Special report: Palestine-Israel
Relations
JERUSALEM, March 1 (Xinhua) -- Israel has been trying
to sound out the world reaction over its large-scale ground incursion into
Gaza while it intensified strikes on Gaza during the past few days.
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak on Thursday spoke
over phone with international Quartet Middle East Envoy Tony Blair and Egyptian
Intelligence Minister Omar Suliman and impressed upon them that Israel would no
longer be able to tolerate the current situation.
Holding Hamas responsible for the current escalating
violence in Gaza, Barak said the Gaza violence is the consequence of the rocket
attacks on southern Israel.
"An Israeli response is necessary and will be carried
out," Barak was quoted by local daily Ha'aretz as saying during a visit to the
southern port city of Ashkelon which is witnessing intensive rocket attacks from
Gaza.
Escalating rocket attacks on Israel from Gaza have
prompted the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) to intensify its aerial onslaught on
the Hamas-ruled coastal strip during the past days.
Israeli aircraft have waged dozens of strikes on
numerous targets since Wednesday morning, killing dozens Palestinians.
Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni also seemed to
be preparing the world for an intensified Israeli action, telling visiting
Lithuanian Foreign Minister Petras Vaitiekunas Thursday that the international
community should "respect" all actions that Israel takes to protect its
citizens, according to local daily Jerusalem Post.
Moreover, Israeli Foreign Ministry instructed its
representatives abroad to inform those nations they stay a standpoint that
Israel has never intended to return to Gaza since it left Gaza in 2005, but the
continuation of rocket attacks left no alternative choice for Israel.
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert also said
Wednesday during his visit to Japan that there is a war going on in the south of
Israel and the Gaza Strip.
"No one in Hamas, neither among the low ranks nor
among the senior ranks, will be immune against that war," Olmert said.
Barak has said on Thursday that Israel must prepare
for a further escalation of the tensions and would not be afraid of launching a
large-scale ground offensive into Gaza to put an end to the continuous rocket
attacks.
Israeli deputy defense minister Matan Vilnai was
quoted by Israel Army Radio on Friday as saying that a large-scale military
operation in Gaza is "unavoidable" in a bid to bring a halt to the rocket
attacks on Israel.
Over the past few days, IDF has positioned an
artillery battery near the Gaza border, and dozens of tanks have assembled in an
area north of Gaza, local daily Yedioth Ahronoth reported on Friday.
Ha'aretz on Thursday quoted Israeli military sources
as saying that IDF would complete its preparations for a major ground offensive
in Gaza.
But the sources acknowledged that the final decision
on a large-scale offensive, which is in the hands of Israeli government, has not
yet been made.
Israeli military analysts say that as Ashkelon
becomes a permanent target of Hamas rocket attacks, an Israeli ground offensive
is becoming inevitable and likely to occur sooner rather than later.
The goals of such a ground operation, reportedly in
the planning stages for weeks if not months, would not "merely" be to reduce the
threat of rocket fire and rocket manufacturing in Gaza, but would also likely
entail paralyzing the Hamas government's ability to operate and even include
"regime change," Israeli defense sources were quoted by Yedioth Ahronoth as
saying.