uses its Web sites to make comparisons between Israel and Nazi Germany, portraying Israel as a destructive, oppressive regime afraid of Hamas rockets raining on Tel Aviv.[340]

Israel

The day before the beginning of the offensive on 27 December the IDF pulled troops back from the border and used its radio channels to broadcast talk of a "lull" to achieve a disinformation coup to lure Hamas fighters out of hiding.[341]

A broadcaster in Islamic Jihad's Voice of Jerusalem radio station in Gaza City reported that IDF have been breaking into his station signal "least once an hour" during conflict intensification to broadcast messages to Gaza's population that their problems were due to Hamas. The Israelis also dropped leaflets with similar messages and contact info to report about the whereabouts of militant leaders and weapons caches.[341] The leaflets also said, "The Israeli army will respond if the rocket fire continues."[339] In war zones, leaflets warned local residents that they had to flee. It also warned residents that their homes would be targeted if they were located in an area of possible target.[342] Dr. Yaniv Levitan of the University of Haifa said that the aim of the flyers was not to demoralize the civil population, but to implant recognition in hearts and minds that Hamas has failed, that there is an option of choosing another path.[340]

IDF spokespersons often reported that scores of demoralized Hamas fighters had been observed deserting. According to Ephraim Kam, deputy head of the Institute of National Security Studies at Tel Aviv University, the claim could not be confirmed but it strengthened the Israeli population's will to continue and undermined the confidence of Hamas in Gaza.[335]

There was a mistrust of phone calls warning messages to people that they have "just minutes to evacuate before they bomb the house". According to a human rights lawyer at the Palestinian Center for Human Rights (PCHR), despite the hundreds of phone calls to families warning their house is about to be blown up, only 37 were destroyed, presumably as of 3 January date.[339]

Controversies regarding tactics

Both Israel and Hamas were accused of using controversial military tactics during the 2008–2009 Gaza War.

Controversial tactics allegedly used by Hamas

Civilians as human shields

Israel maintained that Hamas used civilians, and especially children, as human shields, as a part of its war doctrine. They said that Hamas repeatedly called upon Palestinian civilians to gather near buildings where they feared that the IDF was about to launch air-strikes against Hamas targets. They documented several examples of what they described as "calls in the Hamas controlled Gaza media for Palestinians civilians to serve as human shields". They released footage allegedly showing Hamas' Al-Aqsa TV calling upon children to form a human shield at various structures in Gaza to prevent anticipated IDF airstrikes, and an Al-Aqsa TV News broadcast describing how a crowd of civilians gathered on the roof of Abu Bilal al-Ja'abeer to stop the IDF from executing an airstrike.[citation needed] Amnesty International's investigation of these claims found no evidence that Hamas or any other Palestinian militant group had 'directed the movement of civilians to shield military objectives from attacks.' It did find that Israeli soldiers had deployed Palestinian civilians and children to shield themselves.[343][344]

The IDF released a video taken by an UAV drone during the war, saying that it showed a Hamas militant launching a rocket from a roof of a residential house and then leaving surrounded by children to avoid being targeted by the IDF.[citation needed] Later, the IDF and Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs compiled a film accusing Hamas of a systematic use of civilian infrastructure and civilians as a human shield.[citation needed] Israeli Air Force videos allegedly show terrorists using groups of children as cover to escape from combat areas and joining groups of children.[345]

The commander of the military-terrorist wing of the PFLP-GC in the Gaza Strip stated in an interview that some areas did not present a problem because of the "population and building density" that would "provide the resistance with a shield".[345]

 
Hamas operation centre in the middle of a civilian area

Professor Newton,[who?] an expert in laws of armed conflict testifying in front of a United Nations Fact Finding Mission, criticized a statement by a Hamas brigade commander who said, "The entire people of Gaza are the combatants and therefore, it is appropriate for us to issue warnings and then whether – if, even if they disregard them, to occupy their basement or their house or their backyard." Professor Newton stated that the legal obligation was to never commingle civilian and military objectives.[346]

The New York Times quotes a study published by the Israel-based Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center, charging Hamas with methodically building its military infrastructure in the heart of population centers. According to the study, Hamas not only hides among the population, but has made a main component of its combat strategy "channeling" the army into the densely populated areas to fight.[347] During the Gaza War, Hamas invested great effort in preventing civilians from leaving neighborhoods that were in the line of fire and letting them flee to the south of the Strip.[348]

After Israeli forces fired shells near a UN school in Gaza killing around 30 people, Israel's military said the shelling was in response to mortar fire from within the school and asserted that Hamas were using civilians as cover. They stated that the dead near the school included Hamas members of a rocket launching cell. Two residents of the area confirmed that a group of militants were firing mortar shells from near the school and identified two of the victims as Hamas militants.[349]

The Goldstone report found indications that Palestinian armed groups launched rockets from urban areas. The Mission was not able to obtain any direct evidence of specific intent of shielding the rocket launchers from counterstrokes by the Israeli armed forces.[350] From a legal perspective, the report said that the launching of attacks close to civilian buildings would have unnecessarily exposed the civilian population of Gaza and violated the customary rules of international humanitarian law and the right to life of the endangered civilians.[53]

The Goldstone report concluded that there was evidence of the presence of Palestinian armed groups in residential areas. The report noted that because of the densely populated nature of the northern half of the Gaza strip, once the Israeli forces gained control of the outlying areas in the first few days of the ground invasion, most, if not all, locations still accessible to the Palestinian militants would have been in urban areas. It would be difficult to avoid mixing with the civilian population in the small and overcrowded Gaza Strip. The report concluded that the Israeli Government had not produced any evidence to support its allegation that Palestinian combatants "mingle routinely with civilians in order to cover their movements".[350]

According to the book The Goldstone Report 'Reconsidered', a compilation of essays authored by legal scholars and published by the pro-Israel group NGO Monitor, the conclusions were false and largely based on unverified claims made by NGOs.[351][352]

Combatant use of civilian clothes

A New York Times journalist asserted that Hamas militants were fighting in civilian clothes.[197] Some NGO reports suggested that in general members of Palestinian armed groups did not wear military uniforms and mixed with the civilian population.[350]

The UN Fact Finding Mission (Goldstone Mission), however, concluded in its report: ″While reports reviewed by the Mission credibly indicate that members of Palestinian armed groups were not always dressed in a way that distinguished them from civilians, the Mission found no evidence that Palestinian combatants mingled with the civilian population with the intention of shielding themselves from attack.″[350]

Military use of medical facilities and uniforms

An IDF investigation concluded that Hamas forced the Red Crescent to hand over medic and nurse uniforms for its operatives and commandeered ambulances for fighters transportation during the War. Palestinian civilians living in Gaza detailed Hamas' attempts to hijack ambulances and the wearing of paramedic uniforms by Hamas fighters. An ambulance driver registered with and trained by the Palestinian Red Crescent Society spoke of Hamas' efforts to "lure the ambulances into the heart of a battle to transport fighters to safety" and the hijacking of the al-Quds Hospital's fleet of ambulances.[353][354][355][356]

The IDF claimed that Hamas operated a command and control center inside Shifa Hospital in Gaza City throughout the War, and that Hamas field commanders exploited the daily cessation in fighting that the IDF established for humanitarian purposes to receive instructions from senior Hamas officials. Addressing the Israeli cabinet, an intelligence official claimed that senior members of Hamas sought refuge in the sub-level floors believing that Israel would not target them for fear that such a strike would invariably lead to heavy collateral damage to the hospital patients in the upper floors.[194] Next to the hospital, Militants set up posts that were used for the firing of mortars. Underneath a mosque that was located alongside the hospital was discovered a tunnel leading to the maternity ward, which was used by Hamas operatives to move undetected. After an Israeli airstrike on the central prison, which resulted in prisoners being released into the streets, several of the 115 prisoners accused of collaboration with Israel who had not yet been tried were executed by Hamas militants wearing civilian clothes in the Shifa hospital compound.[357][358]

The Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center, an Israel-based group with close ties to the Israeli military establishment,[347] reported that Hamas made extensive use of the Al-Fahoura Medical Centre and that they established a military camp and training base next to it. The ITIC released aerial pictures showing tunnels dug around the building and the medical centre and that the area surrounding the hospital was heavily mined. Rockets were launched in close proximity of the centre. The ITIC report stated that Hamas used 10 Gazan hospitals for launching rockets at Israeli towns and for attacking IDF troops.[358]

Hamas also set up a command centre within a children's hospital located in the Nasser neighbourhood of Gaza City, which was used by top Hamas leadership on the night of 27 December. Senior Hamas commanders also set up a command center in a Red Crescent Society clinic in Khan Yunis.[354][358]

An IDF probe, released on 22 April 2009, stated that a UN vehicle was attacked by Israeli forces because a Palestinian anti-tank squad was being unloaded from the vehicle.[354]

Amnesty International rejected the charges by Israel that Hamas had systematically used medical facilities, vehicles and uniforms as a cover, stating that no evidence had been provided proving such actions.[359] Further, Magen David Adom's submission to the UN Mission investigating the war stated "there was no use of PRCS ambulances for the transport of weapons or ammunition ... [and] there was no misuse of the emblem by PRCS."[360]

Following its investigations the Goldstone report concluded that it "did not find any evidence to support the allegations that hospital facilities were used by the Gaza authorities or by Palestinian armed groups to shield military activities and that ambulances were used to transport combatants or for other military purposes".[53]

Controversial tactics allegedly used by Israel

Collective punishment

The United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict found that Israel, at least in part, targeted the people of Gaza as a whole. The Mission gave its opinion that ″the operations were in furtherance of an overall policy aimed at punishing the Gaza population for its resilience and for its apparent support for Hamas, and possibly with the intent of forcing a change in such support.″[361] Judge Goldstone later at least partially resiled from this conclusion.

Disproportionate force

Israel was widely criticized by human rights groups for using heavy firepower and causing hundreds of civilian casualties.[362] A group of soldiers who took part in the conflict echoed the criticism through both the Israeli NGO Breaking the Silence and a special report by Israeli filmmaker Nurit Kedar that was shown on Britain's Channel 4 in January 2011.[363][364] Israel was accused of having a deliberate policy of disproportionate force aimed at the civilian population.[365] Israel has said that operational orders emphasized proportionality and humanity while the importance of minimising harm to civilians was made clear to soldiers.[363] Retired U.S. Army colonel Douglas Macgregor gave his opinion as: "They went in heavy, with lots of firepower. But at the same time, because of good intel and other improvements, they were able to be selective and cut down on collateral damage."[366]

IDF use of human shields

On 24 March, a report from the UN team responsible for the protection of children in war zones was released: it found "hundreds" of violations of the rights of children and accused Israeli soldiers of using children as human shields, bulldozing a home with a woman and child still inside, and shelling a building they had ordered civilians into a day earlier.[367] One case involved using an 11-year-old boy as a human shield, by forcing him to enter suspected buildings first and also inspect bags. The report also mentioned the boy was used as a shield when Israeli soldiers came under fire.[367][368] The Guardian has also received testimony from three Palestinian brothers aged 14, 15, and 16, who all claimed to have been used as human shields.[369]

The UK newspaper The Guardian conducted an investigation of its own, which, according to the paper, uncovered evidence of war crimes including the use of Palestinian children as human shields.[370] An Israeli military court later convicted two Israeli soldiers of using human shields,[371] which was outlawed by the Israeli Supreme court in 2005.[370]

The UN fact-finding mission investigated four incidents in which Palestinian civilians were coerced, blindfolded, handcuffed and at gunpoint to enter houses ahead of Israeli soldiers during military operations. The mission confirmed the continued use of this practice with published testimonies of Israeli soldiers who had taken part in the military operations. The mission concluded that these practices amounted to using civilians as human shields in breach of international law. Some civilians were also questioned under threat of death or injury to extract information about Palestinian combatants and tunnels, constituting a further violation of international humanitarian law.[53]

White phosphorus

From 5 January, reports emerged of use by Israel of white phosphorus during the offensive, which was initially denied by Israel.[372] There were numerous reports of its use by the IDF during the conflict. On 12 January, it was reported that more than 50 phosphorus burns victims were in Nasser Hospital. On 16 January the UNRWA headquarters was hit with phosphorus munitions.[373] As a result of the hit, the compound was set ablaze.[374] On completion of the three-day Israeli withdrawal (21 January) an Israeli military spokeswoman said that shells containing phosphorus had been used in Gaza but said that they were used legally as a method to provide a smokescreen.[373] The IDF reiterated their position on 13 January saying that it used weapons "in compliance with international law, while strictly observing that they be used according to the type of combat and its characteristics".[375] On 25 March 2009, the United States-based human rights organization Human Rights Watch published a 71-page report titled "Rain of Fire, Israel's Unlawful Use of White Phosphorus in Gaza" and said that Israel's usage of the weapon was illegal.[376] Donatella Rovera, Amnesty's researcher on Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories said that such extensive use of this weapon in Gaza's densely populated residential neighbourhoods is inherently indiscriminate. "Its repeated use in this manner, despite evidence of its indiscriminate effects and its toll on civilians, is a war crime," she said.[377] The Goldstone report accepted that white phosphorus is not illegal under international law but did find that the Israelis were "systematically reckless in determining its use in built-up areas". It also called for serious consideration to be given to the banning of its use as an obscurant.[378]

Al Jazeera video. Burning Israeli white phosphorus clusters in the streets of Gaza on 11 January 2009.
Videos by Al Jazeera of the 2008–2009 Gaza War

After watching footage of Israeli troop deployments on television, a British soldier who completed numerous combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan with the Intelligence Corps defended the Israeli Army's use of white phosphorus. The soldier noted, "White phosphorus is used because it provides an instant smokescreen, other munitions can provide a smokescreen but the effect is not instant. Faced with overwhelming enemy fire and wounded comrades, every commander would choose to screen his men instantly, to do otherwise would be negligent."[379]

Colonel Lane, a military expert testifying in front of the fact-finding mission in July 2009, told that white phosphorus is used for smoke generation to hide from the enemy. He stated, "The quality of smoke produced by white phosphorus is superb; if you want real smoke for real coverage, white phosphorus will give it to you."[346]

Professor Newton, expert in laws of armed conflict testifying in front of the committee, said that in an urban area, where potential perils are snipers, explosive devices and trip wires, one effective way to mask forces' movement is by white phosphorus. In certain cases, he added, such choice of means would be less harmful for civilian population than other munitions, provided that the use of white phosphorus withstands the proportionality test. In discussing the principle of proportionality he said that the legality of using white phosphorus in an urban setting could only be decided on a case-by-case basis taking into account "the precise circumstances of its use, not in general, generically, but based on that target, at that time". He stressed that the humanitarian implications were vital in this assessment giving the example that using white phosphorus on a school yard would have different implications to its use on another area. He also said that in his view white phosphorus munition is neither chemical nor incendiary weapon and is not intended to cause damage. He said its use was not prohibited by the Chemical Weapons Convention.[346]

An article by Mark Cantora examining the legal implications of the use of white phosphorus munitions by the IDF, published in 2010 in the Gonzaga Journal of International Law, argues that Israel's use of white phosphorus in Gaza was technically legal under existing international humanitarian laws and "Therefore, it is imperative for the international community to convene a White Phosphorus Convention Conference in order to address these issues and fill this substantial gap in international humanitarian law."[380]

Dense inert metal explosives (DIME)

Dense inert metal explosive (DIME) is a type of bomb developed to minimize collateral damage.[381] Casualties show unusual injuries. A military expert working for Human Rights Watch said judging by the nature of the wounds and descriptions given by Gazans made it seem likely that Israel used DIME weapons. A Norwegian doctor who worked at Gaza's Shifa Hospital said that pressure waves generated by missile hits are likely the cause and produced by DIME weapons.[381] Another Norwegian doctor said they had ″clear evidence that the Israelis are using a new type of very high explosive weapons which are called Dense Inert Metal Explosive″.[382]

Colonel Lane, military expert testifying in front of the fact-finding mission in July 2009, told the committee that through his studies, no actual proof was found that DIME rounds were used, but tungsten, iron, and sulfur were found in samples analyzed in a forensic lab. He is of the view that some weapons systems used in the conflict had some sort of DIME component to reduce the effect on the ground. Colonel Lane explained that the idea behind a Focused Lethality Munition (FLM), which is an example of a DIME munition, is that the fragments produced stay within a safety radius of about 6 meters, so anybody outside that radius is safe, while those within the area of dispersal will be affected severely. He commented on the documentations where medics described unusual amputations saying that he was no medical expert, but the use of a metal like tungsten and cobalt at short distances would likely have that effect.[383]

The Goldstone Report wrote that the Mission found that the allegations that DIME weapons were used by Israeli armed forces required further clarification and they were unable to ascertain their usage, though it received reports from Palestinian and foreign doctors who had operated in Gaza during the military operations of a high percentage of patients with injuries compatible with their impact. It stated that the "focused lethality" reportedly pursued in DIME weapons could be seen as enhancing compliance with the principle of distinction between civilian and military objects. The report added that as it currently stands, DIME weapons and weapons armed with heavy metal are not prohibited under international law, but do raise specific health concerns.[378]

An Amnesty International report called on Israel to confirm or deny its use of DIME in order to facilitate the treatment of those injured in the conflict.[384] After reports of similar cases in 2006, the IDF had denied the use of DIME weapons.[385] After Israeli forces fired shells near a UN school in Gaza killing around 30 people, Israel's military said the shelling was in response to mortar fire from within the school and asserted that Hamas were using civilians as cover. They stated that the dead near the school included Hamas members of a rocket launching cell. Two residents of the area confirmed that a group of militants were firing mortar shells from near the school and identified two of the victims as Hamas militants.

Accusations of misconduct by IDF soldiers

Testimonies from Israeli soldiers allegedly admitting indiscriminate killings of civilians, as well as vandalizing homes, were reported in March 2009.[386][387][388] Soon after the publication of the testimonies, reports implying that the testimonies were based on hearsay and not on the firsthand experience started to circulate.[388] At the same time, another kind of evidence was collected from several soldiers who took part in the fighting, that rebutted claims of immoral conduct on the military's part during Gaza War.[389] Following investigations, the IDF issued an official report, concluding that alleged cases of deliberate shooting at civilians did not take place.[390] Nine Israeli rights groups reacting to the closure of the investigation issued a joint statement calling for an "independent nonpartisan investigative body to be established to look into all Israeli army activity" in Gaza.[390]

In July 2009, the Israeli NGO Breaking the Silence published testimony from 26 soldiers (two junior officers and the rest enlisted personnel) who took part in the Gaza assault, claiming that the IDF used Gazans as human shields, improperly fired incendiary white phosphorus shells over civilian areas and used overwhelming firepower that caused needless deaths and destruction.[391][392] The report did not represent a cross-section of the army, but rather they were troops who had approached the group or were reached through acquaintances of NGO members.[391] The accusations were made by anonymous people who claimed that they were reserves soldiers and whose faces had been blurred in the filmed talks. An Israeli military spokesperson dismissed the testimonies as anonymous hearsay and questioned why Breaking the Silence had not handed over its findings before the media had been informed. The Israeli military said some allegations of misconduct had turned out to be second or third-hand accounts and the result of recycled rumours.[393][394] Breaking the Silence state that their methodology includes the verification of all information by cross-referencing the testimonies it collects and that published material has been confirmed by a number of testimonies, from several different points of view. A representative stated "the personal details of the soldiers quoted in the collection, and the exact location of the incidents described in the testimonies, would readily be made available to any official and independent investigation of the events, as long as the identity of the testifiers did not become public."[395] A soldier who described using Gazans as human shields told in an interview to Haaretz that he had not seen Palestinians being used as human shields but had been told by his commanders that this occurred.[396]

In response to the report, a dozen English-speaking reservists who served in Gaza delivered signed, on-camera counter-testimonies via the SoldiersSpeakOut group, about Hamas' "use of Gazans as human shields and the measures the IDF took to protect Arab civilians".[397][398] The special report by Israeli filmmaker Nurit Kedar shown on Channel 4 detailed similar allegations by former IDF soldiers that included vandalism and misconduct by Israeli troops.[363]

Colonel Richard Kemp, former commander of British forces in Afghanistan, in his address to the UNHRC asserted that during the conflict, the Israel Defense Forces "did more to safeguard the rights of civilians in a combat zone than any other army in the history of warfare" and that Palestinian civilian casualties were a consequence of Hamas' way of fighting, which involved using human shields as a matter of policy, and deliberate attempts to sacrifice their own civilians. He added that Israel took extraordinary measures to give Gaza civilians notice of targeted areas and aborted potentially effective missions in order to prevent civilian casualties.[399]

Prosecutions

The first Israeli soldier to be prosecuted for actions committed during the war was a Givati Brigade soldier who stole a Visa credit card from a Palestinian home and used it to withdraw NIS 1,600 ($405). He was arrested and tried before the Southern Command Military Court on charges of looting, credit card fraud, and indecent conduct. He was found guilty and sentenced to seven and a half months in military prison.[400]

In a report submitted to the UN in January 2010, the IDF stated that two senior officers were disciplined for authorizing an artillery attack in violation of rules against their near populated areas. Several artillery shells hit the UNRWA compound in Tel al-Hawa.[401][402] During the attack on 15 January 2009, the compound was set ablaze by white phosphorus shells.[378] The officers involved were identified as Gaza Division Commander Brigadier-General Eyal Eisenberg and Givati Brigade Commander Colonel Ilan Malka.[374] An IDF internal investigation concluded that the firing of the shells violated the IDF orders limiting the use of artillery fire near populated areas and endangered human life.[402] IDF sources added later that the shells had been fired to create cover to assist in the extrication of IDF troops, some of whom were wounded, from an area where Hamas held a superior position.[401] An Israeli Government spokesman stated that in this particular case they had found no evidence of criminal wrongdoing and so had not referred the case to criminal investigation.[374]

In October 2010, Colonel Ilan Malka was interrogated by Israeli military police over the Zeitoun incident, and a criminal investigation was opened. Malka was suspected of authorizing an airstrike on a building that left numerous members of the Samouni family dead. His promotion to the rank of Brigadier-General was suspended due to the investigation. Malka told investigatiors that he was unaware of the presence of civilians.[55][403] He was eventually reprimanded over the incident, but it was decided not to indict him. No other charges were brought over this incident. The IDF denied that they were targeting civilians and The New York Times reported that Hamas members had launched rockets at Israel about a mile away from the residents, an area "known to have many supporters of Hamas".[404] The Palestinian Center for Human Rights called the result "disgraceful" and Btselem stated the need for an external investigator to look into IDF actions during Cast Lead.[405]

In June 2010, Chief Advocate General Avichai Mandelblit summoned a recently discharged Givati Brigade sniper for a special hearing. The soldier was suspected of opening fire on Palestinian civilians when a group of 30 Palestinians that included women and children waving a white flag, approached an IDF position. The incident, which occurred on 4 January 2009, resulted in the death of a non-combatant. Mandelblit decided to indict the soldier on a charge of manslaughter, despite contradictory testimony and the fact that IDF investigators could not confirm that the soldier was responsible for the death.[406]

In July 2010, the officer who authorized the airstrike on the Ibrahim al-Maqadna Mosque was subjected to disciplinary action, as shrapnel caused "unintentional injuries" to civilians inside. The IDF said that the officer "failed to exercise appropriate judgement", and that he would not be allowed to serve in similar positions of command in the future. Another Israeli officer was also reprimanded for allowing a Palestinian man to enter a building to persuade Hamas militants sheltering inside to leave.[407]

In November 2010, two Givati Brigade Staff Sergeants were convicted by the Southern Command Military Court of using a Palestinian boy as a human shield. The soldiers had been accused of forcing nine-year-old Majed R. at gunpoint to open bags suspected of containing bombs in the Tel al-Hawa neighborhood. Both soldiers were demoted one rank and given three-month suspended sentences.[55]

According to the U.S. State Department's 2010 Human Rights Report, the Military Advocate General investigated over 150 wartime incidents, including those mentioned in the Goldstone Report. As of July, the Military Advocate General launched 47 criminal investigations into the conduct of IDF personnel, and completed a significant number of those.[408]

On 1 April 2011, Judge Richard Goldstone, the lead author of the UN report on the conflict, published a piece in The Washington Post titled 'Reconsidering the Goldstone Report on Israel and war crimes'. Goldstone noted that the subsequent investigations conducted by Israel "indicate that civilians were not intentionally targeted as a matter of policy" while "the crimes allegedly committed by Hamas were intentional goes without saying." He further expressed regret "that our fact-finding mission did not have such evidence explaining the circumstances in which we said civilians in Gaza were targeted, because it probably would have influenced our findings about intentionality and war crimes."[409] The other principal authors of the UN report, Hina Jilani, Christine Chinkin and Desmond Travers, have rejected Goldstone's reassessment arguing that there is "no justification for any demand or expectation for reconsideration of the report as nothing of substance has appeared that would in any way change the context, findings or conclusions of that report with respect to any of the parties to the Gaza conflict".[65][66]

Effects

 
Destroyed buildings in Gaza City, January 2009

Along with a high casualty rate, there were multiple economic, industrial and medical effects of the Gaza War. The United Nations Development Programme warned that there will be long-term consequences of the attacks on Gaza because the livelihoods and assets of tens of thousands of Gaza civilians have been affected.[410]

Early estimates by independent contractors in Gaza say that Gaza lost nearly $2 billion in assets, including 4,000 homes destroyed.[411] The IDF destroyed 600–700 factories, small industries, workshops and business enterprises throughout the Gaza Strip,[412] 24 mosques, 31 security compounds, and 10 water or sewage lines.[413] The World Health Organization said that 34 health facilities (8 hospitals and 26 primary health care clinics) were damaged over the course of the offensive and the UNOCHA said that over 50 United Nations facilities sustained damage, of which 28 reported damage in the first three days of the operation.[414] On 22 January 2010, Israel paid $10.5 million in compensation to the United Nations for damages to UN property incurred during the Israeli offensive.[415]

A satellite-based damage assessment of the Gaza Strip by the United Nations revealed 2,692 destroyed and severely damaged buildings, 220 impact craters on roads and bridges with an estimated length of 167 km (104 mi) of paved and unpaved roads damaged, 714 impact craters on open ground or cultivated land with an estimated land area of 2,100 hectares (21 km2), 187 greenhouses completely destroyed or severely damaged with an estimated area of 28 hectares (0.28 km2), and 2,232 hectares (22.32 km2) of demolished zones targeted by IDF bulldozers, tanks and phosphorus shelling.[416]

Health problems in Gaza

Following the war, Gaza has witnessed increasing epidemics of health problems. At the Al Shifa hospital a constant increase in the percentage of children born with birth defects of about 60% was witnessed when the period of July to September 2008 was compared to the same period in 2009.[417][418] Dr. Mohammed Abu Shaban, director of the Blood Tumors Department in Al-Rantisy Hospital in Gaza has witnessed an increase in the number of cases of blood cancer. In March 2010 the department had seen 55 cases so far for that year, compared to the 20 to 25 cases normally seen in an entire year.[419] During the war, Norwegian medics said that they had found traces of depleted uranium, a radioactive and genotoxic material used in some types of munition, in some Gaza residents who were wounded.[420] Lawyers who brought back soil samples from Gaza said that areas where these samples were taken contained up to 75 tons of depleted uranium.[421] The Israeli government denied it used Depleted Uranium, and the United Nations opened an investigation.[422] Israel had also initially denied the use of white phosphorus during the war, but later acknowledged that indeed it had used white phosphorus to cover troop movements.[423]

The policy of the Government of Israel is to condition the access of Palestinians who live in the Palestinian territories to healthcare in Israel upon financial coverage from the Palestinian Authority. In January 2009, following the war, the Palestinian Authority cancelled financial coverage for all medical care for Palestinians in Israeli hospitals, including coverage for chronically ill Palestinian patients, and those in need of complex care that is not available in other tertiary medical centers in the region. This decision was protested by human rights organizations.[424]

Gaza humanitarian crisis

 
A satellite-based damage assessment of the Gaza Strip by the United Nations (UNOSAT, February 2009)

The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported that the Gaza humanitarian crisis is significant and should not be understated. It also states that the situation is a "human dignity crisis" in the Gaza strip, entailing "a massive destruction of livelihoods and a significant deterioration of infrastructure and basic services". Fear and panic are widespread; 80% of the population could not support themselves and were dependent on humanitarian assistance.[8] The International Red Cross said the situation was "intolerable" and a "full blown humanitarian crisis".[425] The importation of necessary food and supplies continues to be blocked even after the respective ceasefires.[426] According to the World Food Programme, the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization and Palestinian officials, between 35% and 60% of the agriculture industry was wrecked. With extensive damage occurring to water sources, greenhouses, and farmland. It is estimated that 60% of the agricultural land in the north of the Strip may no longer be arable.[427][428] More than 50,800 Gazans were left homeless.[411] Extensive destruction was caused to commercial enterprises and to public infrastructure. According to Palestinian industrialists, 219 factories were destroyed or severely damaged during the Israeli military operation. They accounted as part of the 3% of industrial capacity that was operating after the Israeli blockade was imposed, which was mostly destroyed during the operation.[429]

On 3 January before the IDF ground operation, Israel's foreign minister Tzipi Livni said that Israel had taken care to protect the civilian population of Gaza, and that it had kept the humanitarian situation "completely as it should be", maintaining Israel's earlier stance.[430] The Secretary-general of the Arab League, Amr Moussa, criticized Livni's statement and further criticized the Security Council for not responding faster to the crisis.[431] On subsequent reports, the UN stated that "only an immediate cease-fire will be able to address the large-scale humanitarian and protection crisis that faces the people of Gaza."[432]

The Emergency Relief Coordinator of the United Nations has stated that after the end of the Israeli operation, at best, only 120 truckloads get into Gaza, instead of the normal daily requirement, including commercial traffic, of 500 trucks at minimum. It is also reported in his statement and other UN humanitarian office reports that essential items such as construction materials, water pipes, electrical wires, and transformers continue to be effectively banned, or only allowed infrequently.[429][433][434][435] He also stated that commercial goods must be allowed in and out, since Gaza Palestinians "do not want or deserve to be dependent on humanitarian aid" and that the "limited trickle" of items into Gaza continue the effective collective punishment of the civilian population and force the counter-productive reliance on tunnels for daily essentials.[433][436]

 
Tent camp, Gaza Strip, April 2009

As a result of the conflict, the European Union, the Organisation of the Islamic Conference and over 50 nations donated humanitarian aid to Gaza, including the United States, which donated over $20 million.[437] On 7 January a UN Relief Works Agency spokesman acknowledged that he was "aware of instances where deliveries of humanitarian aid into Gaza" were diverted by the Hamas government, though never from his agency.[438] Additionally, on 3 February, blankets and food parcels were confiscated by Hamas police personnel from an UNRWA distribution center, and on 4 February, the UN Emergency Relief Coordinator demanded that the aid be returned immediately.[435] The Hamas government issued a statement stating that the incident was a misunderstanding between the drivers of the trucks and has been resolved through direct contact with the UNRWA.[439] On 9 February, UNRWA lifted the suspension on the movement of its humanitarian supplies into Gaza, after the Hamas authorities returned all the aid supplies confiscated.[440] The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has described the Israeli procedures for humanitarian organizations entrance to Gaza as inconsistent and unpredictable ones that impedes the ability of organizations to effectively plan their humanitarian response and obstructs efforts to address the humanitarian crisis brought by the 18 months blockade and Israel's military operation.[441] The UN also reported that international organizations faced "unprecedented denial" of access to Gaza by Israel since 5 November and that humanitarian access remained unreliable and needed to be granted on an unrestricted daily basis.[clarification needed][442]

 
Destroyed buildings in Gaza

In a damage assessment by the World Health Organization, 48% of the 122 health facilities assessed were found to be damaged or destroyed, 15 of Gaza's 27 hospitals and 41 primary health care centers suffered damage, and 29 ambulances were partially damaged or destroyed.[443] Injured patients needing referral outside Gaza for specialized care were evacuated exclusively through the Egyptian Rafah border crossing. In the early stages of the conflict, Hamas sealed the border, and prevented wounded Palestinians from seeking medical attention in Egypt.[444] On 30 December, the organization allowed a trickle of medical evacuations from Gaza, but restricted their number.[445] Gaza Ministry of Health reported that between 29 December and 22 January 608 injured were evacuated through Rafah. The Israeli Erez crossing was closed much of the period and only 30 patients were able to exit during the crisis.[441][443] An initial survey conducted by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) estimates that 14,000 homes, 68 government buildings, and 31 non-governmental organization offices (NGOs) were either totally or partially damaged, creating about 600,000 tonnes of concrete rubble needing to be removed.[435] Since 2007, Israel has not permitted the entry of construction material into Gaza, adversely affecting UN projects, in particular UNRWA and UNDP, who suspended more than $100 million in construction projects due to lack of materials.[434]

The Israeli Health Ministry and Magen David Adom established an emergency clinic for wounded Gazans at the Erez crossing on 17 June. The clinic received only[quantify]patients, none of them with war-related injuries, and it was suspected that Hamas had instructed civilians not to seek treatment there. The clinic closed after ten days.[446] Subsequently, the Jordanian Army established a field hospital in the Gaza Strip, which is still operating.[when?] The hospital's equipment, staff, and military guards are transferred from Jordan through Israel via the Allenby Bridge, and outgoing personnel return the same way.[447][448]

One year after the ceasefire approximately 20,000 people remained displaced.[449]

Effects on Israel

 
According to HRW, during the Gaza War, rocket attacks placed up to 800,000 people within range of attack.[283]

During the conflict, life in much of southern Israel was largely paralyzed by more than 30 Hamas rocket and mortar strikes.[450] The Israeli Home Front Command issued detailed emergency instructions to Israeli citizens for preparing for and dealing with rocket attacks from the Gaza Strip. The instructions included orders to stay within a certain distance of bomb shelters based on proximity to the source of the rockets.[451] Hamas' Grad rockets' increased range of 40 km put more than 700,000 Israelis within strike range,[452] prompting 40% of the residents of the southern city of Ashkelon to flee the city, despite official calls to stay.[453] Throughout the war, Palestinian rocket attacks into Israel damaged or destroyed more than 1,500 homes and buildings and 327 vehicles.[454] Numerous agricultural fields near Gaza also sustained damage. Twenty-eight Israeli families lost their homes to rocket attacks, and had to temporarily live in hotels.[455] Among the buildings hit were nine educational facilities and three synagogues.[456]

Schools and universities in southern Israel began to close due to rocket threats on 27 December.[457] Studies officially resumed on 11 January. Only schools with fortified classrooms and bomb shelters were allowed to bring students in, and IDF Home Front Command representatives were stationed in the schools;[453][458] attendance was low.[459][460][461] Palestinian rocket attacks that hit educational facilities caused no casualties.[456][462][463][464]

The largest hospital on Israel's southern coast, Ashkelon's Barzilai Medical Center, moved its critical treatment facilities into an underground shelter after a rocket struck beside its helicopter pad on 28 December.[465]

Most business in Southern Israel stopped upon orders of the Home Front Command, with retailers losing an estimated $7 million in the first week. Numerous small businesses suffered in decreased sales, and were unable to pay employee salaries due to low revenues.[456] Major industries remained open, but had high absence rates.[466] The Manufacturers Association of Israel estimated the direct cost to business and industry to be 88 million NIS, and indirect financial losses at several tens of millions of shekels.[467]

The Israel Tax Authority received 1,728 compensation claims for damages related to the conflict, mostly from Ashkelon and Ashdod.[467]

According to Israeli economist Ron Eichel, the war effort cost the Israeli military about 5 billion NIS in military expenditure, or 250 million NIS per day.[468] An anonymous political source told Ynetnews that the aerial assaults were costing $27 million to $39 million a day in munitions and fuel, totaling the first six days of the operation at nearly $265 million for air-strikes alone. Both the IDF and Treasury refused to disclose the exact amount, and the Treasury adamantly denied these figures.[469]

International law

Accusations of violations regarding international humanitarian law, which governs the actions by belligerents during an armed conflict, have been directed at both Israel and Hamas for their actions during the Gaza War. The accusations covered violating laws governing distinction and proportionality by Israel, the indiscriminate firing of rockets at civilian locations and extrajudicial violence within the Gaza Strip by Hamas.[57][470] As of September 2009, some 360 complaints had been filed by individuals and NGOs at the prosecutor's office in the Hague calling for investigations into alleged crimes committed by Israel during the Gaza War.[471]

On 15 September 2009, a 574-page report by UN inquiry team was released, officially titled "Human Rights in Palestine and Other Occupied Arab Territories: Report of the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict". It concluded that the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and Palestinian armed groups committed war crimes and possibly crimes against humanity.[472] On 16 October 2009, the UN Human Rights Council endorsed the report.[473] Israel's Defense Minister said that the report was distorted, falsified and not balanced.[362]

Human rights organizations have urged both Israel and Hamas to implement an independent investigation into the alleged violations of international law as stipulated by the Goldstone report.[474][475][476]

On 1 April 2011, Goldstone wrote an op-ed that appeared in The Washington Post in which he stated that he no longer believes the report's finding that Israel targeted Palestinian civilians as a matter of policy, the most serious accusation the report made against Israel.[477] The three other signatories to the UNHRC report, Hina Jilani, Christine Chinkin and Desmond Travers, co-authored an op-ed that appeared in The Guardian in which they replied that there was no evidence that refutes any of the report's findings.[478]

In April 2012, the International Criminal Court (ICC) rejected the Palestinian Authority's (PA) request that Israel be investigated for claimed war crimes in Gaza in 2009, holding that since the PA is recognized by the UN General Assembly as an "observer" rather than a "state", the ICC lacked jurisdiction to hear its request.[479][480] The decision was heavily criticized by human rights groups.[481]

Media

 
Photojournalists during the conflict

International news networks named the conflict "War in Gaza" and focused on the assault. Israeli media called it the "War in the South" (Hebrew: מלחמה בדרום Milẖama BaDarom) and dispatched reporters to Israeli towns hit by rockets.[482] Al Jazeera suggested that it was a war against Palestinian civilians with the title "War on Gaza".[483]

Denied media access

Reporter access to the war zone was limited. During the Gaza raids against Hamas, the Israeli army denied international media access to the conflict zone, against a decision by the Israeli Supreme Court to lift the embargo.[484] The Foreign Press Association of Israel released a statement saying, "The unprecedented denial of access to Gaza for the world's media amounts to a severe violation of press freedom and puts the state of Israel in the company of a handful of regimes around the world which regularly keep journalists from doing their jobs."[485]

Attacks on the media

Media facilities in Gaza, both foreign and domestic, came under Israeli fire in the military campaign.[486] On one occasion a Grad rocket may have been launched from a location near the television studios in the Al-Shuruk tower in Gaza City. Although the Israeli recording of a reporter describing a rocket launch was during the initial aerial bombardment phase the tower was only bombed in the final few days.[487] On 29 December the IDF destroyed the facilities and headquarters of Al-Aqsa TV (though broadcasts continue from elsewhere), and a week later, IDF soldiers entered the building and seized the equipment. The Israelis also hacked into the station's signal and broadcast an animated clip of Hamas' leadership being gunned down. On 5 January the IDF bombed the offices of the Hamas-affiliated Al-Risala newsweekly.[486] On 9 January the IDF hit the Johara tower of Gaza City, which houses more than 20 international news organizations, including Turkish, French, and Iranian outlets.[488] The IDF Spokesperson's Unit said that the building had not been targeted, though it may have sustained damage from a nearby Israeli strike.

On 12 January two Arab journalists from Jerusalem working for an Iranian television station were arrested by Israeli Police and indicted in the Jerusalem District Court for violating military censorship protocols. They had reported on the IDF ground offensive hours before they were cleared to do so. The journalists maintained that they merely stated what was already being said in the international media.[489]

New media

Media relations also played an important role, with the use of new media (up to and including cyber warfare) on the part of both Israel and Hamas.[490] Haaretz reported that Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni "instructed senior ministry officials to open an aggressive and diplomatic international public relations campaign to gain support for Israel Defense Forces operations in the Gaza Strip". Israeli officials at embassies and consulates worldwide have mounted campaigns in local media, and to that end have recruited people who speak the native language. Israel has also opened an international media centre in Sderot.[491] To improve Israeli public relations, the Ministry of Immigrant Absorption has recruited 1,000 volunteers with the objective of flooding news websites and blogs that the ministry term as anti-Israeli with pro-Israeli opinions. Volunteers proficient in languages other than Hebrew were particularly sought after.[492][493][494][495]

Foreign Press Branch head Avital Leibovich believes the "new media" is another war zone, stating, "We have to be relevant there." As part of its public-relations campaign, the Israeli army opened a YouTube channel "through which it will disseminate footage of precision bombing operations in the Gaza Strip, as well as aid distribution and other footage of interest to the international community".[496]

Reactions

 
Protest against the war in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
 
Protest against the war in London, UK

While Israel defined its operation as a war against Hamas, Palestinian representatives and individuals, among others, viewed it as a "war on the Palestinian people".[497][498][499]

The United Nations Security Council issued a statement on 28 December 2008, calling "for an immediate halt to all violence".[500] The Arab League,[501] the European Union and many nations made similar calls.[502] On 9 January 2009, following an earlier, failed attempt at a ceasefire resolution,[503] the United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 1860 calling for "an immediate, durable and fully respected cease-fire" leading to a full Israeli withdrawal and an end to Gaza arms smuggling, by 14 votes to one abstention (the United States).[504] The resolution was ignored by both Israel and Hamas.[505]

 
Governmental proclamations regarding the 2008–2009 Israel–Gaza conflict
  Israel-Gaza
  States that endorsed the Israeli position/defined Israel's action as falling within its right to defense.
  States that condemned Hamas action only.
  States that called for an end to hostilities, and condemned neither/both belligerents.
  States that condemned Israeli action only.
  States that endorsed the Hamas position/defined Hamas' actions as falling within its right of resistance.
  States that made no official statement on the conflict.
[citation needed]

Many governments expressed positions on the conflict, most condemning both belligerents, or neither of them. Thirty-four states, mostly members of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, condemned Israel's attacks exclusively. Three of them expressed support for Hamas' operations or defined them as falling within its right of resistance. Nineteen states, mostly members of the European Union, condemned Hamas' attacks exclusively. Thirteen of them expressed support for Israel's operations or defined them as falling within Israel's right to self-defense.

Bolivia, Jordan, Mauritania and Venezuela significantly downscaled or severed their relations with Israel in protest of the offensive.[506][507]

The conflict saw worldwide civilian demonstrations for and against both sides.[508]

The conflict triggered a wave of reprisal attacks against Jewish targets in Europe and elsewhere.[509] The worldwide number of recorded antisemitic incidents during the conflict more than tripled the number of such incidents in the same period of the previous year, marking a two-decade high.[510]

The British government reviewed its export licenses to Israel for violations of EU and national arms export control laws and revoked five export licenses for replacement parts and other equipment for Sa'ar 4.5 missile boats used by Israel because they were used in the Gaza offensive, although 16 export licenses for other British defense items to Israel were approved.[511]

The conflict has been called the Gaza Massacre (Arabic: مجزرة غزة) in the Arab world.[512][513][514] Khaled Mashal, Hamas' leader in Damascus called for suicide bombings. Ismail Haniyeh, Prime Minister of the Hamas government in Gaza, said: "Palestine has never witnessed an uglier massacre."[515]

On 28 December 2008, a Palestinian laborer working in the Israeli settlement of Modi'in Illit struck his supervisor on the head with a sledgehammer, stabbed and injured four civilians, and beat up several others. He was shot and severely wounded by an emergency response team member as he attempted to flee. His actions were suspected of being a reprisal for Israel's attack. The worker had been employed in the city for about 10 years with no previous trouble, but had spoken out against the war shortly before his rampage.[516]

Reactions in Israel

 
Tel-Aviv University students demonstrating in support for operation "Cast Lead" and the citizens of south Israel

The war provoked mixed reactions inside Israel, with the Jewish majority largely supporting it, and the Arab minority mostly opposing it. A poll taken on 8 January 2009 showed that 91% of the Jewish public supported the war, and 4% opposed it, while a separate poll conducted 4–6 January showed a 94% approval of the war among Jews and 85% disapproval among Israeli Arabs.[517]

During the war, Arab protests took place across the country. Within hours of the war's start, the Higher Follow-Up Committee for Arab citizens of Israel met in Nazareth, and declared a "day of wrath and mourning for the martyrs among our compatriots in the Gaza Strip", and a general strike for the following day. Arab demonstrations took place across the country almost every day during the offensive, and were described as the "largest Arab demonstrations in Israel's history". Arab parties and parliamentarians in the Knesset also opposed the offensive.[518][519] In Jerusalem, Arabs held violent demonstrations, which included rock-throwing, arson, and the vandalization of Jewish graves. Police arrested dozens of rioters. At the University of Haifa, Tel Aviv University and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jewish leftist and Arab students staged anti-war demonstrations, which were met with pro-war counter-demonstrations. Some confrontations occurred despite police keeping protesters apart.[520]

The legal rights agency Adalah produced a report highly critical of the Israeli police and court system's response to the opposition to Operation Cast Lead. The report said that the Israeli authorities had shown a lack of tolerance for protests, and had damaged the freedom of expression of those opposing the attacks on Gaza. The report said that the actions showed the lessons of the Or Commission had not been learned. The Israeli Ministry of Justice responded that the risk to human life and public welfare had justified their actions.[521]

The term Sderot cinema has been coined for the tradition of residents in Sderot sitting to view the bombardment of the Gaza strip.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ 1,166 according to the IDF,[30] 1,391 according to B'Tselem,[31] and 1,417 according to the PCHR.[32]

Citations

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  2. ^ a b c d e f Eshel, David (11 May 2009). . Aviation Week. Archived from the original on 14 June 2011. Retrieved 3 July 2009.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Spyer, Jonathan (10 September 2009). . The Jerusalem Post. Archived from the original on 3 November 2012. Retrieved 24 March 2010.
  4. ^ a b Ethan Bonner, Hamas Shifts From Rockets to Culture War The New York Times, 24 July 2009.
  5. ^ a b Sengupta, Kim; MacIntyre, Donald (18 January 2009). "Victorious, but vilified: Israel has 'destroyed its image and its soul'". The Independent. London. Retrieved 3 May 2010.
  6. ^ a b . Xinhua. 18 January 2009. Archived from the original on 29 January 2009. Retrieved 3 August 2009.
  7. ^ a b "Hamas agrees to 1-week ceasefire". CBC News. 18 January 2009. Retrieved 3 August 2009.
  8. ^ a b c (PDF). UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. 2 January 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 2009-01-02.
  9. ^ Altman, Alex (4 January 2009). . Time. Archived from the original on 6 February 2009. Retrieved 5 June 2010.
  10. ^ a b Butcher, Tim (2 January 2009). "Israel bombs Gaza for seventh day after killing Hamas leader". The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 5 June 2010.
  11. ^ "Israel vows no let-up over Gaza". BBC News. 5 January 2009. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  12. ^ Jason Koutsoukis (4 January 2009). "Israeli troops enter Gaza". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  13. ^ Fletcher, Martin (12 January 2009). "Israel reinforces army before 'third phase' of war in Gaza". The Times. London. Retrieved 17 May 2010.(subscription required)
  14. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 March 2010. Retrieved 5 June 2010.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Esposito, Michele K. (Spring 2009). "Military Dimensions: The Israeli Arsenal Deployed against Gaza". Journal of Palestine Studies. University of California Press on behalf of the Institute for Palestine Studies. 38 (3): 175–91. doi:10.1525/jps.2009.XXXVIII.3.175. ISSN 1533-8614. JSTOR 10.1525/jps.2009.XXXVIII.3.175.
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  18. ^ "Israeli think tank: Hamas has 20,000 armed men in Gaza Strip", Associated Press, Haaretz, 10 April 2008
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  22. ^ "Hamas Military buildup in the Gaza Strip", IICC 8 April 2008, p. 35 13 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ "Hamas Military buildup in the Gaza Strip", IICC 8 April 2008, p. 34 13 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ a b c "Hamas Military buildup in the Gaza Strip", IICC 8 April 2008, p. 39 28 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ a b Macintrye, Donald (4 February 2010). "Israeli commander: 'We rewrote rules of war for Gaza conflict'". The Belfast Telegraph. Jerusalem. Retrieved 6 March 2010.
  26. ^ a b Amos Harel (11 January 2009). "Sources: Hamas fired anti-aircraft missiles at IAF planes". Haaretz. Retrieved 4 June 2012.
  27. ^ Ilan, Shahar. "Suicide bombers wore IDF uniforms, says army chief". Haaretz. Retrieved 5 June 2010.
  28. ^ a b "Israeli troops step up attacks on Hamas outside Gaza City". Sebastian Rotella and Rushdi abu Alouf, Los Angeles Times, 13 January 2009
  29. ^ a b "Field update on Gaza from the Humanitarian Coordinator" 5 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine. 24–26 January 2009. OCHA oPt (United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs – occupied Palestinian territory). oachopt.org.
  30. ^ a b c d e Lappin 2009.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g B'Tselem.
  32. ^ a b c d e f g PCHR 2009.
  33. ^ Efraim Inbar & Eitan Shamir ‘Mowing the Grass’: Israel’s Strategy for Protracted Intractable Conflict, Journal of Strategic Studies, 37:1, 65–90 p. 83
  34. ^ "Hamas admits 600–700 of its men were killed in Cast Lead" (9 November 2010). Haaretz. Retrieved 2 March 2011
  35. ^ [Egyptian officer killed by Hamas near the Rafah crossing] (in Hebrew). nana 10. Archived from the original on 25 December 2018. Retrieved 1 January 2009.
  36. ^ . 11 January 2009. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009.
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gaza, 2008, 2009, gaza, warpart, gaza, israel, conflict, israeli, palestinian, conflict, iran, israel, proxy, conflictmap, gazadate27, december, 2008, january, 2009, weeks, locationgaza, strip, southern, israelresultisraeli, military, victory, declared, unilat. Gaza WarPart of the Gaza Israel conflict Israeli Palestinian conflict and the Iran Israel proxy conflictMap of GazaDate27 December 2008 18 January 2009 3 weeks and 1 day LocationGaza Strip and Southern IsraelResultIsraeli military victory 2 3 4 5 IDF declared unilateral ceasefire 12 hours later Hamas announced a one week ceasefire 6 7 Humanitarian crisis and deterioration of infrastructure and basic services in Gaza 8 Number of rockets being fired from Gaza reduced See resultsBelligerentsIsrael Israel Defense Forces Israel Security Agency Gaza Strip 1 Hamas Izz ad Din al Qassam Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine Abu Ali Mustapha Brigades Islamic Jihad Movement in Palestine Al Quds Brigades Fatah Al Aqsa Martyrs Popular Resistance CommitteesCommanders and leadersEhud OlmertPrime Minister Ehud BarakMinister of Defense Gabi AshkenaziChief of General Staff Yoav GalantSouthern Command Ido NehoshtanAir Force Eli MaromNavy Eyal EisenbergGaza Division Yuval DiskinInternal Security ServiceKhaled Mashal 9 Ismail Haniyeh Said Seyam KIA Mohammed Deif Abu Zakaria al Jamal KIA Ahmed Jabari Tawfik Jaber KIA 10 Osama Mazini Nizar Rayan KIA 10 Mahmoud al Zahar Ramadan ShallahStrengthIDF 4 000 11 20 000 12 deployed in ground invasion and tens of thousands of reservists mobilized 13 176 000 total active personnel 14 F 16I Sufa aircraft 15 AH 64 Saraph and AH 1F Tzefa attack helicopters 15 Elbit Hermes 450 Heron TP Unmanned aerial vehicles 15 130 140 Merkava tanks 16 Nagmash Achzarit Puma Namer and other armored personnel carriers 15 100 armored CAT D9 and other armored bulldozers 15 17 Super Dvora patrol boats 15 and Sa ar 4 5 class missile boats Soltam M 71 M109 howitzers and mortars 15 B 300 Matador and Spike anti tank missiles 15 Viper military robots 15 Tavor and M16 assault rifles light and heavy machine guns and semi automatic sniper rifles 15 Hamas Izzedine Al Qassam Brigades and paramilitary police 20 000 est total 18 19 Other Palestinian paramilitary forces 10 000 20 BM 21 Grad and Qassam rockets 21 AT 3 Sagger AT 5 Spandrel and Yasin Anti tank missiles 21 22 23 AK 47 assault rifles RPK light machineguns Recoilless guns 24 Heavy machine guns 24 Mortars of various calibres 21 Improvised explosive devices and other booby traps 17 25 Anti aircraft missiles 26 including 9K32 Strela 2s 24 Suicide bombers 21 27 Casualties and lossesTotal killed 13Soldiers 10 friendly fire 4 28 Civilians 3 Total wounded 518Soldiers 336 29 Civilians 182 29 Total killed 1 166 1 417 fn 1 Militants and police officers 491 255 police officers 236 fighters PCHR 32 33 600 B Tselem 31 709 IDF 30 600 700 Hamas 34 Civilians 926 PCHR 32 759 B Tselem 31 295 IDF 30 Total wounded 5 303 PCHR 32 Total captured 120 IDF One Egyptian border guard officer killed and three wounded and two children wounded 35 36 Over 50 800 Gaza residents displaced 37 Over 4 000 homes destroyed around 2bn worth of damage to Gaza 38 255 PCHR 32 or 265 B Tselem 31 police officers were killed The Gaza War also known as Operation Cast Lead Hebrew מ ב צ ע עו פ ר ת י צו ק ה 39 also known in the Muslim world as the Gaza Massacre Arabic مجزرة غزة 40 41 42 and referred to as the Battle of al Furqan معركة الفرقان by Hamas 43 44 was a three week armed conflict between Gaza Strip Palestinian paramilitary groups and the Israel Defense Forces IDF that began on 27 December 2008 and ended on 18 January 2009 with a unilateral ceasefire The conflict resulted in between 1 166 and 1 417 Palestinian and 13 Israeli deaths including 4 from friendly fire 45 The Israeli government s stated goal was to stop indiscriminate Palestinian rocket fire into Israel 46 and weapons smuggling into the Gaza strip 47 48 49 Hamas stated its rocket fire which resumed in November 2008 was in response to an Israeli raid of a tunnel leading from Gaza which it characterized as a ceasefire violation 50 51 Israel said the raid was a preemptive strike against a tunnel they believed would be used to abduct Israeli soldiers guarding the border 50 52 In the initial air assault Israeli forces attacked police stations military targets including weapons caches and suspected rocket firing teams as well as political and administrative institutions in the opening assault striking in the densely populated cities of Gaza Khan Yunis and Rafah 53 After hostilities broke out Palestinian groups fired rockets in retaliation for the aerial bombardments and attacks 54 The international community considers indiscriminate attacks on civilians and civilian structures that do not discriminate between civilians and military targets as illegal under international law 55 56 57 An Israeli ground invasion began on 3 January On 5 January the IDF began operating in the densely populated urban centers of Gaza During the last week of the offensive from 12 January Israel mostly hit targets it had damaged before and struck Palestinian rocket launching units 15 Hamas intensified its rocket and mortar attacks against mostly civilian targets in southern Israel reaching the major cities of Beersheba and Ashdod for the first time during the conflict 58 59 60 Israeli politicians ultimately decided against striking deeper within Gaza amid concerns of higher casualties on both sides and rising international criticism citation needed The conflict ended on 18 January when the IDF first declared a unilateral ceasefire followed by Hamas announcing a one week ceasefire twelve hours later 6 7 The IDF completed its withdrawal on 21 January 61 According to the Shin Bet after the conflict there was a decrease in Palestinian rocket attacks 62 In September 2009 a UN special mission headed by the South African Justice Richard Goldstone produced a report accusing both Palestinian militants and the IDF of war crimes and possible crimes against humanity and recommended bringing those responsible to justice 63 In January 2010 the Israeli government released a response criticizing the Goldstone Report and disputing its findings citation needed In 2011 Goldstone wrote that he no longer believed that Israel intentionally targeted civilians in Gaza 64 The other authors of the report Hina Jilani Christine Chinkin and Desmond Travers rejected Goldstone s re assessment 65 66 The United Nations Human Rights Council ordered Israel to conduct various repairs of the damages On 21 September 2012 the United Nations Human Rights Council concluded that 75 of civilian homes destroyed in the attack were not rebuilt 67 Contents 1 Background 1 1 2008 six month ceasefire 1 1 1 Implementation 2 Pre operation actions 2 1 4 November IDF cross border raid 2 1 1 Tunnel threat 2 1 2 Raid 2 1 3 Immediate repercussions 2 2 December repercussions 3 Proceeding 3 1 Israeli offensive 3 1 1 Air strikes 3 1 2 Naval operations 3 1 3 Ground invasion 3 1 4 Arms interdiction and the Sudan strike 3 1 5 Attack on Gaza City 3 1 6 Humanitarian ceasefires 3 2 Palestinian paramilitary activity 3 2 1 Preparation 3 2 2 Palestinian rockets in Gaza 3 2 3 Rocket attacks into Israel 4 Unilateral ceasefires 4 1 Continued negotiations 5 Post war military assessment 6 Casualties 6 1 Civilians versus combatants 6 1 1 Gazan police 6 1 1 1 Legality 6 1 1 2 Israeli views 6 2 Gazan rockets 7 Aftermath 8 Propaganda and psychological warfare 8 1 Hamas 8 2 Israel 9 Controversies regarding tactics 9 1 Controversial tactics allegedly used by Hamas 9 1 1 Civilians as human shields 9 1 2 Combatant use of civilian clothes 9 1 3 Military use of medical facilities and uniforms 9 2 Controversial tactics allegedly used by Israel 9 2 1 Collective punishment 9 2 2 Disproportionate force 9 2 3 IDF use of human shields 9 2 4 White phosphorus 9 2 5 Dense inert metal explosives DIME 9 2 6 Accusations of misconduct by IDF soldiers 9 2 6 1 Prosecutions 10 Effects 10 1 Health problems in Gaza 10 2 Gaza humanitarian crisis 10 3 Effects on Israel 11 International law 12 Media 12 1 Denied media access 12 2 Attacks on the media 12 3 New media 13 Reactions 13 1 Reactions in Israel 14 See also 15 References 15 1 Notes 15 2 Citations 15 3 Sources 16 Further reading 17 External linksBackgroundMain articles Israeli Palestinian conflict Gaza Israel conflict Rocket and mortar attacks on southern Israel and Blockade of the Gaza Strip See also Timeline of the Gaza War List of Palestinian rocket attacks on Israel 2008 and List of Palestinian rocket attacks on Israel 2009 The Gaza Strip is a coastal strip of land on the eastern shore of the Mediterranean Sea bordering Egypt and Israel Following the death of Yassar Arafat in November 2004 his successor to the Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon signed a ceasefire agreement on 8 February 2005 essentially bringing an end to the Second Intifada 68 On 17 March 2005 the 13 main Palestinian factions including Hamas and Islamic Jihad agreed to be bound by the February agreement conditional on cessation of Israeli attacks 69 Israel maintains that its occupation of Gaza ended following the completion of its unilateral disengagement plan in September 2005 70 71 Because in the post disengagement period after 2005 Israel has continued to control and occupy Gaza s airspace and territorial waters and continues to restrict or prohibit the movement of people or goods in or out of Gaza 57 72 and to unilaterally dictate what Gazans may do in a border strip of variable and undefined width in their own territory 73 74 the UN the International Criminal Court 75 Human Rights Watch 76 and many other NGOs consider Israel still to be the occupying power 57 72 77 Hamas refrained from firing rockets toward Israel for 14 months in accordance with the February ceasefire agreement until IDF naval shelling hit a Gaza beach killing seven civilians on 10 June 2006 78 Israel and the Quartet failed to anticipate Hamas s electoral victory in the January 2006 legislative elections which the U S had pushed for The victory permitted the formation of a Hamas led Palestinian Authority government in March 2006 The Quartet the United States Russia United Nations and European Union conditioned future foreign assistance to the Hamas led PA on the future government s commitment to nonviolence recognition of the state of Israel and acceptance of previous agreements 79 Hamas rejected the demands calling the conditions unfair and endangering the well being of Palestinians 80 leading to Quartet suspension of its foreign assistance program and to Israel imposing economic sanctions 81 In a widely cited article 82 83 84 85 David Rose outlined material suggesting that the United States and Israel then attempted to have the Palestinian National Authority stage a coup to overturn the election results a manoeuvre Hamas is said to have preempted in Gaza with its takeover from Fatah 79 86 87 In June 2007 following Hamas s takeover of Gaza from Fatah Israel imposed a ground air and maritime blockade and announced it would allow only humanitarian supplies into the Strip 88 89 Palestinian groups were partially able to bypass the blockade through tunnels some of which are said to have been used for weapons smuggling 90 According to a US diplomatic cable that quoted Israeli diplomats Israel s policy was to keep Gaza s economy on the brink of collapse 86 91 After a three and a half year legal battle waged by the Gisha human rights organization the Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories COGAT finally released a 2008 document that detailed its red lines for food consumption in the Gaza Strip in which a calculation was made of the number of calories needed to be provided to Gaza by external sources to avoid malnutrition COGAT said that the document was a draft and never discussed nor implemented An Israeli appeal court disagreed 92 93 94 95 Between 2005 and 2007 Palestinian groups in Gaza fired about 2 700 locally made Qassam rockets into Israel killing four Israeli civilians and injuring 75 others During the same period Israel fired more than 14 600 155 mm artillery shells into the Gaza Strip killing 59 Palestinians and injuring 270 According to the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs between 2005 and 2008 116 Israelis including civilians and Israeli security forces which includes Israeli police Israeli Border Police and members of the armed services were killed in both Israel and the Palestinian Territories in direct conflict related incidents and 1 509 were injured 96 During this time 1 735 Palestinians including civilians and militants from various groups were killed and 8 308 wounded in direct conflict related incidents 96 2008 six month ceasefire Main article 2008 Israel Hamas ceasefire Palestinians killed by the IDF in Gaza red and Israelis killed by Palestinians in Israel blue during January December 2008 according to B Tselem Rocket hits in Israel January December 2008 97 Israel had been preparing to intervene militarily in the Gaza Strip since March 2007 98 In June as talks for a negotiated agreement between the two parties were underway the defense minister Ehud Barak ordered the IDF to prepare operational plans for action within the Strip 99 On 19 June 2008 an Egyptian brokered six month lull or pause in hostilities between Israel and Hamas went into effect 100 The agreement had no mutually agreed text or enforcement mechanism and eventually collapsed 101 The lull agreed to was thought necessary to allow time for the IDF to prepare its operation 99 102 The agreement required Hamas to end rocket and mortar attacks on Israel while that country would cease attacks on and military incursions into Gaza plus progressively ease the blockade of Gaza over a thirteen day period 103 Points on which there was not mutual agreement included an end to Hamas military buildup in Gaza and movement toward the release of Corporal Shalit 104 105 Hamas called on all of Gaza s militant groups to abide by the truce and was confident they would do so 106 107 108 109 Defense Ministry Official Amos Gilad the Israeli envoy to the talks stressed that Israel demanded a ceasefire meaning that even one single rocket fired will be seen as a violation of the agreement He added that Egypt on its side was committed to preventing the smuggling activity from Gaza 110 Gilad also said that Israel would hold Hamas responsible for attacks from Gaza 106 In a British Foreign Affairs Committee investigation Dr Albasoos said that Unfortunately on 4 November 2008 the Israeli army killed six Palestinians I was leaving the Gaza Strip to come to the UK that same night I remember when the Israeli army invaded the middle area of the Gaza Strip killing six Palestinians It was outrageous from their side to come and breach that ceasefire I believe that Palestinian political factions including Hamas committed to that ceasefire and still have the intention to renew it in the near future as soon as possible In rebuttal Ms Bar Yaacov said that The Israelis had added a condition to the tahdia truce being concerned that Hamas was building tunnels to go under the Israeli border and kidnap more Israeli soldiers The condition stated that if Hamas came within 500 metres of the border they the IDF would attack and that is exactly what happened on 4 November 2008 111 British barrister and professor Geoffrey Nice and General Nick Parker opined during a lecture that Building a tunnel was not a breach of the ceasefire but the armed incursion into Gaza definitely was 112 Implementation Pre 5 November 2008 The ceasefire has brought enormous improvements in the quality of life in Sderot and other Israeli villages near Gaza where before the ceasefire residents lived in fear of the next Palestinian rocket strike However nearby in the Gaza Strip the Israeli blockade remains in place and the population has so far seen few dividends from the ceasefire 113 Hamas was careful to maintain the ceasefire 114 115 Despite Israel s refusal to comply significantly with the truce agreement to end the siege blockade Hamas brought rocket and mortar fire from Gaza to a virtual halt during the summer and fall of 2008 116 Hamas tried to enforce the terms of the arrangement on other Palestinian groups taking a number of steps against networks which violated the arrangement including short term detention and confiscating their weapons but it could not completely end the rocket and mortar shell attacks by these rogue factions in Gaza Hamas had sought support in Gazan public opinion for its policy of maintaining the ceasefire 117 On 2 August there were massive clashes in Gaza City after Hamas had stepped up its campaign to curb Fatah from attacking Israel 118 The truce started uneasily with the UN recording seven IDF violations of the ceasefire between 20 and 26 June On various occasions Israeli forces shot at farmers wood collectors and fishermen in Gaza territory seriously injuring two farmers Subsequently between 23 and 26 June nine Qassam rockets were fired at Israel in three separate violations by Palestinian groups not affiliated with Hamas No Israelis were injured 119 120 121 122 Islamic Jihad reportedly fired the rockets in retaliation for Israeli assassinations of their members in the West Bank According to sources close to the ceasefire negotiations after 72 hours from the start of the ceasefire the crossing points would be opened to allow 30 per cent more goods to enter the Gaza strip Ten days after that i e thirteen days after the ceasefire began all crossings would be open between Gaza and Israel and Israel will allow the transfer of all goods that were banned or restricted to go into Gaza 103 Therefore besides firing on and killing Gaza citizens Israel failed further to comply with these truce obligations to ease the blockade that were crucial to all groups in Gaza Islamic Jihad put pressure on Hamas to press Israel to comply with this vital part of the truce 123 The Carter Center recorded based on U N OCHAO data that instead of easing the blockade according to the agreed schedule despite the 97 drop in attacks the truce did not do much to ease the siege of Gaza Imports increased only marginally only 27 of the amount of goods entering in January 2007 were allowed through at best No exports were allowed After the June 2008 ceasefire the number of Palestinians entering and exiting Gaza at the Rafah crossing with Egypt increased slightly with 108 people leaving in August 2008 but this number decreased soon after to only one in October 2008 The passage of Gazans through the Erez crossing reveal similar low numbers 116 Historian Ian Bickerton argues that Israel s failure to comply with the terms of the truce made conditions harder in Gaza 124 Even though not part of the generally accepted truce terms 103 by 23 June 2006 Hamas and Israel began talks via an Egyptian intermediary regarding the release of the captured IDF soldier Shalit 118 As of 15 August the UN reported that Israel was allowing a few new items into Gaza including limited supplies of cement clothes juices and agricultural materials but said that overall humanitarian conditions had not significantly improved since the cease fire began After a few weeks of calm clashes resumed On 12 September the IDF shot and seriously wounded an unarmed Palestinian who strayed close to the border A retaliatory rocket was fired On 16 September IDF troops entered central Gaza to bulldoze land along the border fence On 23 September the UN reported Although the cease fire has afforded the populations in southern Israel and Gaza greater security there has been no corresponding improvement in living conditions for the population in Gaza 118 After the initial increase of goods allowed into Gaza to 30 of the 2007 levels OCHAO data shows that the through flow then fell rapidly through the September October lull in rocket fire to below even pre June levels 116 118 Notwithstanding Hamas not having fired a single rocket during the truce prior to 5 November 2008 114 Israel accused Hamas of bad faith and of violations of the Egyptian mediated truce Even though neither was included as Hamas obligations under the generally accepted terms of this truce 103 Israel noted that rocket fire from Gaza never stopped entirely between June 19 and November 4 20 rockets 125 and 18 mortar shells 126 were fired at Israel and that weapons smuggling was not halted 127 Hamas in turn accused Israel of non compliance with the truce by never allowing the major renewal of goods flow into Gaza and of conducting raids that killed Hamas fighters 101 128 During October 2008 Israel Palestinian violence fell to its lowest level since the start of the al Aqsa intifada in September 2000 118 One rocket and 1 mortar shell were fired at Israel in October 129 However during the same period several Israeli violations were reported In South Gaza on 3 October the IDF fired on two unarmed Palestinians near the border and sent soldiers into the strip to arrest them and detain them in Israel On 19 October IDF bulldozers entered Gaza On 27 October IDF soldiers fired into Gaza for unknown reasons damaging a school in Khuza a and injuring one child Palestinian fishing boats off the Gaza coast were fired upon on four separate occasions during the month wounding two fishermen one of them seriously 118 According to Mondoweiss for the entire duration of the 2008 Hamas Israel cease fire even after the Israeli raid of a Hamas tunnel on 4 November not a single person was killed by rocket or mortar fire into Israel 130 Pre operation actionsFurther information Violence in the Israeli Palestinian conflict 2008 4 November IDF cross border raid On 4 November 2008 Israel launched a cross border military raid variously also referred to as an attack invasion incident military event incursion code named Operation Double Challenge into a residential area of Dayr al Balah in central Gaza to destroy the opening of a cross border 131 tunnel concealed within a building 300 meters from the fence on the Gaza Strip border citation needed Professor Sir Geoffrey Nice QC and General Sir Nick Parker observed that Building a tunnel was not a breach of the ceasefire but the IDF armed incursion into Gaza definitely was 112 132 Various outlets and authors reported this Israeli action as breaking the June truce 128 114 133 According to the Telegraph writing as Cast Lead began the 4 November operation sealed the fate of the ceasefire 134 Author Avi Shlaim wrote in 2015 that the ceasefire had a dramatic effect in de escalating the conflict It was Israel that violated the ceasefire On 4 November 2008 the IDF launched a raid into Gaza and killed 6 Hamas fighters That was the end of the ceasefire and that Hamas had set a good example in respecting the ceasefire 132 The raid according to Mark LeVine was unprovoked 135 Israel stated its aim was to destroy what it said was a tunnel on the Gaza Israel border dug by militants to infiltrate into Israel and abduct soldiers While accusing Hamas of plotting to dig a tunnel under the border Israeli defense official was quoted in The Washington Times as separately acknowledging that Israel wanted to send Hamas a message 118 According to Israel the raid was not a violation of the ceasefire but a legitimate step to remove an immediate threat The 2009 Report of the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict noted that the ceasefire began to founder on 4 November 2008 following an incursion by Israeli soldiers into the Gaza Strip 136 Tunnel threat Dr Ido Hart an Israeli defence analyst specialising in underground warfare defined three types of Gaza tunnels namely those intended for smuggling from Egypt those which are defensive in nature designed for storage and protection and those that are offensive permitting cross border penetrations into Israel by Gaza militants Once you find the entrance you have to climb inside to know whether it is a defensive or offensive tunnel 137 Defensive tunnels have served as an escape hatch for senior Hamas officials during Israeli invasions 138 The purpose of the defensive tunnels is to enable the Hamas command structure to reside safely underground while their armed forces conduct a mobile defence against Israeli forces 139 Robert Pastor who was intimately involved in the indirect 2008 Hamas Israel negotiations stated There is some dispute as to whether that tunnel was intended to capture an Israeli soldier or whether it was a defensive tunnel to protect against an Israeli incursion 140 Later once a new ceasefire had been negotiated Pastor was quoted as saying that Hamas officials asserted however that the tunnel was being dug for defensive purposes not to capture IDF personnel and furthermore that an IDF official had confirmed that fact to him 117 The IDF allegation that the tunnel attacked by it on 4 November 2008 was offensive aimed at abducting IDF soldiers and posing an imminent threat was also reported with doubt by various other players and commentators such as UNISPAL that wrote IDF special forces had entered the area to blow up a tunnel dug by Hamas for allegedly kidnapping IDF soldiers 141 Another example is the Israeli daily Ha aretz that wrote The tunnel was dug ostensibly to facilitate the abduction of Israeli soldiers but the tunnel was not a clear and present danger 142 Former U S President Jimmy Carter wrote Israel launched an attack in Gaza to destroy a defensive tunnel being dug by Hamas inside the wall that encloses Gaza 143 The Journal of Palestine Studies favourably referenced Norman Finkelstein Israel broke the cease fire by killing seven Palestinian militants on the flimsy excuse that Hamas was digging a tunnel to abduct Israeli soldiers and knowing full well that its operation would provoke Hamas into hitting back 144 Noam Chomsky observed The pretext for the raid was that Israel had detected a tunnel in Gaza that might have been intended for use to capture another Israeli soldier a ticking tunnel in official communiques The pretext was transparently absurd as a number of commentators noted If such a tunnel existed and reached the border Israel could easily have barred it right there 145 Raid A paratroopers reconnaissance battalion commanded by Yaron Finkelman supported by tanks and bulldozers crossed the border and penetrated about 250 meters into the Gaza Strip to destroy the tunnel 146 A firefight broke out in which one Hamas fighter was killed Hamas responded with a barrage of mortar and rocket fire at Israeli troops Three Israeli airstrikes on Hamas mortar and rocket positions then killed five Hamas fighters According to eyewitnesses another three Hamas fighters were wounded in an Israeli UCAV strike over the el Burejj refugee camp 147 Three Israeli soldiers were also wounded during the operation Hamas said it would take revenge for what it perceived as an act of Israeli aggression that had violated the truce 147 148 Hamas launched 35 rockets into southern Israel in what was described by Hamas spokesman Fawzi Barhoum as a response to Israel s massive breach of the truce stating that The Israelis began this tension and they must pay an expensive price They cannot leave us drowning in blood while they sleep soundly in their beds 128 149 The blockade of Gaza was tightened further the following day 135 Immediate repercussions The intensity of rocket attacks targeted at Israeli cities near Gaza sharply increased after the 4 November 2008 cross border IDF attack approaching pre truce levels Clashes between Israeli troops and Palestinian militants also took place along the border during which 11 Palestinian militants were killed 150 According to CAMERA in the period between 4 November incident and mid December more than 200 Qassam rockets and mortar shells landed in the western Negev region most fired immediately after the 4 November tunnel raid by the IDF and thereafter decreasing to a few per day 151 Israel had frequently shut down the crossings in response to rocket attacks on its towns 152 December repercussions On 13 December Israel announced that it favored extending the cease fire provided Hamas adhered to the conditions 152 On 14 December a Hamas delegation in Cairo proposed that Hamas was prepared to stop all rocket attacks against Israel if the Israelis would open up the Gaza border crossings and pledge not to launch attacks in Gaza 153 as per the original June 2008 truce terms to that date not complied with by Israel 103 On the same day Hamas officials said that earlier reports quoting Khaled Meshaal as saying there would be no renewal of the truce were inaccurate A Hamas spokesman said that the lull would not be renewed as long as there is no real Israeli commitment to all of its conditions 154 A spokesman for the Israeli Prime Minister replied that Israel was committed to the truce but it s clear there can t be a one sided ceasefire where rockets are everyday coming from the Gaza Strip targeting Israeli civilians 154 On 17 December a 40 year old Palestinian was killed by IDF fire in Northern Gaza 155 The following day 18 December Hamas declared the end of the cease fire a day before the truce officially expired 156 More than 20 rockets were fired from Gaza into southern Israel on that day 157 On 19 December Hamas refused to enter talks to renew the six month truce and a Hamas spokesman announced that it would not extend the cease fire 155 157 The spokesman Ayman Taha specified that Hamas s refusal was because the enemy did not abide by its obligations to ease a crippling blockade of the Gaza Strip and had not halted all attacks 158 Palestinian sources said that Hamas wanted to renew the truce but only on improved terms a complete opening of the border crossings with Israel the opening of the Rafah border crossing with Egypt a complete ban on Israeli military activity in Gaza and an extension of the truce to the West Bank as well Israel was not ready to accept these terms 155 This was confirmed by Yuval Diskin head of Shin Bet Israel s internal security agency at an Israeli cabinet meeting on 21 December Diskin said he thought Hamas was interested in continuing the truce but wants to improve its terms it wants us to lift the siege of Gaza stop attacks and extend the truce to include the West Bank 159 Three Qassam rockets fired from the northern Gaza Strip landed in Israel 160 On 22 December Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said that his country will not accept the ongoing rocket fire from the Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni who had supported the truce until recently suggested that military actions be taken against the Hamas government in Gaza 161 On 23 December senior Hamas leader Mahmoud al Zahar said that Hamas was willing to renew the cease fire under the original terms demanding an Israeli commitment to refrain from any military operation in the Strip and to keep the border crossings open Speaking with Egyptian newspaper al Ahram al Zahar said that the movement would reassess the situation in Gaza once the 24 hours during which Hamas vowed to halt rocket fire had ended 162 Despite the temporary ceasefire declared by the armed Palestinian factions eight Qassam rockets and eight mortar shells hit the Negev 163 164 Also that day Israeli Defense Forces killed three Palestinian militants stating they were planting explosives on the border 165 On 24 December an Israeli airstrike hit a group of militants in the Gaza Strip An Israeli military spokesman said that the militants had fired mortars at Israel Palestinian medics said that one Hamas militant was killed in the strike and two other Palestinians were wounded including a cameraman from Hamas television station 166 On that day Hamas military wing issued a statement saying that it began an operation code named Operation Oil Stain 87 Palestinian mortar shells Katyusha and Qassam rockets hit the Negev 167 168 Hamas said that it would expand the Oil Stain and put thousands of Israelis under fire Hamas said it was ready for the war far greater than surrendering to Israeli threats and that they became much more prepared to counter Israeli aggression and to defend themselves than in the past 167 On 25 December after Israel had wrapped up preparations for a broad offensive Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert delivered a final warning in an interview with the Arabic language satellite channel al Arabiya He said I am telling them now it may be the last minute I m telling them stop it We are stronger 169 Another 6 Qassams landed in southern Israel 170 ProceedingMain article Timeline of the Gaza War See also Incidents in the Gaza War Israeli offensive Israel began planning for a military operation as early as six months before the conflict by collecting intelligence on potential targets The IDF also engaged in a disinformation campaign to give Hamas a false sense of security and to take them by surprise Defense minister Ehud Barak stated that the offensive was the result of Israel s patience running out over the rocket attacks 171 172 which had been restarted by Hamas after Israel destroyed a tunnel on 4 November 128 101 According to Israeli officials its subsequent 27 December offensive took Hamas by surprise thereby increasing militant casualties 172 Air strikes Israeli F 16I of the 107th Squadron preparing for takeoff At 11 30 am on 27 December 2008 Israel launched the campaign titled Operation Cast Lead It began with an opening wave of airstrikes in which F 16 fighter jets and AH 64 Apache attack helicopters 173 simultaneously struck 100 preplanned targets within a span of 220 seconds There was a 95 success rate with zero misses in the opening attack according to the Israeli Air Force 174 Thirty minutes later a second wave of 64 jets and helicopters struck at an additional 60 targets The air strikes hit Hamas headquarters government offices and 24 police stations 15 175 An Israeli UAV airstrike on the police headquarters of Gaza City killed 40 people including several dozen police cadets at their graduation ceremony 176 Approximately 140 members of Hamas were killed including Tawfik Jaber head of Hamas police force 177 178 Another estimate puts the death toll of the police academy strike at 225 Hamas militants killed and 750 injured 179 Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni told reporters that Israel would strike all targets associated with what she called the illegitimate terrorist government of Hamas 174 At least 225 230 Palestinians were killed and more than 700 injured on the first day of air strikes Civilians including children were among the casualties 178 Although media reported that most of the dead were Hamas security forces or Hamas operatives 180 181 police officers are according to B Tselem presumed to be civilians and likely not legitimate objects of attack under international humanitarian law 182 Human rights groups critically note that the attacks began around the time children were leaving school 183 The Israeli attack was the deadliest one day death toll in 60 years of conflict between the Israelis and Palestinians a day that was called the Massacre of Black Saturday by Palestinians in Gaza 184 185 Hamas responded with a rocket barrage on Southern Israel and Palestinian factions in the Gaza Strip kept Southern Israel under constant rocket fire during the entire war Beersheba suffered two rocket attacks the farthest Palestinian rockets had ever reached Palestinian rocket fire killed three Israeli civilians and one soldier in the early days of the conflict 186 In the weeks following the initial air raids F 16Is and AH 64 Apaches continued to target Hamas facilities while also inflicting severe damage to Palestinian infrastructure 187 Israel used the 2000 pound Mark 84 Joint Direct Attack Munition to attack buildings and tunnels along the Gaza Sinai border The 500 pound variant was used against underground bunkers 174 Israel also used the new PB500A1 laser guided hard target penetration bomb which was developed by Israel Military Industries and is based on the 1000 pound Mark 83 There were unconfirmed reports of the IAF also using the GBU 39 Small Diameter Bomb for the first time 2 Israeli aircraft also used synthetic aperture radar targeting pods and high resolution imaging pods 174 After being grounded six months prior the Israeli fleet of AH 1F Cobra helicopter gunships were rushed back into service for the operation 188 The Israeli Air Force also used unmanned aerial vehicles firing Israeli manufactured Spike missiles citation needed According to the IAF 80 of the bombs used by the IAF were precision weapons and 99 of the air strikes hit their targets 189 A study by the Center for Strategic and International Studies points out that when possible IAF executed strikes using the smallest precision guided weapons and coordinated air strikes and the use of artillery weapons using GPS in a systematic effort to limit collateral damage 89 In a 2009 interview Major General Ido Nehushtan said that the only use of non precision guided munitions from the Israeli Air Force was in open areas 190 He went on to say We had to find ways to do things as precisely and proportionately as possible while focusing on how to differentiate between terrorists and uninvolved civilians 190 The IDF also targeted homes of Hamas commanders noting Destruction of hundreds of Hamas leaders homes is one of the keys to the offensive s success The homes serve as weapons warehouses and headquarters and shelling them has seriously hindered Hamas capabilities 191 Several high ranking Hamas commanders were killed including Nizar Rayan Abu Zakaria al Jamal and Jamal Mamduch Hamas leaders often died along with their families in their homes According to a Hamas spokesperson and Rayyan s son the IDF warned Rayan by contacting his cell phone that an attack on his house was imminent 192 193 Some Hamas leaders hid in the basements of the Shifa Hospital complex in Gaza City in the belief that they would be protected by human shields 194 Hamas Interior Minister Said Seyam Hamas Interior Ministry Security Director Saleh Abu Sharkh and local Hamas militia leader Mahmoud Abu Watfah were killed on 15 January in an Israeli airstrike in Jabalia 195 Destroyed building in Rafah 12 January 2009 Among IDF s measures to reduce civilian casualties were the extensive use of leaflets and phone messages to warn Palestinians including families in high risk areas and families of Hamas personnel to leave the area or to avoid potential targets 89 196 197 Israel used A 4 Skyhawks to deliver more than 2 million leaflets urging the population to evacuate 190 In a practice codenamed roof knocking the IDF issued warning calls before air strikes on civilian buildings Typically Israeli intelligence officers and Shin Bet security servicemen contacted residents of a building in which they suspected storage of military assets and told them that they had 10 15 minutes to flee the attack 174 198 199 At several instances the IDF has also used a sound bomb to warn civilians before striking homes 196 In some cases IDF commanders called off airstrikes when residents of suspected houses have been able to gather on its roof 196 IAF developed small bomb that is designed not to explode as it was aimed at empty areas of the roofs to frighten residents into leaving the building 89 197 Israel s military used low explosive missiles to warn civilians of imminent attack and to verify that buildings were evacuated before attacks 190 Some of the attacks took place sooner than the warning suggested and many calls were not followed up with attacks 8 The Israeli Government report notes that while the warning systems implemented by the IDF did not eliminate all harm to civilians they were apparently effective because in many incidents aerial video surveillance by IDF forces confirmed the departure of numerous residents from targeted areas as a direct result of the warnings before the attacks While Israel is not a party to the Protocol I Israel accepts its provisions as reflective of customary international law citation needed By 3 January 2009 the Palestinian death toll stood at 400 with 25 estimated to be civilian casualties 200 The air offensive continued throughout the ground invasion that followed and as of 15 January Israeli forces had carried out 2 360 air strikes 201 No safe haven or bomb shelters existed making this one of the rare conflicts where civilians had no place to flee 202 The IAF had so far carried out 555 aerial sorties and 125 helicopter missions and dozens of UAV flight hours were logged Naval operations The Israeli Navy attacked Hamas rocket launchers and outposts command and control centers a Hamas patrol boat and the office of Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh using the Typhoon Weapon System and Surface to surface missiles 203 204 The navy coordinated with other Israeli forces and used powerful shipboard sensors to acquire and shell targets on land 174 205 Records of the attacks published by the navy indicate that for the first time vessels were equipped with Spike ER electro optically guided anti armor missiles Videos of an attack showed precision hits from a Typhoon stabilizing gun despite a rolling sea Versions of the Spike were also used by ground units 2 and possibly by helicopters or unmanned aerial vehicles 206 Shayetet 13 naval commandos were also deployed to attack targets on land 21 and reportedly attacked an Iranian ship loaded with arms for Hamas which was docking in Sudan 207 On 28 December Naval vessels shelled the Port of Gaza 186 On 29 December the Free Gaza Movement relief boat Dignity carrying volunteer doctors with 3 5 tons of medical supplies human rights activists Among them Caoimhe Butterly and former US Representative Cynthia McKinney and a CNN reporter was involved in an altercation with Israeli patrol boats The captain of the Free Gaza vessel said that their vessel had been rammed intentionally and that there had been no warning before it had been rammed 208 An Israeli spokesman disputed this and said the collision was caused by the Dignity attempting to outmaneuver the patrol boats after disobeying Israeli orders to turn back 209 On 4 January the Israeli Navy extended its blockade of the Gaza Strip to 20 nautical miles 210 Throughout the war the Israeli Navy employed Sa ar 4 5 class missile boats and Super Dvora Mk III class patrol boats Ground invasion See also 2009 Ibrahim al Maqadna Mosque strike and Zeitoun incident IDF infantry and armor units amassed near the Gaza border on 28 December engaging in a blockade of the strip On 29 December a Palestinian mortar attack hit an Israeli military base along the Gaza border killing one soldier and wounding several others citation needed Explosion in Gaza 12 January 2009 211 ISM photo Damage to the Zeitoun neighbourhood On the evening of 3 January Israel began the ground operation with a massive artillery barrage all along the Gaza boundary and ground forces were sent into Gaza for the first time since the start of the conflict 212 213 214 The ground invasion termed the second stage of Operation Cast Lead sought to control open areas and encircle towns and refugee camps from which militants continued to launch rockets but not penetrate densely populated areas 15 The Paratroopers Golani and Givati brigades simultaneously entered the Gaza Strip from several unexpected directions to avoid reported booby traps while also outflanking opposing forces The 401st Armored Brigade used Merkava Mark IV tanks to quickly block access from Rafah and Khan Yunis to Gaza City cutting supply lines to Hamas from the south 2 The move put psychological pressure on Hamas while also forcing combatants to withdraw from the front line Israeli forces took strategic hilltops to better control areas 212 Weapons found in a mosque during Operation Cast Lead according to the IDF The Israeli advance was spearheaded by Combat Engineering Corps sappers opening routes and allowing the ground forces to advance while dismantling booby traps set up in great numbers by Hamas often set to detonate upon entry to a building Improvised explosive devices IED were a concern for Israeli soldiers 25 One Israeli commander said that booby traps were found in a mosque and one third of the houses He said that some of the traps were designed to assist in taking IDF soldiers captive All such attempts failed 3 215 The IDF used D9 armored bulldozers to ensure that paths were cleared of IEDs These bulldozers were also used to destroy tunnels The unmanned remote controlled version of the D9 called Black Thunder were also used In one case an armored D9 knocked down a door which triggered an explosion of a building full of explosive on top of the D9 The D9 survived the explosion and building s collapse Combat engineers that inspected the rubbles found a tunnel cache of weapons and remains of a suicide bomber 216 Viper miniature robots were deployed by Israeli forces for the first time These were used for various tasks including the disabling of IEDs Along with blocking mobile phone communication the IDF employed electronic jamming equipment to disable remote operated explosives 188 Among others The IDF used the new Bull Island system for the first time to identify booby traps in buildings Bull Island uses a camera shaped like a tennis ball that can be thrown into a building to transfer 360 degree imagery to the troops outside of the structure 15 17 Israeli artillery units worked closely with battalion commanders 205 For the first time the Sheder Ham digitized data mapping and command and control system linked the Artillery Corps into the Army s overall C4I network 188 Israel artillery fired approximately 7 000 rounds during the conflict An Israel Defense Forces colonel stated that tactics and procedures had to suit the difficult urban environment The number of rounds in the 22 day conflict was 5 of the total fired during the 34 day Lebanon war Under the condition of anonymity another officer said that close air support missions accounted for more than 90 of rounds fired He also said that about half of those were MA25A1 incendiary based smoke rounds used to mask troop movements The Oketz Unit the IDF s dog handling corps performed 33 successful missions during the war with specially trained sniffer and attack dogs and their handlers leading advancing forces In every mission that involved Oketz dogs there were no casualties among soldiers Three dogs were killed by enemy fire during the war 217 Hamas guerrillas sometimes emerged from tunnels to fire at IDF soldiers then pulled back to lure troops into built up areas In one case a Palestinian dressed in an Israeli Army uniform opened fire on a group of soldiers but was killed before he could cause any casualties In several instances would be suicide bombers with explosive vests charged Israeli soldiers but all were killed before they could reach their targets citation needed Israeli ground troops entered Beit Lahiya and Beit Hanoun in northern Gaza in the early hours of 4 January 218 Israeli forces reportedly bisected Gaza and surrounded Gaza City 213 but restricted their movements to areas that were not heavily urbanized citation needed The IDF stated that it had targeted forty sites including weapons depots and rocket launch sites The Israeli military said that 50 Hamas fighters were killed and dozens more wounded 219 At least 25 Palestinian rockets were fired into Southern Israel wounding a woman in Sderot 186 One Israeli soldier was killed and 19 other soldiers were wounded in Jabalia when a mortar shell fired by Hamas fighters landed on their patrol As Israeli tanks and troops seized control of large parts of the Gaza Strip tens of thousands of Gazans fled their homes amid artillery and gunfire and flooded into the inner parts of Gaza city 220 On 5 January IDF forces began operating in the densely populated urban centers of Gaza Gun battles broke out between the IDF and Hamas on the streets of Gaza as the IDF surrounded the city 221 222 IDF combat units were sent in to capture Hamas fighters and were met with grenades and mortar fire The Israeli military said that 80 100 Hamas fighters were killed and 100 captured during heavy ground fighting Some 40 rockets and mortar shells were fired at Israel injuring four civilians 223 Israel continued to launch airstrikes and naval bombardments IDF forces discover weapons in a mosque during Operation Cast Lead in the Gaza Strip On 6 January heavy fighting took place between Israeli troops and Palestinian militants on the outskirts of the northern district of Gaza City while Israeli helicopter gunships pounded militant positions The IDF reportedly widened its attacks to Khan Yunis in southern Gaza after heavy fighting on the edges of Deir al Balah in central Gaza 186 The Al Fakhura school was hit by Israeli mortar fire and reports on deaths and if militants were among the casualties varied 224 225 226 The attack was originally reported as being on the school 227 In northern Gaza City Palestinian gunmen ambushed an Israeli patrol killing one soldier and wounding four The patrol returned fire hitting some of the gunmen 228 while in Jabalya an Israeli tank fired a shell into an abandoned building as Golani Brigade soldiers were taking cover in it killing 3 soldiers and wounding 24 The casualties were extracted under the cover of heavy artillery fire and helicopters dropping illumination bombs 229 In a separate friendly fire incident an Israeli officer was killed by a misdirected artillery shell In all at least 70 Palestinians and 5 Israelis were killed on 6 January 186 Arms interdiction and the Sudan strike Main article 2009 Sudan airstrikes In January and February 2009 there was a series of two air strikes in Sudan and one in the Red Sea allegedly conducted by Israel against a convoy of 17 trucks containing Iranian arms possibly Fajr 3 artillery rockets being smuggled to the Gaza Strip through Sudan A total of 39 were reported killed with Iranian Revolutionary Guard operatives possibly among the dead 230 231 The attack was widely reported to have been conducted by Israeli aircraft while the Israeli government hinted that it was behind the attack 232 Naval commandos from the elite Shayetet 13 unit were reportedly involved in the operation which included an attack on an Iranian arms ship docking in Port Sudan 233 Attack on Gaza City White phosphorus artillery shell exploding over Gaza City on the 11 January On 7 January Israel carried out 40 airstrikes overnight Dozens of other targets were attacked by aircraft and artillery during the day and the Gaza Egypt border was bombed after Israeli aircraft dropped leaflets onto Rafah urging the residents to leave A total of 20 Palestinians were killed A total of 20 rockets were fired into Southern Israel 186 Israel temporarily halted its attacks for three hours to provide a humanitarian respite 234 On 8 January an exchange of fire took place in Gaza City Hamas suffered heavy losses but an Israeli officer of the Golani Brigade was also killed In Northern Gaza snipers opened fire on Israeli forces conducting an operation killing an Israeli soldier Another Israeli soldier was lightly wounded The IDF soldiers identified the origin of the fire and returned fire directly hitting the snipers In another incident several mortar shells were fired at Givati Brigade soldiers who responded with mortar fire and were aided by IAF airstrikes citation needed In Central Gaza a force of IDF soldiers entered a building near the Kissfum crossing As the force entered Hamas fighters fired an anti tank rocket at them killing one Israeli officer and wounding one soldier Israeli aircraft also hit more than 40 Hamas targets in Gaza 235 Israeli troops shot and killed Hamas commander Amir Mansi and wounded two other Hamas fighters as they operated a mortar 236 The IAF attacked over 60 Hamas targets A rocket fired from Gaza wounded seven IDF soldiers in Southern Israel On 10 January the Israeli military said that another 40 sites were targeted and that 15 Hamas fighters were killed 237 On 11 January the IDF started the third stage of the operation with an attack on the suburbs of Gaza City Israeli forces pushed into the south of the city and reached a key junction to its north During their advance Hamas and Islamic Jihad fighters ambushed Israeli troops at several locations and heavy fighting ensued in which 40 Hamas and Islamic Jihad fighters were killed 177 Additionally the IAF reported that Hamas operatives had tried to shoot down an IAF plane with anti aircraft missiles for the first time since operations in Gaza began Heavy machine gun fire against helicopters had also been unsuccessful 26 Two Hamas fighters were killed by an Israeli airstrike in the Southern Gaza Strip A Palestinian woman was also killed by Israeli artillery fire 238 Israeli forces continued to push deeper into heavily populated areas around Gaza City Fierce clashes were reported in the Southern suburb of Sheikh Ajleen 186 On 12 January nearly 30 rockets and mortars were fired at Southern Israel damaging a house in Ashkelon Palestinians in a Gaza city neighbourhood on Day 18 of the War in Gaza 239 On 13 January Israeli tanks continued their advance toward the headquarters of Hamas preventive security building from the al Karramah neighborhood in the northwest and the Tel al Hawa neighborhood in the northeast The Israeli Army also said that 25 mortars and rockets were fired into Southern Israel 186 240 Before dawn during the night Israeli troops and tanks supported by artillery and helicopters advanced 300 metres into Tel al Hawa a neighborhood with several high rise buildings while Israeli gunboats shelled Hamas targets along the coast citation needed As troops entered the narrow streets heavy street fighting with militants ensued leaving three Israeli soldiers wounded and 30 Hamas militants dead or wounded according to the IDF By morning IDF soldiers were still advancing slowly towards the city center and several buildings were in flames in Tel al Hawa where most of the fighting took place Five Israeli soldiers were wounded during clashes with militants and an officer was severely wounded by an explosion inside a booby trapped building 241 The push into the neighborhood was Israel s deepest incursion into Gaza City There was widespread desertion by members of the Qassam Brigades in the face of the IDF advance 3 On 15 January Israeli artillery started an intense bombardment of the city while fighting was still going on in the streets Troops and tanks advanced deeper into the city following the shelling The Israeli military claimed to have killed dozens of militants since breaching the city limits four days earlier while they suffered 20 25 soldiers wounded Among buildings hit by shellfire was the al Quds hospital Gaza s second largest in the Tel al Hawa neighborhood At least 14 rockets were fired from Gaza into Israel wounding five and severely damaging a house in Sderot 186 Almost all members of Hamas approximately 100 man strong Iranian Unit were killed during a battle in the Zeytoun neighborhood on 15 January Members of the military wing had previously travelled to Iran for training by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard According to Palestinian sources Iran was preparing for an end to the fighting and promised money and resources to rebuild military capabilities and infrastructure destroyed during the fighting 242 The headquarters of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency UNRWA was also shelled on 15 January There were 3 people injured and tons of food and fuel intended for 750 000 Palestinian refugees were destroyed 243 The Associated Press initially reported that an anonymous Israeli military official stated that Gaza militants had fired anti tank weapons and machine guns from inside the compound Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said it is absolutely true that we were attacked from that place but the consequences are very sad and we apologize for it I don t think it should have happened and I m very sorry After UNRWA dismissed this as nonsense Israel ordered an army investigation into the incident 244 Israeli officials afterwards came forward to say that preliminary results showed that the militants ran for safety inside the U N compound after firing on Israeli forces from outside 245 On 16 January more than 50 Israeli airstrikes were carried out against militants tunnels and a mosque suspected of being used as a weapons store Israeli forces continued their push into Gaza City while Israeli Navy vessels shelled militant targets in support 234 About 10 rockets were fired into Southern Israel 186 Palestinian militants fired 15 rockets into Israel wounding eight people including a pregnant woman The Givati Brigade penetrated the deepest into Gaza City The brigade s reconnaissance battalion swept into the Tel al Hawa neighborhood and took over two 15 story buildings in search of Hamas operatives two days before the cease fire went into effect About 40 Palestinian fighters were killed during the operation The commander of the brigade Colonel Ilan Malka was critical of Hamas use of civilian houses and said that he took many steps to prevent our soldiers from getting hurt Malka told reporters that the IDF had initially predicted each battalion would lose six or seven soldiers 246 The Israeli government considered a third phase of the operation with the intent of dealing a knock out blow to Hamas Military and intelligence assessments indicating that shifting the goal to destroying Hamas would require additional weeks of deep ground incursions into urban areas and refugee camps This was expected to result in heavy casualties on both sides and among civilians reduce the strong domestic support for the war and increase international criticism 15 Humanitarian ceasefires Due to the number of civilian casualties and the deteriorating humanitarian situation Israel faced significant international pressure for a ceasefire the establishment of a humanitarian corridor access to the population of Gaza and the lifting of the blockade 247 On 7 January Israel opened a humanitarian corridor to allow the shipment of aid into Gaza The Israeli army agreed to interrupt fighting for three hours and Hamas agreed not to launch rockets during the pause 248 249 250 Israel repeated the ceasefire either daily or every other day Aid officials and the UN praised the truce but said it was not enough as fighting usually resumed immediately following the humanitarian ceasefires 248 251 252 253 An Israeli Government report published in July 2009 notes that during the period between 8 and 17 January Hamas fired a total of 44 rockets and mortars at Israel during humanitarian pauses citation needed An independent report commissioned jointly by the Israeli NGO Physicians for Human Rights and the Palestinian Medical Relief Society notes that according to testimonies by local witnesses there were several cases where IDF ground forces breached the daily ceasefire agreement 254 Palestinian paramilitary activity According to Human Rights Watch rockets from Gaza were fired from populated areas 255 According to Abu Ahmed the official media spokesman of the Al Quds Brigades the military wing of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad movement Palestinian paramilitary factions in Gaza worked together operationally and otherwise to repel the Israeli attack on Gaza Abu Ahmed told Asharq al Awsat during the war that everybody helps everybody else with regards to food weapons and first aid there is no difference between a member Al Quds Brigade or Al Qassam Brigade military wing of Hamas or Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade or Abu Ali Mustafa Brigade military wing of Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine or PFLP For everybody s goal is the same and their compass is pointing in the same direction and that is to drive out the occupation and defeat them and disrupt their plan to dissolve the Palestinian Cause 256 Hamas said that rockets fired from Gaza were meant to hit military targets but because they are unguided they hit civilians by mistake 257 Political representatives for Hamas Islamic Jihad the PFLP Saiqa the Popular Struggle Front the Revolutionary Communist Party Palestinian Liberation Organization Fatah s Intifada faction and a number of other Palestinian factions in Syria formed a temporary alliance during the offensive as well They issued a joint statement refusing any security arrangements that affect the resistance and its legitimate right to struggle against the occupation and refusing proposals suggesting international forces be sent to Gaza The coalition also affirmed that any peace initiatives must include an end to the blockade and an opening of all of Gaza s crossings including the Rafah crossing with Egypt 1 Preparation A Grad rocket hitting Beersheba Hamas used the months leading to the war to prepare for urban warfare which was to give them a chance to inflict casualties on the Israeli military 258 Militants booby trapped houses and buildings and built an extensive system of tunnels in preparation for combat 259 A Hamas fighter reported that the group had prepared a tunnel network in Gaza city that would allow Hamas to engage the IDF in urban warfare 260 IDF commanders said that many Hamas members have dug tunnels for themselves under their homes and hid weapon caches in them 261 Some houses were booby trapped with mannequins explosives and adjacent tunnels Israeli officers said that houses were set up this way so that Israeli soldiers would shoot the mannequin mistaking it for a man an explosion would occur and the soldiers would be driven or pulled into the hole where they could be taken prisoner A colonel estimated that one third of all houses encountered were booby trapped 215 IDF Brigadier General Eyal Eisenberg said that roadside bombs were planted in TV satellite dishes adding that Hamas booby trapping of homes and schools was monstrous and inhumane 262 Ron Ben Yishai an Israeli military correspondent embedded with invading ground forces stated that entire blocks of houses were booby trapped and wired in preparation for urban confrontation with the IDF Israel said a map showing the deployment of explosives and Hamas forces in the al Atatra neighborhood in northern Gaza was found The map reportedly showed that Hamas placed many explosives and firing positions in residential areas several mosques and next to a gas station 263 Israel deployed the elite Sayeret Yahalom combat engineering unit throughout the brigades with new equipment including miniature robots and improved wall breaching munitions to counter the booby traps 2 An example of a weapons cache found in northern Gaza According to Jane s Defence Weekly armed groups in Gaza counted domestically produced anti armor RPGs like al Battar and Banna 1 and Banna 2 in their arsenal 264 Hamas and Islamic Jihad also manufactured a variety of improvised explosive devices IEDs some of which were anti personnel bombs and others were planted on the sides of roads or underground to be activated against tanks and armored personnel carriers According to The Jerusalem Post some of the IEDs were manufactured from medicine bottles transferred to the Gaza Strip as humanitarian aid by Israel 265 The same newspaper also reported that Hamas representatives said they were fighting with the aid of armored vehicles and weapons confiscated from the Palestinian National Authority given by Israel the United States and other countries 266 A weapons cache in found in northern Gaza At least one Palestinian witness told an Italian reporter that on many roofs of the tall buildings that were hit by Israeli bombs including UN building there were rocket launchers or Hamas look outs 267 268 On 27 January the Shin Bet released details given by Hamas captives including the militants use of mosques for weapon caches and military training Militants admitted to the location of Hamas weapon storage sites in tunnels in the homes of activists and in citrus groves and mosques and told of theory instruction given in mosques as well 269 Following the visit of the British Army veteran Colonel Tim Collins to the ruins of one of the mosques targeted by the IDF in Rafah he said that in his view the evidencies of the secondary explosion that could have indicated weapon s storage in the mosque are present 270 Palestinian rockets in Gaza According to Human Right Watch On 24 December 2008 a rocket struck a bedroom of a family living in the Tel al Hawa area in southern Gaza City critically wounding one man The brother of this victim told after the incident no armed group came to apologize I was next door in my home when this all happened When one of those responsible tried to bargain for the shrapnel I said that if no one took responsibility I will go to the courts so Hamas came to me privately and admitted it On 26 December 2008 a Palestinian rocket struck north of Beit Lahiya a house was hit killing two cousins and wounding another The grandfather described the rocket as about one meter in length according to Human Rights Watch examination the diameter of the pipe is 120 mm The grandfather said the rocket was taken by Hamas policemen for investigation After he left the war started and we never heard from him again We got the compensation given to all victims of the war 255 Rocket attacks into Israel See also Palestinian rocket attacks on Israel and Palestinian political violence Kindergarten classroom in Beersheba hit by Grad rocket from Gaza 271 After the initial Israeli aerial assault Hamas quickly dispersed both its personnel and weapons and equipment 272 According to Human Rights Watch rockets from Gaza were fired from populated areas an Islamic Jihad fighter said the most important thing is achieving our military goals We stay away from the houses if we can but that s often impossible 255 According to BBC Palestinian groups had been firing in response to Israeli massacres 54 The strike range of Hamas rockets had increased from 16 km 9 9 mi to 40 km 25 mi since early 2008 with the use of improved Qassam and factory made rockets 273 These attacks resulted in civilian casualties and damage to infrastructure 274 Rockets reached major Israeli cities Ashdod Beersheba and Gedera for the first time putting one eighth of Israel s population in rocket range 275 On 3 January 2009 Ma an News Agency reported The Al Qassam Brigades military wing of Hamas said that after a week since the start of the Battle of Al Furqan the criterion it has managed to fire 302 rockets at an average of 44 rockets daily 54 As of 13 January 2009 Palestinian militants had launched approximately 565 rockets and 200 mortars at Israel since the beginning of the conflict according to Israeli security sources 276 A source close to Hamas described the movement s use of stealth when firing They fired rockets in between the houses and covered the alleys with sheets so they could set the rockets up in five minutes without the planes seeing them The moment they fired they escaped and they are very quick 277 It is reported that 102 rockets and 35 mortars were fired by Fatah Hamas chief rival 278 Besides the rockets fired by the Qassam Brigades of Hamas other factions claimed responsibility for rockets fired into Israel and attacks on Israeli soldiers including Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades affiliated with Fatah the Abu Ali Mustapha Brigades the Quds Brigades and the Popular Resistance Councils 1 A Fatah official stated that the rocket attacks by his faction contradicted the official position of Mahmoud Abbas Fatah leader and President of the Palestinian National Authority Abbas had called on all sides to cease hostilities unconditionally Militants fired over 750 rockets and mortars from Gaza into Israel during the conflict 279 Bersheeba and Gedera were the farthest areas hit by rocket or mortars 279 The rockets killed three civilians and one IDF soldier and wounded 182 people with another 584 people suffering from shock and anxiety citation needed The rockets also caused property damage including damage to three schools 271 280 281 Senior Hamas official Mahmoud al Zahar stated during the operation they Israeli forces shelled everyone in Gaza They shelled children and hospitals and mosques and in doing so they gave us legitimacy to strike them in the same way 282 Human Rights Watch noted in the open letter to Ismail Haniyeh that despite his Foreign Ministry stance as part of response to the Goldstone Report Palestinian armed groups remain responsible for firing rockets indiscriminately or deliberately at Israeli civilian objects HRW also noted that Palestinian militants put Palestinian civilians at risk of Israeli counter attacks by launching rockets from populated areas 283 The UN fact finding mission stated that the firing of rockets at Israel constituted a deliberate attack against the civilian population and was in violation of international law 53 After the war the Izz ad Din al Qassam Brigades revealed new rockets it used during Israel s military operation and published pictures of weapons Tandem and RPG 29 anti armor rockets that it could secretly smuggle to Gaza 284 Repairs being made to water pipe after it was hit a by a rocket Besides being hit with rockets fired from Gaza Israel experienced other attacks along the borders with Lebanon and Syria 285 Unilateral ceasefiresOn 17 January Israeli officials announced a unilateral ceasefire Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert declared the ceasefire effective that night at 00 00 GMT on 18 January 286 The ceasefire consisted of two phases First a ceasefire is declared If Hamas stops firing rockets then Israel pulls its forces out of the Gaza Strip If rocket fire resumes then the IDF goes back in this time with the international backing gained by having tried a truce Olmert declared that the military objectives had been met 287 288 Hamas initially vowed to fight on 289 and responded that any continued Israeli presence in Gaza would be regarded as an act of war Farzi Barhoum a Hamas spokesman said before the ceasefire began The occupier must halt his fire immediately and withdraw from our land and lift his blockade and open all crossings and we will not accept any one Zionist soldier on our land regardless of the price that it costs 290 Palestinian militants resumed rocket fire into southern Israel the following Sunday morning four of the six fired landed in or near Sderot 291 292 The Israeli military returned fire and launched an air strike against the rocket launching site in northern Gaza 293 On 18 January Hamas Islamic Jihad and other paramilitias said they would stop launching rockets into Israel for one week and demanded the withdrawal of the enemy forces from the Gaza Strip within a week along with the opening of all the crossings for the entry of humanitarian aid food and other necessities for our people in the Gaza Strip 294 295 296 Three days later the last Israeli troops left Gaza 297 Since the unilateral ceasefires were declared on 17 January militants have fired rockets and mortar shells from Gaza 298 299 and the IDF has launched airstrikes against Gaza 300 Continued negotiations Egyptian mediators held discussions with Israel and Hamas about extending the cease fire by a year or more Hamas and Fatah met to allow both to play a role in rebuilding 301 Israel began pressuring Egypt to do more to stop weapons smuggling into Gaza the halting of which is one of Israel s central demands in extending a cease fire On 27 January 2009 Foreign Minister of Egypt Ahmed Aboul Gheit discouraged Britain France and Germany from sending warships to patrol the waters off Gaza which the three European nations felt could help halt seaborne smuggling Gheit said such efforts would harm Europe s relations with the Arab world Egypt also opposed proposals for European troops to be stationed on the border between Gaza and Egypt to monitor smuggling tunnels 302 Israel along with many Western and some Arab countries wanted international aid groups to control aid from donations around the world so that Hamas would not receive credit for the rebuilding To speed up reconstruction Hamas agreed that it would not insist on collecting reconstruction money itself and would allow donated money to flow through different avenues based on the various alliances although Hamas ultimately expected to administer the aid But advisors to senior Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh said Israel s willingness to open the border for humanitarian aid only was unacceptable as Hamas would need much more to rebuild its economy and provide relief for citizens Haniyeh aides said the cease fire is contingent on a full border opening 301 Shortly after becoming President of the United States Barack Obama directed newly appointed special envoy to the Middle East George J Mitchell to visit Israel the West Bank Egypt Jordan Turkey and Saudi Arabia for peace talks Mitchell began his meetings in Cairo on 27 January 2009 and Obama said his visit was part of the President s campaign promise to listen to both sides of the Israeli Palestinian conflict and work toward a Middle East peace deal Mitchell did not plan to talk to Hamas but instead focus on talks with the more moderate Palestinian Authority 302 A spokesman for Haniyeh said he respected Mitchell but was disappointed with the envoy s decision not to hold discussions with Hamas 301 Ehud Olmert stated that Israel would not agree to a long term truce or lift the blockade on Gaza without the freeing of Gilad Shalit an IDF soldier held captive in Gaza since June 2006 303 304 Hamas demanded that Israel release 1 400 Palestinian prisoners in exchange for Shalit and such negotiations be kept separate from ceasefire negotiations 305 Post war military assessmentThe war was an Israeli tactical victory and a significant tactical defeat for Hamas 4 306 307 Al Qassam Brigades reported in The outcome of al Qassam operations during the Battle of al Furqan they killed 102 Israeli soldiers On 19 January 2009 a spokesperson for the group said on al Arabiya Israel lost at least 80 soldiers in the fighting and said about Hamas losses only 48 fighters slain in Israel war According to United Nations report of the Independent International Fact Finding Mission of Human Rights Council which was on General Assembly s agenda on 29 October 2009 The large discrepancy in the data confirms the Mission s observations below in the report about the reliability of the information about the Gaza military operations posted on websites of al Qassam and other Palestinian armed groups 308 In November 2010 the Hamas Interior Minister acknowledged that around 700 militants either part of Hamas or affiliated factions were killed in the war 309 Several senior Hamas military commanders and politburo members were killed as well as approximately 50 explosives experts 3 Hamas experienced widespread desertion in the face of the Israeli advance 3 Hamas also lost a very large amount of weaponry and equipment key storage facilities were discovered under mosques and public buildings 3 A former Shin Bet deputy director who co authored a report on the war noted Hamas had planned to stand and fight but the Iz al Qassam Brigades proved unequal to the task and consequently they failed to match the public image Hamas has tried so hard to present of stalwart proficient Islamic warriors 307 In addition the Israeli operation greatly curtailed years of Hamas rocket fire returning a sense of normalcy to Southern Israel 310 In the year before the war Hamas had fired over 3 300 rockets at Israel s Gaza periphery towns That number dropped to less than 300 in the ten months following the conflict 311 Defense analyst David Eshel stated The success of Operation Cast Lead in the densely populated Gaza Strip shows that an industrial military that coordinates operations among land air and sea units makes effective use of advanced technology and shares intelligence and leads from the front can decisively defeat an asymmetrical enemy He further noted Israel used a variety of tactics to outflank and defeat Hamas in its own territory These included long term planning meticulous intelligence gathering deception and disinformation 2 As a result of its poor performance Hamas relieved at least two brigade commanders on Iranian advice and reportedly stripped 100 fighters of their membership The organization decided to initiate a thorough investigation of the conduct of its fighters during the operation 3 312 Hamas leadership modified its tactical doctrine The Qassam Brigades intensified military training at its various training camps and military academy in the Nuseirat refugee camp The new training was thought to be more offensive with a focus on hitting the rear of an IDF force Hezbollah operatives were suspected of involvement in the program In contrast to the pre war period when Hamas openly displayed its capabilities the nature of the program was kept classified 3 The Israeli army said it destroyed about 80 of the tunnels between Gaza and Egypt that were being used to bring in weapons and rocket components Residents in Rafah said they cleared away debris and discovered that many of the tunnels were intact though they acknowledged the destruction of many 313 CasualtiesMain article Casualties of the Gaza War Human Rights organizations and the UN counted just above 1 400 Palestinian deaths 32 31 314 Israel acknowledged 1 166 deaths 30 315 According to PCHR among the Palestinian deaths were 926 unarmed civilians 255 police officers and 236 fighters 32 B Tselem counted 248 killed police officers 31 Al Mezan Centre for Human Rights said in January 2009 that 1 268 people were killed among them 288 children and 103 women and 85 of those killed were not combatants The IDF tallied 295 killed civilians least 709 armed militants and 162 undetermined 30 315 The Hamas Interior Minister Fathi Hamad stated that between 200 and 300 Hamas fighters another 150 security forces and 250 policemen were killed 309 316 During the war 3 Israeli civilians were killed by rocket attacks A total of 10 Israeli soldiers were killed in the war of whom 6 were killed by enemy action and 4 were killed by friendly fire 31 28 Civilians versus combatants During the 2008 2009 Gaza fighting I personally erased a key detail that Hamas fighters were dressed as civilians and being counted as civilians in the death toll because of a threat to our reporter in Gaza The policy was then and remains not to inform readers that the story is censored unless the censorship is Israeli Earlier this month the AP s Jerusalem news editor reported and submitted a story on Hamas intimidation the story was shunted into deep freeze by his superiors and has not been published Matti Friedman 317 In any conflict the ratio of combatant and civilian deaths is a highly sensitive topic During the fighting in the Gaza War the main source for the number of Palestinian casualties was Hamas Ministry of Health in Gaza The ICRC used these figures but at a later stage it made its own assessment 318 Because Israel allowed very few international workers and journalists in Gaza during much of the conflict it has been difficult to verify the figures independently 318 In The Jerusalem Post Israeli Arab journalist Khaled Abu Toameh suggested that killed fighters in civilian clothes led to the over counting of civilian casualties and under counting Hamas military casualties as Palestinian casualties arrived at hospitals without weapons or any other signs revealing they were fighters 319 B Tselem wrote that its fatalities classification was based on the guidelines of the International Committee of the Red Cross ICRC published in June 2009 The PCHR civilian count includes Hamas members killed in what the PCHR assessed were non combat situations The Al Mezan centre defined combatants as those taking up arms against Israeli troops 318 The Israeli International Institute for Counter Terrorism 320 and SPME 321 have contested the classifications of B Tselem and PCHR Gazan police During the conflict Israel targeted numerous police facilities in Gaza Many of these attacks occurred during the first minutes of the operations resulting in the deaths of 99 policemen and nine other members of the public 53 322 The attacks on Police during the first day of the operation included the bombing of a police cadet graduation ceremony killing scores of police cadets along with family members who had come to attend the celebration Police cadets killed in the incident included traffic police and musicians in the police orchestra 323 324 The UN fact finding mission established that approximately 240 Gaza policemen were killed by Israeli forces during the course of the conflict constituting over one sixth of the total Palestinian casualties 53 According to Ayman al Batniji spokesperson for the Palestinian Police Force in Gaza almost 251 policemen were killed within the first few hours of the attack which also left more than 700 others injured including those who could never return to work due to losing their legs and other limbs 325 Legality The UN Fact Finding Mission analysed the police institutions in Gaza from the time Hamas gained control They concluded that the Gaza police were a civilian law enforcement agency and that Israel s blanket targeting of the Gaza police was therefore a violation of international humanitarian law 53 Human Rights Watch stated that police are presumptively civilians but on a specific case by case basis can be considered valid targets if formally incorporated into the armed forces of a party to a conflict or directly participate in the hostilities They stressed that blanket decisions must not be made about police being legitimate targets and that a decision that police and police stations are legitimate military targets depends on whether those police play a role in fighting against Israel or whether a particular police station is used to store weapons or for some other military purpose 326 B Tselem also states that police officers are presumed to be civilians and likely not legitimate objects of attack under international humanitarian law 182 Israeli views The Israeli Orient Research Group reported that 78 of the 89 killed during this first IAF strike were terror operatives many of them belonging to the militant group al Qassam Brigades citation needed The Jerusalem Centre for Public Affairs further reported that 286 of the 343 police officers killed during the offensive were members of terror organizations and that another 27 fighters belonged to units undergoing infantry training citation needed It noted that the security apparatuses participated in terror activity and that the Hamas leadership presented these organizations as at the forefront of the jihad for liberating all of Palestine 327 328 The IDF made clear that it regards police under the control of Hamas in Gaza to be equivalent to the enemies armed fighters including them in the militant s count 53 315 A government paper published pictures of four men that were killed during the military operations that they claim were downloaded from Palestinian websites The men are identified in the different pictures as both policemen and members of al Qassam Brigades 329 Israeli Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center ITIC alleged that the distinction between the internal security forces and Hamas military wing is not sharply defined and cites Gaza police officials who said that police were instructed to fight the enemy in case of an invasion into the Gaza Strip 330 331 Many security force members were reported to moonlight with the militant group Izzidin al Qassam Brigades 332 Gazan rockets During the conflict Palestinian groups fired rockets targeting Israeli civilians in the cities of Ashdod Beersheba and Gedera placing 1 8 of the Israeli population at risk The military wing of Hamas said that after a week from the start it had managed to fire 302 rockets at an average of 44 rockets daily 102 rockets and 35 mortars were fired by Fatah at Israel Over 750 rockets and mortars were fired from Gaza into Israel during the conflict wounded 182 civilians killing 3 people and causing minor suffering to another 584 people suffering from shock and anxiety Several rockets landed in schools and one fell close to a kindergarten all located in residential areas The UN fact finding mission stated that this constituted a deliberate attack against the civilian population and was unjustifiable in international law 271 279 AftermathIsrael was victorious militarily but its reputation was harmed 5 The international community continued to isolate Hamas except for Iran and Syria because it rejected the Quartet demands to recognize Israel accept the Oslo accords peace initiative and abandon violence in exchange for international recognition as representatives of the Palestinian people 333 In the months following the war Hamas suspended its use of rockets and shifted focus to winning support at home and abroad through cultural initiatives and public relations with the aim to build a cultural resistance Hamas officials stated that The current situation required a stoppage of rockets After the war the fighters needed a break and the people needed a break 334 Propaganda and psychological warfareHamas Before and during the conflict Hamas senior representatives released a number of statements designed to avert Israeli decision makers from launching any military operation in Gaza and to cause demoralization among Israelis Before the end of the pre conflict ceasefire Hamas boasted that it had countless surprises awaiting Israeli troops should they advance 335 Hamas representatives threatened on several occasions to abduct Israeli soldiers and during the ground invasion tried to spread rumors that it actually had captured or killed more Israeli soldiers 336 On a video broadcast on Al Aqsa TV on 10 January showing the names of Israeli towns hit by rockets it was implied Tel Aviv is the next target and that all options are open 337 Also Hamas sent messages in Hebrew to Israeli citizens mobile phones warning Rockets on all cities shelters will not protect you 338 339 Hamas instrumentalized the Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit as a form of psychological weapon declaring that he had been wounded by Israeli fire later announcing that his condition was no longer of interest to them 335 According to IDF spokesman Hamas ruses in the battlefield included booby traps throughout Gaza s neighborhoods such as mannequins placed at apartment entrances and rigged to explode when the soldiers approach 336 Arab television stations reported Hamas provided statistics for Israeli casualties on the assumption that Israel is distorting its own figures of soldiers killed and wounded 340 A study by the Center for Strategic and International Studies notes that Hamas propaganda both rejected Hamas responsibility for the fighting and used it to attack the Palestinian Authority 89 Dr Tal Pavel from Israeli think tank International Policy Institute for Counter Terrorism ICT said that Hamas uses its Web sites to make comparisons between Israel and Nazi Germany portraying Israel as a destructive oppressive regime afraid of Hamas rockets raining on Tel Aviv 340 Israel The day before the beginning of the offensive on 27 December the IDF pulled troops back from the border and used its radio channels to broadcast talk of a lull to achieve a disinformation coup to lure Hamas fighters out of hiding 341 A broadcaster in Islamic Jihad s Voice of Jerusalem radio station in Gaza City reported that IDF have been breaking into his station signal least once an hour during conflict intensification to broadcast messages to Gaza s population that their problems were due to Hamas The Israelis also dropped leaflets with similar messages and contact info to report about the whereabouts of militant leaders and weapons caches 341 The leaflets also said The Israeli army will respond if the rocket fire continues 339 In war zones leaflets warned local residents that they had to flee It also warned residents that their homes would be targeted if they were located in an area of possible target 342 Dr Yaniv Levitan of the University of Haifa said that the aim of the flyers was not to demoralize the civil population but to implant recognition in hearts and minds that Hamas has failed that there is an option of choosing another path 340 IDF spokespersons often reported that scores of demoralized Hamas fighters had been observed deserting According to Ephraim Kam deputy head of the Institute of National Security Studies at Tel Aviv University the claim could not be confirmed but it strengthened the Israeli population s will to continue and undermined the confidence of Hamas in Gaza 335 There was a mistrust of phone calls warning messages to people that they have just minutes to evacuate before they bomb the house According to a human rights lawyer at the Palestinian Center for Human Rights PCHR despite the hundreds of phone calls to families warning their house is about to be blown up only 37 were destroyed presumably as of 3 January date 339 Controversies regarding tacticsMain article International Law and the Gaza War Both Israel and Hamas were accused of using controversial military tactics during the 2008 2009 Gaza War Controversial tactics allegedly used by Hamas Civilians as human shields Israel maintained that Hamas used civilians and especially children as human shields as a part of its war doctrine They said that Hamas repeatedly called upon Palestinian civilians to gather near buildings where they feared that the IDF was about to launch air strikes against Hamas targets They documented several examples of what they described as calls in the Hamas controlled Gaza media for Palestinians civilians to serve as human shields They released footage allegedly showing Hamas Al Aqsa TV calling upon children to form a human shield at various structures in Gaza to prevent anticipated IDF airstrikes and an Al Aqsa TV News broadcast describing how a crowd of civilians gathered on the roof of Abu Bilal al Ja abeer to stop the IDF from executing an airstrike citation needed Amnesty International s investigation of these claims found no evidence that Hamas or any other Palestinian militant group had directed the movement of civilians to shield military objectives from attacks It did find that Israeli soldiers had deployed Palestinian civilians and children to shield themselves 343 344 The IDF released a video taken by an UAV drone during the war saying that it showed a Hamas militant launching a rocket from a roof of a residential house and then leaving surrounded by children to avoid being targeted by the IDF citation needed Later the IDF and Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs compiled a film accusing Hamas of a systematic use of civilian infrastructure and civilians as a human shield citation needed Israeli Air Force videos allegedly show terrorists using groups of children as cover to escape from combat areas and joining groups of children 345 The commander of the military terrorist wing of the PFLP GC in the Gaza Strip stated in an interview that some areas did not present a problem because of the population and building density that would provide the resistance with a shield 345 Hamas operation centre in the middle of a civilian area Professor Newton who an expert in laws of armed conflict testifying in front of a United Nations Fact Finding Mission criticized a statement by a Hamas brigade commander who said The entire people of Gaza are the combatants and therefore it is appropriate for us to issue warnings and then whether if even if they disregard them to occupy their basement or their house or their backyard Professor Newton stated that the legal obligation was to never commingle civilian and military objectives 346 The New York Times quotes a study published by the Israel based Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center charging Hamas with methodically building its military infrastructure in the heart of population centers According to the study Hamas not only hides among the population but has made a main component of its combat strategy channeling the army into the densely populated areas to fight 347 During the Gaza War Hamas invested great effort in preventing civilians from leaving neighborhoods that were in the line of fire and letting them flee to the south of the Strip 348 After Israeli forces fired shells near a UN school in Gaza killing around 30 people Israel s military said the shelling was in response to mortar fire from within the school and asserted that Hamas were using civilians as cover They stated that the dead near the school included Hamas members of a rocket launching cell Two residents of the area confirmed that a group of militants were firing mortar shells from near the school and identified two of the victims as Hamas militants 349 The Goldstone report found indications that Palestinian armed groups launched rockets from urban areas The Mission was not able to obtain any direct evidence of specific intent of shielding the rocket launchers from counterstrokes by the Israeli armed forces 350 From a legal perspective the report said that the launching of attacks close to civilian buildings would have unnecessarily exposed the civilian population of Gaza and violated the customary rules of international humanitarian law and the right to life of the endangered civilians 53 The Goldstone report concluded that there was evidence of the presence of Palestinian armed groups in residential areas The report noted that because of the densely populated nature of the northern half of the Gaza strip once the Israeli forces gained control of the outlying areas in the first few days of the ground invasion most if not all locations still accessible to the Palestinian militants would have been in urban areas It would be difficult to avoid mixing with the civilian population in the small and overcrowded Gaza Strip The report concluded that the Israeli Government had not produced any evidence to support its allegation that Palestinian combatants mingle routinely with civilians in order to cover their movements 350 According to the book The Goldstone Report Reconsidered a compilation of essays authored by legal scholars and published by the pro Israel group NGO Monitor the conclusions were false and largely based on unverified claims made by NGOs 351 352 Combatant use of civilian clothes A New York Times journalist asserted that Hamas militants were fighting in civilian clothes 197 Some NGO reports suggested that in general members of Palestinian armed groups did not wear military uniforms and mixed with the civilian population 350 The UN Fact Finding Mission Goldstone Mission however concluded in its report While reports reviewed by the Mission credibly indicate that members of Palestinian armed groups were not always dressed in a way that distinguished them from civilians the Mission found no evidence that Palestinian combatants mingled with the civilian population with the intention of shielding themselves from attack 350 Military use of medical facilities and uniforms An IDF investigation concluded that Hamas forced the Red Crescent to hand over medic and nurse uniforms for its operatives and commandeered ambulances for fighters transportation during the War Palestinian civilians living in Gaza detailed Hamas attempts to hijack ambulances and the wearing of paramedic uniforms by Hamas fighters An ambulance driver registered with and trained by the Palestinian Red Crescent Society spoke of Hamas efforts to lure the ambulances into the heart of a battle to transport fighters to safety and the hijacking of the al Quds Hospital s fleet of ambulances 353 354 355 356 The IDF claimed that Hamas operated a command and control center inside Shifa Hospital in Gaza City throughout the War and that Hamas field commanders exploited the daily cessation in fighting that the IDF established for humanitarian purposes to receive instructions from senior Hamas officials Addressing the Israeli cabinet an intelligence official claimed that senior members of Hamas sought refuge in the sub level floors believing that Israel would not target them for fear that such a strike would invariably lead to heavy collateral damage to the hospital patients in the upper floors 194 Next to the hospital Militants set up posts that were used for the firing of mortars Underneath a mosque that was located alongside the hospital was discovered a tunnel leading to the maternity ward which was used by Hamas operatives to move undetected After an Israeli airstrike on the central prison which resulted in prisoners being released into the streets several of the 115 prisoners accused of collaboration with Israel who had not yet been tried were executed by Hamas militants wearing civilian clothes in the Shifa hospital compound 357 358 The Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center an Israel based group with close ties to the Israeli military establishment 347 reported that Hamas made extensive use of the Al Fahoura Medical Centre and that they established a military camp and training base next to it The ITIC released aerial pictures showing tunnels dug around the building and the medical centre and that the area surrounding the hospital was heavily mined Rockets were launched in close proximity of the centre The ITIC report stated that Hamas used 10 Gazan hospitals for launching rockets at Israeli towns and for attacking IDF troops 358 Hamas also set up a command centre within a children s hospital located in the Nasser neighbourhood of Gaza City which was used by top Hamas leadership on the night of 27 December Senior Hamas commanders also set up a command center in a Red Crescent Society clinic in Khan Yunis 354 358 An IDF probe released on 22 April 2009 stated that a UN vehicle was attacked by Israeli forces because a Palestinian anti tank squad was being unloaded from the vehicle 354 Amnesty International rejected the charges by Israel that Hamas had systematically used medical facilities vehicles and uniforms as a cover stating that no evidence had been provided proving such actions 359 Further Magen David Adom s submission to the UN Mission investigating the war stated there was no use of PRCS ambulances for the transport of weapons or ammunition and there was no misuse of the emblem by PRCS 360 Following its investigations the Goldstone report concluded that it did not find any evidence to support the allegations that hospital facilities were used by the Gaza authorities or by Palestinian armed groups to shield military activities and that ambulances were used to transport combatants or for other military purposes 53 Controversial tactics allegedly used by Israel Collective punishment The United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict found that Israel at least in part targeted the people of Gaza as a whole The Mission gave its opinion that the operations were in furtherance of an overall policy aimed at punishing the Gaza population for its resilience and for its apparent support for Hamas and possibly with the intent of forcing a change in such support 361 Judge Goldstone later at least partially resiled from this conclusion Disproportionate force Israel was widely criticized by human rights groups for using heavy firepower and causing hundreds of civilian casualties 362 A group of soldiers who took part in the conflict echoed the criticism through both the Israeli NGO Breaking the Silence and a special report by Israeli filmmaker Nurit Kedar that was shown on Britain s Channel 4 in January 2011 363 364 Israel was accused of having a deliberate policy of disproportionate force aimed at the civilian population 365 Israel has said that operational orders emphasized proportionality and humanity while the importance of minimising harm to civilians was made clear to soldiers 363 Retired U S Army colonel Douglas Macgregor gave his opinion as They went in heavy with lots of firepower But at the same time because of good intel and other improvements they were able to be selective and cut down on collateral damage 366 IDF use of human shields On 24 March a report from the UN team responsible for the protection of children in war zones was released it found hundreds of violations of the rights of children and accused Israeli soldiers of using children as human shields bulldozing a home with a woman and child still inside and shelling a building they had ordered civilians into a day earlier 367 One case involved using an 11 year old boy as a human shield by forcing him to enter suspected buildings first and also inspect bags The report also mentioned the boy was used as a shield when Israeli soldiers came under fire 367 368 The Guardian has also received testimony from three Palestinian brothers aged 14 15 and 16 who all claimed to have been used as human shields 369 The UK newspaper The Guardian conducted an investigation of its own which according to the paper uncovered evidence of war crimes including the use of Palestinian children as human shields 370 An Israeli military court later convicted two Israeli soldiers of using human shields 371 which was outlawed by the Israeli Supreme court in 2005 370 The UN fact finding mission investigated four incidents in which Palestinian civilians were coerced blindfolded handcuffed and at gunpoint to enter houses ahead of Israeli soldiers during military operations The mission confirmed the continued use of this practice with published testimonies of Israeli soldiers who had taken part in the military operations The mission concluded that these practices amounted to using civilians as human shields in breach of international law Some civilians were also questioned under threat of death or injury to extract information about Palestinian combatants and tunnels constituting a further violation of international humanitarian law 53 White phosphorus From 5 January reports emerged of use by Israel of white phosphorus during the offensive which was initially denied by Israel 372 There were numerous reports of its use by the IDF during the conflict On 12 January it was reported that more than 50 phosphorus burns victims were in Nasser Hospital On 16 January the UNRWA headquarters was hit with phosphorus munitions 373 As a result of the hit the compound was set ablaze 374 On completion of the three day Israeli withdrawal 21 January an Israeli military spokeswoman said that shells containing phosphorus had been used in Gaza but said that they were used legally as a method to provide a smokescreen 373 The IDF reiterated their position on 13 January saying that it used weapons in compliance with international law while strictly observing that they be used according to the type of combat and its characteristics 375 On 25 March 2009 the United States based human rights organization Human Rights Watch published a 71 page report titled Rain of Fire Israel s Unlawful Use of White Phosphorus in Gaza and said that Israel s usage of the weapon was illegal 376 Donatella Rovera Amnesty s researcher on Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories said that such extensive use of this weapon in Gaza s densely populated residential neighbourhoods is inherently indiscriminate Its repeated use in this manner despite evidence of its indiscriminate effects and its toll on civilians is a war crime she said 377 The Goldstone report accepted that white phosphorus is not illegal under international law but did find that the Israelis were systematically reckless in determining its use in built up areas It also called for serious consideration to be given to the banning of its use as an obscurant 378 source source source source source source source source source source Al Jazeera video Burning Israeli white phosphorus clusters in the streets of Gaza on 11 January 2009 Videos by Al Jazeera of the 2008 2009 Gaza War After watching footage of Israeli troop deployments on television a British soldier who completed numerous combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan with the Intelligence Corps defended the Israeli Army s use of white phosphorus The soldier noted White phosphorus is used because it provides an instant smokescreen other munitions can provide a smokescreen but the effect is not instant Faced with overwhelming enemy fire and wounded comrades every commander would choose to screen his men instantly to do otherwise would be negligent 379 Colonel Lane a military expert testifying in front of the fact finding mission in July 2009 told that white phosphorus is used for smoke generation to hide from the enemy He stated The quality of smoke produced by white phosphorus is superb if you want real smoke for real coverage white phosphorus will give it to you 346 Professor Newton expert in laws of armed conflict testifying in front of the committee said that in an urban area where potential perils are snipers explosive devices and trip wires one effective way to mask forces movement is by white phosphorus In certain cases he added such choice of means would be less harmful for civilian population than other munitions provided that the use of white phosphorus withstands the proportionality test In discussing the principle of proportionality he said that the legality of using white phosphorus in an urban setting could only be decided on a case by case basis taking into account the precise circumstances of its use not in general generically but based on that target at that time He stressed that the humanitarian implications were vital in this assessment giving the example that using white phosphorus on a school yard would have different implications to its use on another area He also said that in his view white phosphorus munition is neither chemical nor incendiary weapon and is not intended to cause damage He said its use was not prohibited by the Chemical Weapons Convention 346 An article by Mark Cantora examining the legal implications of the use of white phosphorus munitions by the IDF published in 2010 in the Gonzaga Journal of International Law argues that Israel s use of white phosphorus in Gaza was technically legal under existing international humanitarian laws and Therefore it is imperative for the international community to convene a White Phosphorus Convention Conference in order to address these issues and fill this substantial gap in international humanitarian law 380 Dense inert metal explosives DIME Dense inert metal explosive DIME is a type of bomb developed to minimize collateral damage 381 Casualties show unusual injuries A military expert working for Human Rights Watch said judging by the nature of the wounds and descriptions given by Gazans made it seem likely that Israel used DIME weapons A Norwegian doctor who worked at Gaza s Shifa Hospital said that pressure waves generated by missile hits are likely the cause and produced by DIME weapons 381 Another Norwegian doctor said they had clear evidence that the Israelis are using a new type of very high explosive weapons which are called Dense Inert Metal Explosive 382 Colonel Lane military expert testifying in front of the fact finding mission in July 2009 told the committee that through his studies no actual proof was found that DIME rounds were used but tungsten iron and sulfur were found in samples analyzed in a forensic lab He is of the view that some weapons systems used in the conflict had some sort of DIME component to reduce the effect on the ground Colonel Lane explained that the idea behind a Focused Lethality Munition FLM which is an example of a DIME munition is that the fragments produced stay within a safety radius of about 6 meters so anybody outside that radius is safe while those within the area of dispersal will be affected severely He commented on the documentations where medics described unusual amputations saying that he was no medical expert but the use of a metal like tungsten and cobalt at short distances would likely have that effect 383 The Goldstone Report wrote that the Mission found that the allegations that DIME weapons were used by Israeli armed forces required further clarification and they were unable to ascertain their usage though it received reports from Palestinian and foreign doctors who had operated in Gaza during the military operations of a high percentage of patients with injuries compatible with their impact It stated that the focused lethality reportedly pursued in DIME weapons could be seen as enhancing compliance with the principle of distinction between civilian and military objects The report added that as it currently stands DIME weapons and weapons armed with heavy metal are not prohibited under international law but do raise specific health concerns 378 An Amnesty International report called on Israel to confirm or deny its use of DIME in order to facilitate the treatment of those injured in the conflict 384 After reports of similar cases in 2006 the IDF had denied the use of DIME weapons 385 After Israeli forces fired shells near a UN school in Gaza killing around 30 people Israel s military said the shelling was in response to mortar fire from within the school and asserted that Hamas were using civilians as cover They stated that the dead near the school included Hamas members of a rocket launching cell Two residents of the area confirmed that a group of militants were firing mortar shells from near the school and identified two of the victims as Hamas militants Accusations of misconduct by IDF soldiers Testimonies from Israeli soldiers allegedly admitting indiscriminate killings of civilians as well as vandalizing homes were reported in March 2009 386 387 388 Soon after the publication of the testimonies reports implying that the testimonies were based on hearsay and not on the firsthand experience started to circulate 388 At the same time another kind of evidence was collected from several soldiers who took part in the fighting that rebutted claims of immoral conduct on the military s part during Gaza War 389 Following investigations the IDF issued an official report concluding that alleged cases of deliberate shooting at civilians did not take place 390 Nine Israeli rights groups reacting to the closure of the investigation issued a joint statement calling for an independent nonpartisan investigative body to be established to look into all Israeli army activity in Gaza 390 In July 2009 the Israeli NGO Breaking the Silence published testimony from 26 soldiers two junior officers and the rest enlisted personnel who took part in the Gaza assault claiming that the IDF used Gazans as human shields improperly fired incendiary white phosphorus shells over civilian areas and used overwhelming firepower that caused needless deaths and destruction 391 392 The report did not represent a cross section of the army but rather they were troops who had approached the group or were reached through acquaintances of NGO members 391 The accusations were made by anonymous people who claimed that they were reserves soldiers and whose faces had been blurred in the filmed talks An Israeli military spokesperson dismissed the testimonies as anonymous hearsay and questioned why Breaking the Silence had not handed over its findings before the media had been informed The Israeli military said some allegations of misconduct had turned out to be second or third hand accounts and the result of recycled rumours 393 394 Breaking the Silence state that their methodology includes the verification of all information by cross referencing the testimonies it collects and that published material has been confirmed by a number of testimonies from several different points of view A representative stated the personal details of the soldiers quoted in the collection and the exact location of the incidents described in the testimonies would readily be made available to any official and independent investigation of the events as long as the identity of the testifiers did not become public 395 A soldier who described using Gazans as human shields told in an interview to Haaretz that he had not seen Palestinians being used as human shields but had been told by his commanders that this occurred 396 In response to the report a dozen English speaking reservists who served in Gaza delivered signed on camera counter testimonies via the SoldiersSpeakOut group about Hamas use of Gazans as human shields and the measures the IDF took to protect Arab civilians 397 398 The special report by Israeli filmmaker Nurit Kedar shown on Channel 4 detailed similar allegations by former IDF soldiers that included vandalism and misconduct by Israeli troops 363 Colonel Richard Kemp former commander of British forces in Afghanistan in his address to the UNHRC asserted that during the conflict the Israel Defense Forces did more to safeguard the rights of civilians in a combat zone than any other army in the history of warfare and that Palestinian civilian casualties were a consequence of Hamas way of fighting which involved using human shields as a matter of policy and deliberate attempts to sacrifice their own civilians He added that Israel took extraordinary measures to give Gaza civilians notice of targeted areas and aborted potentially effective missions in order to prevent civilian casualties 399 Prosecutions The first Israeli soldier to be prosecuted for actions committed during the war was a Givati Brigade soldier who stole a Visa credit card from a Palestinian home and used it to withdraw NIS 1 600 405 He was arrested and tried before the Southern Command Military Court on charges of looting credit card fraud and indecent conduct He was found guilty and sentenced to seven and a half months in military prison 400 In a report submitted to the UN in January 2010 the IDF stated that two senior officers were disciplined for authorizing an artillery attack in violation of rules against their near populated areas Several artillery shells hit the UNRWA compound in Tel al Hawa 401 402 During the attack on 15 January 2009 the compound was set ablaze by white phosphorus shells 378 The officers involved were identified as Gaza Division Commander Brigadier General Eyal Eisenberg and Givati Brigade Commander Colonel Ilan Malka 374 An IDF internal investigation concluded that the firing of the shells violated the IDF orders limiting the use of artillery fire near populated areas and endangered human life 402 IDF sources added later that the shells had been fired to create cover to assist in the extrication of IDF troops some of whom were wounded from an area where Hamas held a superior position 401 An Israeli Government spokesman stated that in this particular case they had found no evidence of criminal wrongdoing and so had not referred the case to criminal investigation 374 In October 2010 Colonel Ilan Malka was interrogated by Israeli military police over the Zeitoun incident and a criminal investigation was opened Malka was suspected of authorizing an airstrike on a building that left numerous members of the Samouni family dead His promotion to the rank of Brigadier General was suspended due to the investigation Malka told investigatiors that he was unaware of the presence of civilians 55 403 He was eventually reprimanded over the incident but it was decided not to indict him No other charges were brought over this incident The IDF denied that they were targeting civilians and The New York Times reported that Hamas members had launched rockets at Israel about a mile away from the residents an area known to have many supporters of Hamas 404 The Palestinian Center for Human Rights called the result disgraceful and Btselem stated the need for an external investigator to look into IDF actions during Cast Lead 405 In June 2010 Chief Advocate General Avichai Mandelblit summoned a recently discharged Givati Brigade sniper for a special hearing The soldier was suspected of opening fire on Palestinian civilians when a group of 30 Palestinians that included women and children waving a white flag approached an IDF position The incident which occurred on 4 January 2009 resulted in the death of a non combatant Mandelblit decided to indict the soldier on a charge of manslaughter despite contradictory testimony and the fact that IDF investigators could not confirm that the soldier was responsible for the death 406 In July 2010 the officer who authorized the airstrike on the Ibrahim al Maqadna Mosque was subjected to disciplinary action as shrapnel caused unintentional injuries to civilians inside The IDF said that the officer failed to exercise appropriate judgement and that he would not be allowed to serve in similar positions of command in the future Another Israeli officer was also reprimanded for allowing a Palestinian man to enter a building to persuade Hamas militants sheltering inside to leave 407 In November 2010 two Givati Brigade Staff Sergeants were convicted by the Southern Command Military Court of using a Palestinian boy as a human shield The soldiers had been accused of forcing nine year old Majed R at gunpoint to open bags suspected of containing bombs in the Tel al Hawa neighborhood Both soldiers were demoted one rank and given three month suspended sentences 55 According to the U S State Department s 2010 Human Rights Report the Military Advocate General investigated over 150 wartime incidents including those mentioned in the Goldstone Report As of July the Military Advocate General launched 47 criminal investigations into the conduct of IDF personnel and completed a significant number of those 408 On 1 April 2011 Judge Richard Goldstone the lead author of the UN report on the conflict published a piece in The Washington Post titled Reconsidering the Goldstone Report on Israel and war crimes Goldstone noted that the subsequent investigations conducted by Israel indicate that civilians were not intentionally targeted as a matter of policy while the crimes allegedly committed by Hamas were intentional goes without saying He further expressed regret that our fact finding mission did not have such evidence explaining the circumstances in which we said civilians in Gaza were targeted because it probably would have influenced our findings about intentionality and war crimes 409 The other principal authors of the UN report Hina Jilani Christine Chinkin and Desmond Travers have rejected Goldstone s reassessment arguing that there is no justification for any demand or expectation for reconsideration of the report as nothing of substance has appeared that would in any way change the context findings or conclusions of that report with respect to any of the parties to the Gaza conflict 65 66 EffectsMain article Effects of the Gaza War Destroyed buildings in Gaza City January 2009 Along with a high casualty rate there were multiple economic industrial and medical effects of the Gaza War The United Nations Development Programme warned that there will be long term consequences of the attacks on Gaza because the livelihoods and assets of tens of thousands of Gaza civilians have been affected 410 Early estimates by independent contractors in Gaza say that Gaza lost nearly 2 billion in assets including 4 000 homes destroyed 411 The IDF destroyed 600 700 factories small industries workshops and business enterprises throughout the Gaza Strip 412 24 mosques 31 security compounds and 10 water or sewage lines 413 The World Health Organization said that 34 health facilities 8 hospitals and 26 primary health care clinics were damaged over the course of the offensive and the UNOCHA said that over 50 United Nations facilities sustained damage of which 28 reported damage in the first three days of the operation 414 On 22 January 2010 Israel paid 10 5 million in compensation to the United Nations for damages to UN property incurred during the Israeli offensive 415 A satellite based damage assessment of the Gaza Strip by the United Nations revealed 2 692 destroyed and severely damaged buildings 220 impact craters on roads and bridges with an estimated length of 167 km 104 mi of paved and unpaved roads damaged 714 impact craters on open ground or cultivated land with an estimated land area of 2 100 hectares 21 km2 187 greenhouses completely destroyed or severely damaged with an estimated area of 28 hectares 0 28 km2 and 2 232 hectares 22 32 km2 of demolished zones targeted by IDF bulldozers tanks and phosphorus shelling 416 Health problems in Gaza Following the war Gaza has witnessed increasing epidemics of health problems At the Al Shifa hospital a constant increase in the percentage of children born with birth defects of about 60 was witnessed when the period of July to September 2008 was compared to the same period in 2009 417 418 Dr Mohammed Abu Shaban director of the Blood Tumors Department in Al Rantisy Hospital in Gaza has witnessed an increase in the number of cases of blood cancer In March 2010 the department had seen 55 cases so far for that year compared to the 20 to 25 cases normally seen in an entire year 419 During the war Norwegian medics said that they had found traces of depleted uranium a radioactive and genotoxic material used in some types of munition in some Gaza residents who were wounded 420 Lawyers who brought back soil samples from Gaza said that areas where these samples were taken contained up to 75 tons of depleted uranium 421 The Israeli government denied it used Depleted Uranium and the United Nations opened an investigation 422 Israel had also initially denied the use of white phosphorus during the war but later acknowledged that indeed it had used white phosphorus to cover troop movements 423 The policy of the Government of Israel is to condition the access of Palestinians who live in the Palestinian territories to healthcare in Israel upon financial coverage from the Palestinian Authority In January 2009 following the war the Palestinian Authority cancelled financial coverage for all medical care for Palestinians in Israeli hospitals including coverage for chronically ill Palestinian patients and those in need of complex care that is not available in other tertiary medical centers in the region This decision was protested by human rights organizations 424 Gaza humanitarian crisis See also 2008 2009 Gaza Strip aid A satellite based damage assessment of the Gaza Strip by the United Nations UNOSAT February 2009 The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported that the Gaza humanitarian crisis is significant and should not be understated It also states that the situation is a human dignity crisis in the Gaza strip entailing a massive destruction of livelihoods and a significant deterioration of infrastructure and basic services Fear and panic are widespread 80 of the population could not support themselves and were dependent on humanitarian assistance 8 The International Red Cross said the situation was intolerable and a full blown humanitarian crisis 425 The importation of necessary food and supplies continues to be blocked even after the respective ceasefires 426 According to the World Food Programme the UN s Food and Agriculture Organization and Palestinian officials between 35 and 60 of the agriculture industry was wrecked With extensive damage occurring to water sources greenhouses and farmland It is estimated that 60 of the agricultural land in the north of the Strip may no longer be arable 427 428 More than 50 800 Gazans were left homeless 411 Extensive destruction was caused to commercial enterprises and to public infrastructure According to Palestinian industrialists 219 factories were destroyed or severely damaged during the Israeli military operation They accounted as part of the 3 of industrial capacity that was operating after the Israeli blockade was imposed which was mostly destroyed during the operation 429 On 3 January before the IDF ground operation Israel s foreign minister Tzipi Livni said that Israel had taken care to protect the civilian population of Gaza and that it had kept the humanitarian situation completely as it should be maintaining Israel s earlier stance 430 The Secretary general of the Arab League Amr Moussa criticized Livni s statement and further criticized the Security Council for not responding faster to the crisis 431 On subsequent reports the UN stated that only an immediate cease fire will be able to address the large scale humanitarian and protection crisis that faces the people of Gaza 432 The Emergency Relief Coordinator of the United Nations has stated that after the end of the Israeli operation at best only 120 truckloads get into Gaza instead of the normal daily requirement including commercial traffic of 500 trucks at minimum It is also reported in his statement and other UN humanitarian office reports that essential items such as construction materials water pipes electrical wires and transformers continue to be effectively banned or only allowed infrequently 429 433 434 435 He also stated that commercial goods must be allowed in and out since Gaza Palestinians do not want or deserve to be dependent on humanitarian aid and that the limited trickle of items into Gaza continue the effective collective punishment of the civilian population and force the counter productive reliance on tunnels for daily essentials 433 436 Tent camp Gaza Strip April 2009 As a result of the conflict the European Union the Organisation of the Islamic Conference and over 50 nations donated humanitarian aid to Gaza including the United States which donated over 20 million 437 On 7 January a UN Relief Works Agency spokesman acknowledged that he was aware of instances where deliveries of humanitarian aid into Gaza were diverted by the Hamas government though never from his agency 438 Additionally on 3 February blankets and food parcels were confiscated by Hamas police personnel from an UNRWA distribution center and on 4 February the UN Emergency Relief Coordinator demanded that the aid be returned immediately 435 The Hamas government issued a statement stating that the incident was a misunderstanding between the drivers of the trucks and has been resolved through direct contact with the UNRWA 439 On 9 February UNRWA lifted the suspension on the movement of its humanitarian supplies into Gaza after the Hamas authorities returned all the aid supplies confiscated 440 The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has described the Israeli procedures for humanitarian organizations entrance to Gaza as inconsistent and unpredictable ones that impedes the ability of organizations to effectively plan their humanitarian response and obstructs efforts to address the humanitarian crisis brought by the 18 months blockade and Israel s military operation 441 The UN also reported that international organizations faced unprecedented denial of access to Gaza by Israel since 5 November and that humanitarian access remained unreliable and needed to be granted on an unrestricted daily basis clarification needed 442 Destroyed buildings in Gaza In a damage assessment by the World Health Organization 48 of the 122 health facilities assessed were found to be damaged or destroyed 15 of Gaza s 27 hospitals and 41 primary health care centers suffered damage and 29 ambulances were partially damaged or destroyed 443 Injured patients needing referral outside Gaza for specialized care were evacuated exclusively through the Egyptian Rafah border crossing In the early stages of the conflict Hamas sealed the border and prevented wounded Palestinians from seeking medical attention in Egypt 444 On 30 December the organization allowed a trickle of medical evacuations from Gaza but restricted their number 445 Gaza Ministry of Health reported that between 29 December and 22 January 608 injured were evacuated through Rafah The Israeli Erez crossing was closed much of the period and only 30 patients were able to exit during the crisis 441 443 An initial survey conducted by the United Nations Development Programme UNDP estimates that 14 000 homes 68 government buildings and 31 non governmental organization offices NGOs were either totally or partially damaged creating about 600 000 tonnes of concrete rubble needing to be removed 435 Since 2007 Israel has not permitted the entry of construction material into Gaza adversely affecting UN projects in particular UNRWA and UNDP who suspended more than 100 million in construction projects due to lack of materials 434 The Israeli Health Ministry and Magen David Adom established an emergency clinic for wounded Gazans at the Erez crossing on 17 June The clinic received only quantify patients none of them with war related injuries and it was suspected that Hamas had instructed civilians not to seek treatment there The clinic closed after ten days 446 Subsequently the Jordanian Army established a field hospital in the Gaza Strip which is still operating when The hospital s equipment staff and military guards are transferred from Jordan through Israel via the Allenby Bridge and outgoing personnel return the same way 447 448 One year after the ceasefire approximately 20 000 people remained displaced 449 Effects on Israel According to HRW during the Gaza War rocket attacks placed up to 800 000 people within range of attack 283 During the conflict life in much of southern Israel was largely paralyzed by more than 30 Hamas rocket and mortar strikes 450 The Israeli Home Front Command issued detailed emergency instructions to Israeli citizens for preparing for and dealing with rocket attacks from the Gaza Strip The instructions included orders to stay within a certain distance of bomb shelters based on proximity to the source of the rockets 451 Hamas Grad rockets increased range of 40 km put more than 700 000 Israelis within strike range 452 prompting 40 of the residents of the southern city of Ashkelon to flee the city despite official calls to stay 453 Throughout the war Palestinian rocket attacks into Israel damaged or destroyed more than 1 500 homes and buildings and 327 vehicles 454 Numerous agricultural fields near Gaza also sustained damage Twenty eight Israeli families lost their homes to rocket attacks and had to temporarily live in hotels 455 Among the buildings hit were nine educational facilities and three synagogues 456 Schools and universities in southern Israel began to close due to rocket threats on 27 December 457 Studies officially resumed on 11 January Only schools with fortified classrooms and bomb shelters were allowed to bring students in and IDF Home Front Command representatives were stationed in the schools 453 458 attendance was low 459 460 461 Palestinian rocket attacks that hit educational facilities caused no casualties 456 462 463 464 The largest hospital on Israel s southern coast Ashkelon s Barzilai Medical Center moved its critical treatment facilities into an underground shelter after a rocket struck beside its helicopter pad on 28 December 465 Most business in Southern Israel stopped upon orders of the Home Front Command with retailers losing an estimated 7 million in the first week Numerous small businesses suffered in decreased sales and were unable to pay employee salaries due to low revenues 456 Major industries remained open but had high absence rates 466 The Manufacturers Association of Israel estimated the direct cost to business and industry to be 88 million NIS and indirect financial losses at several tens of millions of shekels 467 The Israel Tax Authority received 1 728 compensation claims for damages related to the conflict mostly from Ashkelon and Ashdod 467 According to Israeli economist Ron Eichel the war effort cost the Israeli military about 5 billion NIS in military expenditure or 250 million NIS per day 468 An anonymous political source told Ynetnews that the aerial assaults were costing 27 million to 39 million a day in munitions and fuel totaling the first six days of the operation at nearly 265 million for air strikes alone Both the IDF and Treasury refused to disclose the exact amount and the Treasury adamantly denied these figures 469 International lawMain article International law and the Gaza War See also United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict Accusations of violations regarding international humanitarian law which governs the actions by belligerents during an armed conflict have been directed at both Israel and Hamas for their actions during the Gaza War The accusations covered violating laws governing distinction and proportionality by Israel the indiscriminate firing of rockets at civilian locations and extrajudicial violence within the Gaza Strip by Hamas 57 470 As of September 2009 some 360 complaints had been filed by individuals and NGOs at the prosecutor s office in the Hague calling for investigations into alleged crimes committed by Israel during the Gaza War 471 On 15 September 2009 a 574 page report by UN inquiry team was released officially titled Human Rights in Palestine and Other Occupied Arab Territories Report of the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict It concluded that the Israel Defense Forces IDF and Palestinian armed groups committed war crimes and possibly crimes against humanity 472 On 16 October 2009 the UN Human Rights Council endorsed the report 473 Israel s Defense Minister said that the report was distorted falsified and not balanced 362 Human rights organizations have urged both Israel and Hamas to implement an independent investigation into the alleged violations of international law as stipulated by the Goldstone report 474 475 476 On 1 April 2011 Goldstone wrote an op ed that appeared in The Washington Post in which he stated that he no longer believes the report s finding that Israel targeted Palestinian civilians as a matter of policy the most serious accusation the report made against Israel 477 The three other signatories to the UNHRC report Hina Jilani Christine Chinkin and Desmond Travers co authored an op ed that appeared in The Guardian in which they replied that there was no evidence that refutes any of the report s findings 478 In April 2012 the International Criminal Court ICC rejected the Palestinian Authority s PA request that Israel be investigated for claimed war crimes in Gaza in 2009 holding that since the PA is recognized by the UN General Assembly as an observer rather than a state the ICC lacked jurisdiction to hear its request 479 480 The decision was heavily criticized by human rights groups 481 MediaMain article Media and the Gaza War Photojournalists during the conflict International news networks named the conflict War in Gaza and focused on the assault Israeli media called it the War in the South Hebrew מלחמה בדרום Milẖama BaDarom and dispatched reporters to Israeli towns hit by rockets 482 Al Jazeera suggested that it was a war against Palestinian civilians with the title War on Gaza 483 Denied media access Reporter access to the war zone was limited During the Gaza raids against Hamas the Israeli army denied international media access to the conflict zone against a decision by the Israeli Supreme Court to lift the embargo 484 The Foreign Press Association of Israel released a statement saying The unprecedented denial of access to Gaza for the world s media amounts to a severe violation of press freedom and puts the state of Israel in the company of a handful of regimes around the world which regularly keep journalists from doing their jobs 485 Attacks on the media Media facilities in Gaza both foreign and domestic came under Israeli fire in the military campaign 486 On one occasion a Grad rocket may have been launched from a location near the television studios in the Al Shuruk tower in Gaza City Although the Israeli recording of a reporter describing a rocket launch was during the initial aerial bombardment phase the tower was only bombed in the final few days 487 On 29 December the IDF destroyed the facilities and headquarters of Al Aqsa TV though broadcasts continue from elsewhere and a week later IDF soldiers entered the building and seized the equipment The Israelis also hacked into the station s signal and broadcast an animated clip of Hamas leadership being gunned down On 5 January the IDF bombed the offices of the Hamas affiliated Al Risala newsweekly 486 On 9 January the IDF hit the Johara tower of Gaza City which houses more than 20 international news organizations including Turkish French and Iranian outlets 488 The IDF Spokesperson s Unit said that the building had not been targeted though it may have sustained damage from a nearby Israeli strike On 12 January two Arab journalists from Jerusalem working for an Iranian television station were arrested by Israeli Police and indicted in the Jerusalem District Court for violating military censorship protocols They had reported on the IDF ground offensive hours before they were cleared to do so The journalists maintained that they merely stated what was already being said in the international media 489 New media Media relations also played an important role with the use of new media up to and including cyber warfare on the part of both Israel and Hamas 490 Haaretz reported that Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni instructed senior ministry officials to open an aggressive and diplomatic international public relations campaign to gain support for Israel Defense Forces operations in the Gaza Strip Israeli officials at embassies and consulates worldwide have mounted campaigns in local media and to that end have recruited people who speak the native language Israel has also opened an international media centre in Sderot 491 To improve Israeli public relations the Ministry of Immigrant Absorption has recruited 1 000 volunteers with the objective of flooding news websites and blogs that the ministry term as anti Israeli with pro Israeli opinions Volunteers proficient in languages other than Hebrew were particularly sought after 492 493 494 495 Foreign Press Branch head Avital Leibovich believes the new media is another war zone stating We have to be relevant there As part of its public relations campaign the Israeli army opened a YouTube channel through which it will disseminate footage of precision bombing operations in the Gaza Strip as well as aid distribution and other footage of interest to the international community 496 ReactionsMain article International reactions to the Gaza War 2008 09 See also Antisemitic incidents during the Gaza War 2008 09 Protest against the war in Dar es Salaam Tanzania Protest against the war in London UK While Israel defined its operation as a war against Hamas Palestinian representatives and individuals among others viewed it as a war on the Palestinian people 497 498 499 The United Nations Security Council issued a statement on 28 December 2008 calling for an immediate halt to all violence 500 The Arab League 501 the European Union and many nations made similar calls 502 On 9 January 2009 following an earlier failed attempt at a ceasefire resolution 503 the United Nations Security Council passed Resolution 1860 calling for an immediate durable and fully respected cease fire leading to a full Israeli withdrawal and an end to Gaza arms smuggling by 14 votes to one abstention the United States 504 The resolution was ignored by both Israel and Hamas 505 Governmental proclamations regarding the 2008 2009 Israel Gaza conflict Israel Gaza States that endorsed the Israeli position defined Israel s action as falling within its right to defense States that condemned Hamas action only States that called for an end to hostilities and condemned neither both belligerents States that condemned Israeli action only States that endorsed the Hamas position defined Hamas actions as falling within its right of resistance States that made no official statement on the conflict citation needed Many governments expressed positions on the conflict most condemning both belligerents or neither of them Thirty four states mostly members of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference condemned Israel s attacks exclusively Three of them expressed support for Hamas operations or defined them as falling within its right of resistance Nineteen states mostly members of the European Union condemned Hamas attacks exclusively Thirteen of them expressed support for Israel s operations or defined them as falling within Israel s right to self defense Bolivia Jordan Mauritania and Venezuela significantly downscaled or severed their relations with Israel in protest of the offensive 506 507 The conflict saw worldwide civilian demonstrations for and against both sides 508 The conflict triggered a wave of reprisal attacks against Jewish targets in Europe and elsewhere 509 The worldwide number of recorded antisemitic incidents during the conflict more than tripled the number of such incidents in the same period of the previous year marking a two decade high 510 The British government reviewed its export licenses to Israel for violations of EU and national arms export control laws and revoked five export licenses for replacement parts and other equipment for Sa ar 4 5 missile boats used by Israel because they were used in the Gaza offensive although 16 export licenses for other British defense items to Israel were approved 511 The conflict has been called the Gaza Massacre Arabic مجزرة غزة in the Arab world 512 513 514 Khaled Mashal Hamas leader in Damascus called for suicide bombings Ismail Haniyeh Prime Minister of the Hamas government in Gaza said Palestine has never witnessed an uglier massacre 515 On 28 December 2008 a Palestinian laborer working in the Israeli settlement of Modi in Illit struck his supervisor on the head with a sledgehammer stabbed and injured four civilians and beat up several others He was shot and severely wounded by an emergency response team member as he attempted to flee His actions were suspected of being a reprisal for Israel s attack The worker had been employed in the city for about 10 years with no previous trouble but had spoken out against the war shortly before his rampage 516 Reactions in Israel Tel Aviv University students demonstrating in support for operation Cast Lead and the citizens of south Israel The war provoked mixed reactions inside Israel with the Jewish majority largely supporting it and the Arab minority mostly opposing it A poll taken on 8 January 2009 showed that 91 of the Jewish public supported the war and 4 opposed it while a separate poll conducted 4 6 January showed a 94 approval of the war among Jews and 85 disapproval among Israeli Arabs 517 During the war Arab protests took place across the country Within hours of the war s start the Higher Follow Up Committee for Arab citizens of Israel met in Nazareth and declared a day of wrath and mourning for the martyrs among our compatriots in the Gaza Strip and a general strike for the following day Arab demonstrations took place across the country almost every day during the offensive and were described as the largest Arab demonstrations in Israel s history Arab parties and parliamentarians in the Knesset also opposed the offensive 518 519 In Jerusalem Arabs held violent demonstrations which included rock throwing arson and the vandalization of Jewish graves Police arrested dozens of rioters At the University of Haifa Tel Aviv University and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Jewish leftist and Arab students staged anti war demonstrations which were met with pro war counter demonstrations Some confrontations occurred despite police keeping protesters apart 520 The legal rights agency Adalah produced a report highly critical of the Israeli police and court system s response to the opposition to Operation Cast Lead The report said that the Israeli authorities had shown a lack of tolerance for protests and had damaged the freedom of expression of those opposing the attacks on Gaza The report said that the actions showed the lessons of the Or Commission had not been learned The Israeli Ministry of Justice responded that the risk to human life and public welfare had justified their actions 521 The term Sderot cinema has been coined for the tradition of residents in Sderot sitting to view the bombardment of the Gaza strip See alsoPortals Palestine Israel 2008 Israel Hamas ceasefire Civil defense in Israel Effects of the Gaza War 2008 09 Gaza Strip smuggling tunnels Iran Israel proxy conflict Izz ad Din al Qassam Brigades Hamas military wing List of modern conflicts in the Middle East Military equipment of Israel Palestinian domestic weapons production Palestinian political violence R v Saibene Roof knocking Shurrab familyReferencesNotes 1 166 according to the IDF 30 1 391 according to B Tselem 31 and 1 417 according to the PCHR 32 Citations a b c Shane Bauer Palestinian factions united by war Al Jazeera English Archived from the original on 22 January 2009 Retrieved 23 January 2009 a b c d e f Eshel David 11 May 2009 New Tactics Yield Solid Victory in Gaza Aviation Week Archived from the original on 14 June 2011 Retrieved 3 July 2009 a b c d e f g h Spyer Jonathan 10 September 2009 Hamas seeks new doctrine after Gaza War failures The Jerusalem Post Archived from the original on 3 November 2012 Retrieved 24 March 2010 a b Ethan Bonner Hamas Shifts From Rockets to Culture War The New York Times 24 July 2009 a b Sengupta Kim MacIntyre Donald 18 January 2009 Victorious but vilified Israel has destroyed its image and its soul The Independent London Retrieved 3 May 2010 a b Hamas leader in Syria announce one week ceasefire in Gaza Xinhua 18 January 2009 Archived from the original on 29 January 2009 Retrieved 3 August 2009 a b Hamas agrees to 1 week ceasefire CBC News 18 January 2009 Retrieved 3 August 2009 a b c Gaza Humanitarian Situation Report January 2 2009 as of 14 30 PDF UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 2 January 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 14 January 2009 Retrieved 2009 01 02 Altman Alex 4 January 2009 Hamas Leader Khaled Mashaal Time Archived from the original on 6 February 2009 Retrieved 5 June 2010 a b Butcher Tim 2 January 2009 Israel bombs Gaza for seventh day after killing Hamas leader The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 5 June 2010 Israel vows no let up over Gaza BBC News 5 January 2009 Retrieved 4 May 2010 Jason Koutsoukis 4 January 2009 Israeli troops enter Gaza The Sydney Morning Herald Fletcher Martin 12 January 2009 Israel reinforces army before third phase of war in Gaza The Times London Retrieved 17 May 2010 subscription required Institute for National Security Studies PDF Archived from the original PDF on 31 March 2010 Retrieved 5 June 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Esposito Michele K Spring 2009 Military Dimensions The Israeli Arsenal Deployed against Gaza Journal of Palestine Studies University of California Press on behalf of the Institute for Palestine Studies 38 3 175 91 doi 10 1525 jps 2009 XXXVIII 3 175 ISSN 1533 8614 JSTOR 10 1525 jps 2009 XXXVIII 3 175 Israel unveils defense shield for Merkavas United Press International 6 April 2010 Retrieved 7 April 2010 a b c Wall Robert 23 February 2009 Israel unleashed Bulls and Matadors on Gaza Aviation Week Retrieved 5 May 2010 Israeli think tank Hamas has 20 000 armed men in Gaza Strip Associated Press Haaretz 10 April 2008 Butcher Tim 5 January 2009 Hamas fighters now a well organised force The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 3 May 2010 Haidar Eid 2 January 2009 Israel s war of terror against Gaza Socialist Worker Archived from the original on 15 June 2010 Retrieved 5 June 2010 a b c d e Yagna Yanir Ashkenazi Eli Pfeffer Anshel 15 January 2009 Hamas launches first phosphorus rocket at Negev no injuries reported Haaretz Retrieved 5 May 2010 Hamas Military buildup in the Gaza Strip IICC 8 April 2008 p 35 Archived 13 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine Hamas Military buildup in the Gaza Strip IICC 8 April 2008 p 34 Archived 13 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine a b c Hamas Military buildup in the Gaza Strip IICC 8 April 2008 p 39 Archived 28 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine a b Macintrye Donald 4 February 2010 Israeli commander We rewrote rules of war for Gaza conflict The Belfast Telegraph Jerusalem Retrieved 6 March 2010 a b Amos Harel 11 January 2009 Sources Hamas fired anti aircraft missiles at IAF planes Haaretz Retrieved 4 June 2012 Ilan Shahar Suicide bombers wore IDF uniforms says army chief Haaretz Retrieved 5 June 2010 a b Israeli troops step up attacks on Hamas outside Gaza City Sebastian Rotella and Rushdi abu Alouf Los Angeles Times 13 January 2009 a b Field update on Gaza from the Humanitarian Coordinator Archived 5 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine 24 26 January 2009 OCHA oPt United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs occupied Palestinian territory oachopt org a b c d e Lappin 2009 a b c d e f g B Tselem a b c d e f g PCHR 2009 Efraim Inbar amp Eitan Shamir Mowing the Grass Israel s Strategy for Protracted Intractable Conflict Journal of Strategic Studies 37 1 65 90 p 83 Hamas admits 600 700 of its men were killed in Cast Lead 9 November 2010 Haaretz Retrieved 2 March 2011 קצין מצרי נהרג מירי אנשי חמאס סמוך למעבר רפיח Egyptian officer killed by Hamas near the Rafah crossing in Hebrew nana 10 Archived from the original on 25 December 2018 Retrieved 1 January 2009 Two Egyptian Children Police Injured in Israeli Air Strike Near Gaza Border 11 January 2009 Archived from the original on 14 January 2009 Gaza looks like earthquake zone BBC 19 January 2009 Gaza Humanitarian situation BBC News 30 January 2009 Retrieved 24 March 2010 The operation began in the midst of celebrating the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah the name Cast Lead עופרת יצוקה Hebrew pronunciation ofeʁet jetsuka is a famous phrase from Israel s national poet Hayim Nahman Bialik s popular Hebrew children s song Likhvod haḤanukkah לכבוד החנוכה In the song see article in the Hebrew Wikipedia the child narrator is given a dreidel made of cast lead See Operation Cast Lead in Gavriely Nuri Dalia 2013 The Normalization of War in Israeli Discourse 1967 2008 Lanham MD Lexington Books pp 42 43 ISBN 978 0 7391 7260 5 on Google Books Gavriely Nuri 30 shana leMilkhemet Levanon haRishona mabat mekhudash conference 3rd session yitzugei Levanon vehamilkhama batarbut haYisre elit The Hebrew University of Jerusalem The Leonard Davis Institute for International Relations The Department of International Relation and The Department of Communication and Journalism 2 May 2012 1 05 52 ff lecture begins at 56 25 Hebrew Gaita Raimond ed 2010 Gaza Morality Law amp Politics UWA Publishing p 1 ISBN 978 1742580968 Fisher David Wicker Brian 2010 Just war on terror A Christian and Muslim response Ashgate Publishing p 164 ISBN 978 1409408086 Wiegand Krista 2010 Bombs and ballots governance by Islamist terrorist and guerrilla groups Ashgate Publishing p 131 ISBN 978 0754678915 Studies on the Israeli Aggression on Gaza Strip Cast Lead Operation Al Furqan Battle Al Zaytuna Center for Studies amp Consultations Archived from the original on 13 December 2014 the Cast Lead Operation or al Furqan Battle as named by Israel and Hamas respectively Secondary source Abdul Hameed al Kayyali Studies on the Israeli Aggression on Gaza Strip Cast Lead Operation Al Furqan Battle 2009 Maximilian Felsch 2011 Die Hamas eine pragmatische soziale Bewegung Eine transnationale empirische Fallanalyse der Hamas in den besetzten Gebieten in Jordanien im Libanon und in Syrien Hamas a pragmatic social movement A transnational empirical case analysis of Hamas in the occupied territories in Jordan in Lebanon and in Syria in German Waxmann Verlag p 106 ISBN 978 3 8309 2611 5 Retrieved 24 December 2011 Al Mughrabi Nidal Israel tightens grip on urban parts of Gaza Archived 9 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Q amp A Gaza conflict BBC 18 01 2009 John Kroll Torchia Alfred de Montesquiou 18 January 2009 Israeli troops exiting Gaza Hamas ceases fire The Plain Dealer Cleveland Bright Arthur Israel set to launch limited operation in Gaza The Christian Science Monitor 26 December 2008 Archived 8 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Rory McCarthy 16 September 2009 Israel rejects war crimes findings of UN Gaza inquiry The Guardian London Retrieved 8 May 2010 a b Israel and Hamas Conflict in Gaza 2008 2009 PDF Congressional Research Service 19 February 2009 pp 6 7 McCarthy Rory 5 November 2008 Gaza truce broken as Israeli raid kills six Hamas gunmen the Guardian Retrieved 4 March 2020 McCarthy Rory 5 November 2008 Gaza truce broken as Israeli raid kills six Hamas gunmen The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 26 April 2020 a b c d e f g h i Report of the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict PDF London United Nations Human Rights Council Retrieved 15 September 2009 a b c Palestinian groups continue firing rockets in response to Israeli massacres BBC Archived from the original on 16 January 2013 Retrieved 17 December 2011 a b c Israel Soldiers Punishment for Using Boy as Human Shield Inadequate Human Rights Watch 26 November 2010 Retrieved 18 June 2011 Protection of the civilian population Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949 and relating to the Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflicts Protocol I 8 June 1977 International Committee of the Red Cross Retrieved 10 July 2014 a b c d Israel Occupied Palestinian Territories The conflict in Gaza A briefing on applicable law investigations and accountability Amnesty International 19 January 2009 Retrieved 5 June 2009 Rockets land east of Ashdod Archived 4 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine Ynetnews 28 December 2008 Rockets reach Beersheba cause damage Ynetnews 30 December 2008 Lazaroff Tovah 30 September 2009 Ashkelon rocket victim livid report ignored her plight The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 18 June 2011 Another Miracle Rocket Hits Empty Synagogue Arutz Sheva Retrieved 8 May 2010 Hamas Israel set independent cease fires CNN International Last Israeli troops leave Gaza BBC News 21 January 2009 Israeli Security Agency 2010 Annual Summary Data and Trends in Terrorism Shin Bet UN condemns war crimes in Gaza BBC News 15 September 2009 Goldstone Richard 1 April 2011 Reconsidering the Goldstone Report on Israel and War Crimes The Washington Post Retrieved 1 April 2011 a b Authors reject calls to retract Goldstone report on Gaza AFP 14 April 2011 Archived from the original on 3 January 2013 Retrieved 17 April 2011 a b Hina Jilani Christine Chinkin and Desmond Travers 14 April 2011 Goldstone report Statement issued by members of UN mission on Gaza war The Guardian London Retrieved 17 April 2011 A HRC 21 33 of 21 September 2012 Unispal un org Archived from the original on 20 September 2013 Retrieved 17 August 2014 Unnamed CNN Staff 2005 Palestinian Israeli leaders announce cease fire CNN Retrieved 29 June 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help Palestinian Militants Agree to Cease Fire Fox News Associated Press 2006 Retrieved 29 June 2018 Legal Acrobatics The Palestinian Claim that Gaza is Still Occupied Even After Israel Withdraws Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs 26 August 2005 Sabel Robbie 10 February 2008 Analysis Is Gaza blockade a legitimate tool of war The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 24 March 2010 a b Human Rights Council Special Session on the Occupied Palestinian Territories 6 July 2006 Human Rights Watch considers Gaza still occupied Fares Akram and Jodi Ruderen 2013 Gaza Farmers Near Fence With Israel Remain Wary The New York Times Retrieved 2 June 2018 Access restricted areas ARA in the Gaza strip PDF OCHAO 2013 Retrieved 2 June 2018 The Office of the Prosecutor 2014 Situation on Registered Vessels of Comoros Greece and Cambodia Article 53 1 Report PDF International Criminal Court Retrieved 2 June 2018 The Gaza Strip Israel s obligations under international law Hardcover ed BTSELEM 2017 Retrieved 2 June 2018 Levs Josh 6 January 2009 Is Gaza occupied territory CNN Retrieved 30 May 2009 Steven Erlanger 2006 Hamas Fires Rockets at Israel After Calling Off Truce The New York Times Retrieved 29 June 2018 a b Rose David The Gaza Bombshell Vanity Fair Retrieved 24 March 2010 Staff writers 2006 Hamas rejects unfair aid demand BBC Hardcover ed Retrieved 3 June 2018 Jeremy M Sharp Christopher M Blanchard U S Foreign Aid to the Palestinians PDF Congressional Research Service Retrieved 17 August 2014 Nathan Thrall The Only Language They Understand Forcing Compromise in Israel and Palestine Henry Holt and Company 2017 p 271 n 20 Bjorn Brenner Gaza Under Hamas From Islamic Democracy to Islamist Governance I B Tauris 2017 p 207 n 21 Eugenio Lilli New Beginning in US Muslim Relations President Obama and the Arab Awakening Springer 2016 p 98 n 46 Jason Brownlee Democracy Prevention The Politics of the U S Egyptian Alliance Cambridge University Press 2012 p 223 notes 76 78 a b Peter Beinart The Crisis of Zionism Melbourne University Press 2012 p 227 n 77 punish Gazans for electing Israeli leaders said explicitly that their purpose in initiating the blockade was not merely to prevent Hamas and other terrorist groups from importing arms but also to keep the Gazan economy on the brink of collapse Daniel C Kurtzer Scott B Lasensky William B Quandt Steven L Spiegel Shibley Telhami The Peace Puzzle America s Quest for Arab Israeli Peace 1989 2011 Cornell University Press 2012 p 217 The Bush administration s language POV is that Hamas mounted a coup Rose s view supported by NYTs reportage states that Hamas s takeover was preemptive of a coup Gaza under blockade BBC News 15 June 2009 a b c d e Anthony H Cordesman 3 March 2009 The Gaza War A Strategic Analysis PDF Center for Strategic amp International Studies p 7 Archived from the original PDF on 18 April 2009 Kevin Dowling 17 January 2009 Strikes on Gaza continue ahead of imminent ceasefire The Times p 2 Retrieved 17 August 2014 subscription required Israel used calorie count to limit Gaza food during blockade critics claim the Guardian 17 October 2012 Retrieved 4 June 2018 2 279 calories per person How Israel made sure Gaza didn t starve haaretz com 17 October 2012 Retrieved 5 June 2018 Padraig O Malley The Two State Delusion Israel and Palestine A Tale of Two Narratives Penguin 2015 p 393 n 58 Gershon Shafir A Half Century of Occupation Israel Palestine and the World s Most Intractable Conflict University of California Press 2017 p 52 Hussein A Amery Arab Water Security Threats and Opportunities in the Gulf States Cambridge University Press 2015 pp 73 74 Between 2006 and the middle of 2010 Israel imposed a strict blockade against Palestinians living in the Gaza Strip Gisha an Israeli advocacy group described the blockade as tantamount to economic warfare and collective punishment against the 1 5 million residents of Gaza Israeli documents reveal that during that period its military made precise calculations of Gaza s caloric needs to avoid malnutrition and sought to keep Gaza s economy on the brink of collapse For the Israeli army the purpose of the blockade was to weaken Hamas its archenemy Israeli calibrated its economic siege of Palestinian territory by withholding a lot of the food supply which caused real suffering yet allowed enough food through so as not to cause a dire economic crisis that might generate images of hungry children Dov Weissglass an advisor to the Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon joked It s like a meeting with a dietician We have to make them Palestinians much thinner but not enough to die a b POC Monthly Tables October 2008 PDF OCHA oPt October 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 25 February 2009 Retrieved 25 February 2009 Summary of Rocket Fire and Mortar Shelling in 2008 Archived 24 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine pdf Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center Retrieved 14 January 2009 pp 5 7 Drop in rocket fire calculated from data provided in report Uri Blau IDF Sources Conditions Not Yet Optimal for Gaza Exit Haaretz 8 January 2009 a b Barak Ravid Disinformation Secrecy and How the Gaza Offensive came about Haaretz 27 December 2008 Isabel Kershner 25 June 2008 Rockets hit Israel breaking Hamas truce International Herald Tribune Archived from the original on 7 July 2008 a b c Bronner Ethan Taghreed El Khodary 20 December 2008 Gaza Truce May Be Revived by Necessity The New York Times Retrieved 12 February 2009 Norman Finkelstein Gaza An Inquest into Its Martyrdom University of California Press 2018 ISBN 978 0 520 96838 7 p 35 a b c d e Stephen Jones 2009 Gaza The conflict between Israel and Hamas Library House of Commons Retrieved 4 June 2018 The Six Months of the Lull Arrangement PDF Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 13 October 2009 Retrieved 4 June 2018 Kershner Isabel 18 June 2008 Israel Agrees to Truce with Hamas on Gaza The New York Times Retrieved 2 April 2010 a b Israel confirms Hamas ceasefire deal The Independent 18 June 2008 Israel and Hamas agree truce BBC News 18 June 2008 A Hamas official said he was confident all militant groups in Gaza would abide by the agreement brokered by Egypt Nidal al Mughrabi Hamas and Egypt to discuss truce prisoner swap deal Reuters 8 July 2008 Hamas has called on all militant groups in Gaza to abide by the truce but some factions have vowed to respond militarily to Israeli raids in the occupied West Bank which is not covered by the truce Richard Boudreaux Israel and Hamas OK Gaza truce Los Angeles Times June 18 2008 As details of the accord were being worked out Israeli aircraft attacked targets in southern Gaza killing six militants in a car Gaza militants then fired four mortar shells at Israel but no one was hurt Hamas officials said the violence would not prevent the truce from taking effect They said all militant groups in Gaza had had promised to abide by it Top Defense Ministry official If Shalit is not released Rafah stays closed Ynetnews 16 June 2008 Foreign Affairs Committee 2009 Examination of Witnesses Questions 1 19 House of Commons Retrieved 25 June 2018 a b Professor Sir Geoffrey Nice QC and General Sir Nick Parker 2015 Gaza Israel The Legal and Military View Gresham College Retrieved 25 June 2018 Israel Occupied Palestinian Territories OPT Gaza ceasefire Israel and Hamas must step back from the brink PDF Amnesty International 2008 Retrieved 25 June 2018 a b c Mason Victoria 2012 No permission to shoot in Gaza is necessary Israeli State terror against Palestinians in Gaza during Operation Cast Lead In Poynting Scott Whyte David eds Counter Terrorism and State Political Violence The War on Terror as Terror Routledge pp 119 22 ISBN 978 0 415 60720 9 The Six Months of the Lull Arrangement PDF Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the Israel Intelligence Heritage amp Commemoration Center 2008 Retrieved 21 June 2008 a b c Jimmy Carter 2009 The June 2008 Gaza Ceasefire PDF The Carter Center Retrieved 29 June 2018 a b Gareth Porter 2009 Israel Rejected Hamas Ceasefire Offer In December Huffington Post Retrieved 21 June 2018 a b c d e f g Esposit Michele K Spring 2009 Prelude to Operation Cast Lead Israel s Unilateral Disengagement to the Eve of War Journal of Palestine Studies 38 3 139 68 doi 10 1525 jps 2009 xxxviii 3 139 JSTOR 10 1525 jps 2009 XXXVIII 3 139 Hamas vowed to secure the truce but refused to act as Israel s police force by confronting violators On 6 26 Hamas s Gaza security chief and former PA interior minister Said Siyam convened the heads of Gaza s factions to discuss truce adherence and Islamic Jihad pledged to coordinate future responses with Hamas Hamas affiliated imams focused Friday sermons 6 27 on the need to support the truce in the interests of the Palestinian people FACTBOX Israel Palestinians trade blame for truce violations Archived from the original on 29 June 2008 Retrieved 26 June 2008 Qassam lands in Sderot backyard Ynetnews 24 June 2008 Mortar shells land near southern kibbutz Ynetnews 27 June 2008 Palestinians fire mortars at Karni crossing Ynetnetws 29 June 2008 Islamic Jihad calls on Hamas to press Israel to comply with truce Ma an News Agency 2006 Retrieved 24 June 2018 In June 2008 Egypt brokered a six month ceasefire Israel increased the severity of its blockade of Gaza during the ceasefire drastically restricting the entry of supplies necessary for daily living and preventing exports from leaving the Strip The exchange of rockets launched and retaliatory aerial assaults increased late in 2008 with Hamas and Israel blaming each other for a breakdown in the ceasefire The evidence suggests Israel broke the ceasefire with a raid into the Gaza Strip that killed six Hamas men on 4 November the night of the presidential election in the USA Ian Bickerton The Arab Israeli Conflict A Guide for the Perplexed A amp C Black 2012 p 238 three of which fell inside the Gaza Strip five of which fell inside the Gaza Strip The Six Months of the Lull Arrangement PDF Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the Israel ITIC December 2008 Retrieved 4 March 2015 a b c d Gaza truce broken as Israeli raid kills six Hamas gunmen The Guardian Rory McCarthy 5 November 2008 Summary of rocket fire and mortar shelling in 2008 PDF ITIC 1 February 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 24 May 2011 Retrieved 4 March 2015 Phan Nguyen 2012 Dissecting IDF propaganda The numbers behind the rocket attacks Mondoweiss Retrieved 24 June 2018 Richemond Barak Daphne 2018 Underground Warfare Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0190457242 a b Shlaim Avi 2015 From The Historical Archive Israel and the arrogance of power Irish Pages 9 2 133 80 JSTOR 44508360 The Six Months of the Lull Arrangement Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center December 2008 A period of relative quiet between 19 June and 4 November As of 19 June there was a marked reduction in the extent of attacks on the western Negev population The lull was sporadically violated by rocket and mortar shell fire carried out by rogue terrorist organizations in some instances in defiance of Hamas especially by Fatah and Al Qaeda supporters Hamas was careful to maintain the ceasefire The escalation and erosion of the lull arrangement 4 November to the time of this writing December 172 On 4 November the IDF carried out a military action close to the border security fence on the Gazan side to prevent an abduction planned by Hamas which had dug a tunnel under the fence to that purpose Seven Hamas terrorist operatives were killed during the action In retaliation Hamas and the other terrorist organizations attacked Israel with a massive barrage of rockets During the second period a new dynamic was created which replaced the former relative calm Hamas and the other terrorist organizations extended their attacks rocket and mortar shell fire IEDs and light arms fire the IDF operated to prevent attacks within the Gaza Strip Israeli Air Force attacks firing at terrorist squads within the Gaza Strip near the border the terrorist organizations responded with barrages of rocket and mortar shell fire to retaliate for their losses and continued daily sporadic fire in response to which Israel closed the border crossings exerting pressure on Hamas and the Gaza Strip residents With the escalation in rocket and mortar shell attacks which began on 4 November Israel began closing the crossings for longer periods That led to shortages of basic goods in the Gaza Strip and to disruptions in the supply of various types of fuel although electrical power was not cut off since the plant in Ashqelon which supplies 65 of the Gaza Strip s electricity provided an uninterrupted flow of power Israel attack on Gaza Fragile peace shattered again The Telegraph 27 December 2008 Retrieved 24 March 2020 a b Mark LeVine Who will save Israel from itself Al Jazeera 27 December 2009 Richard Goldstone Christine Chinkin Hina Jilani Desmond Travers 25 September 2009 Report of the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict PDF Report UN p 68 Retrieved 24 March 2020 After two months in which few incidents were reported the ceasefire began to founder on 4 November 2008 following an incursion by Israeli soldiers into the Gaza Strip which Israel stated was to close a cross border tunnel that in Israel s view was intended to be used by Palestinian fighters to kidnap Israeli soldiers a href Template Cite report html title Template Cite report cite report a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Harriet Sherwood 2014 Inside the tunnels Hamas built Israel s struggle against new tactic in Gaza war The Guardian Retrieved 24 June 2018 Nicolas Pelham 2006 Gaza s tunnels phenomenon the unintended dynamics of Israel s siege Journal of Palestine Studies Vol 31 No 6 pp 6 31 Dr Eado Hecht Bar Ilan University Israel 2006 Gaza How Hamas tunnel network grew BBC a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Juan Gonzalez 2009 Ex Carter Admin Official Israel Ignored Hamas Offer Days Before Attacking Gaza Violated Ceasefire with Attacks Blockade DemocracyNow Retrieved 24 June 2018 Division for Palestinian Rights DPR November 2008 Chronological Review of Events Relating to the Question of Palestine Monthly media monitoring review UNISPAL Retrieved 25 June 2018 Zvi Bar el 2014 Crushing the Tahadiyeh Ha aretz Retrieved 24 June 2018 Jimmy Carter 2009 An Unnecessary War The Washington Post Retrieved 25 June 2018 Finkelstein Norman 2009 Foiling another Palestinian Peace Offensive Behind the Bloodbath in Gaza PDF Journal of Palestine Studies 39 3 223 39 Retrieved 25 June 2018 The fundamental motives behind the latest Israeli attack on Gaza lie elsewhere 1 in the need to restore Israel s deterrence capacity and 2 in the threat posed by a new Palestinian peace offensive Israel s larger concern in the current offensive New York Times Middle East correspondent Ethan Bronner reported quoting Israeli sources was to re establish Israeli deterrence because its enemies are less afraid of it than they once were or should be Preserving its deterrence capacity has always loomed large in Israeli strategic doctrine It is impossible to claim that those who decided to blow up the tunnel were simply being thoughtless The military establishment was aware of the immediate implications of the measure as well as of the fact that the policy of controlled entry into a narrow area of the Strip leads to the same place an end to the lull That is policy not a tactical decision by a commander on the ground Noam Chomsky 2009 Exterminate all the Brutes Gaza 2009 Retrieved 25 June 2018 Yiftah S Shapir and Gal Perl Finkel Subterranean Warfare A New Old Challenge a chapter inside The Lessons of Operation Protective Edge eds Anat Kurz and Shlomo Brom INSS 2014 a b Rockets fired after Gaza clashes BBC 5 November 2009 Porter Gareth 9 January 2009 Israel Rejected Hamas Ceasefire Offer In December Huffington Post Inter Press Service Retrieved 23 January 2009 Hider James 6 November 2008 Six die in Israeli attack over Hamas tunnel under border to kidnap soldier The Times London Retrieved 8 January 2009 subscription required Hamas militants step up rocket attacks The Times London Associated Press 15 November 2008 Retrieved 8 January 2009 subscription required Unspecified CAMERA staff 2009 Timeline and Causes of Operation Cast Lead In Gaza CAMERA Retrieved 29 June 2018 a b Sofer Roni 13 December 2008 Israel in favor of extending Gaza lull Ynetnews Retrieved 27 December 2008 Israel Rejected Hamas Ceasefire Offer in December IPS 9 January 2009 Archived 24 December 2009 at the Wayback Machine a b Gaza Israel truce in jeopardy Al Jazeera 15 December 2009 a b c Harel Amos Avi Issacharoff Barak Ravid 19 December 2008 Hamas declares end to cease fire Israeli gov t sources fear violence is unavoidable Haaretz Retrieved 27 December 2008 TIMELINE Israeli Hamas violence since truce ended Reuters 5 January 2009 a b Hamas says it will not renew ceasefire The Times 19 December 2008 subscription required Nidal al Mughrabi 2008 Hamas declares end to ceasefire with Israel in Gaza Reuters Retrieved 29 June 2008 Israeli leaders to topple Hamas BBC News 22 December 2008 Retrieved 23 January 2009 Lull ends 3 Qassams hit western Negev Ynetnews 19 December 2008 Israeli defense minister Ongoing rocket fire unacceptable Xinhua 22 December 2008 Archived from the original on 8 February 2009 Retrieved 5 June 2010 Nahmias Roee 23 December 2008 Hamas Willing to renew truce Yedioth Ahronoth Archived from the original on 27 May 2012 Retrieved 2009 03 20 6 Qassams explode in western Negev Ynetnews 23 December 2008 2 Qassams 8 mortar shells fired at Negev overnight Ynetnews 24 December 2008 The War on Gaza PDF Palestinian Human Rights Monitoring Group Archived from the original PDF on 10 May 2010 Retrieved 27 November 2011 al Mughrabi Nidal 24 December 2008 Flare up dims truce hopes along Israel Gaza border Reuters Gaza City PS Retrieved 3 January 2009 a b Hamas 87 shells fired at Israeli targets in 24 hours Bethlehem PS Ma an News 25 December 2008 Retrieved 28 October 2009 Katz Yaakov Herb Keinon 24 December 2008 IDF gets green light to strike Hamas after rocket barrage The Jerusalem Post Archived from the original on 27 December 2008 Retrieved 27 December 2008 Olmert Delivers Last Minute Warning to Gaza Fox News 25 December 2008 Archived from the original on 19 September 2010 6 Qassams land in southern Israel Ynetnews 25 December 2008 Black Ian 29 December 2008 Six months of secret planning then Israel moves against Hamas The Guardian London Retrieved 2 April 2010 a b Ravid Barak 27 December 2008 Disinformation secrecy and lies How the Gaza offensive came about Haaretz Retrieved 27 December 2008 Operation Cast Lead Begins One Israeli and 205 Arabs are Dead Arutz Sheva Retrieved 24 March 2010 a b c d e f gt In Gaza Both Sides Reveal New Gear Defense News 5 January 2009 dead link Report of the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict PDF London United Nations Human Rights Council Retrieved 15 September 2009 Precisely Wrong Human Rights Watch 30 June 2009 Retrieved 5 June 2010 a b Katz Yaakov 28 December 2008 A year s intel gathering yields alpha hits The Jerusalem Post Archived from the original on 28 December 2011 Retrieved 28 December 2008 a b Casualties Reuters 27 December 2008 Efraim Inbar amp Eitan Shamir Mowing the Grass Israel s Strategy for Protracted Intractable Conflict Journal of Strategic Studies 37 1 65 90 67 83 Death toll passes 225 in Israeli offensive on Gaza CBC News 27 December 2008 Harel Amos Issacharoff Avi 28 December 2008 IDF Surprises Hamas With Largest Gaza Operation Since 1967 at Least 225 Killed Haaretz a b B Tselem Explanation of statistics on fatalities Archived 27 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine Israel OPT Immediate access to humanitarian workers and observers essential Amnesty International 31 December 2008 Retrieved 24 March 2010 At least 205 killed as Israeli pounds Gaza Alarabiya 27 December 2008 Israeli jets kill at least 225 in strikes on Gaza The Times 2008 12 28 subscription required a b c d e f g h i j Gaza conflict Timeline BBC News 18 January 2009 Retrieved 5 June 2010 Barzak Ibrahim Jason Keyser 4 January 2009 Israeli troops tanks slice deep into Gaza azcentral com Associated Press Retrieved 18 February 2009 a b c Esposito Michele K Spring 2000 Israeli Arsenal Deployed Against Gaza During Operation Cast Lead PDF Journal of Palestine Studies Institute for Palestine Studies XXXVIII 3 175 91 doi 10 1525 jps 2009 xxxviii 3 175 ISSN 1533 8614 Archived from the original PDF on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 6 March 2010 Examining the Conduct of IDF Operations in Gaza The Washington Institute for Near East Policy 27 March 2009 a b c d Opall Rome Barbara 8 March 2009 Maj Gen Ido Nehushtan Defense News Retrieved 4 August 2009 dead link Hanan Greenberg 18 January 2009 IDF ponders response to rocket fire Ynetnews Ghazali Said MacIntyre Donald 2 January 2009 Profile of a professor who was prepared for martyrdom The Independent London Archived from the original on 5 January 2009 Retrieved 4 January 2009 Butcher Tim 1 January 2009 Hardline Hamas leader killed in air strike on Gaza home The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 2 January 2009 a b Amos Harel 12 January 2009 Hamas leaders hiding in basement of Israel built hospital in Gaza Haaretz Retrieved 4 June 2012 Jihad in Palestine Political Islam and the Israeli Palestinian Conflict Shaul Bartal Routledge footnote 98 a b c IDF phones Gaza residents to warn them of imminent strikes Haaretz Associated Press 2 January 2009 a b c Erlanger Steven 11 January 2009 Gaza War Full of Traps and Trickery The New York Times Retrieved 2 April 2010 Kurz Anat N Emily B Landau 4 January 2009 A response to a Euro Mediterranean appeal The Jerusalem Post Retrieved 10 January 2009 Archived version 2009 01 29 Harel Amos Yoav Stern 4 January 2009 IDF targets senior Hamas figures Haaretz Retrieved 9 January 2009 Israel steps up offensive on Gaza BBC News 3 January 2009 Retrieved 24 March 2010 Donald Macintyre and Kim Sengupta 15 January 2009 Civilian casualties Human rights groups accuse Israelis of war crimes The Independent London Situation Report From The Humanitarian Coordinator January 7 2009 1700 hours PDF UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs 7 January 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 9 January 2009 Retrieved 2009 01 07 Dover idf il Archived 22 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine Amos Harel 29 December 2008 מבצע עופרת יצוקה תקיפת חיל הים ברצועת עזה כך זה נראה Operation Cast Lead Israeli Navy attacks on the Gaza Strip So it seems Haaretz in Hebrew Retrieved 24 March 2010 a b Opall Rome Barbara 11 May 2009 Gaza War Is Battle Lab for Joint Combat Ops Defense News Retrieved 6 August 2009 dead link Human Rights Watch accuses Israel over Gaza drones Reuters 30 June 2009 Report Naval com, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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