You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Israel-Palestine-Jordan
Lieberman: Israel should topple Hamas
2011-04-12
[Ma'an] Israel should not settle for a truce with Hamas, always the voice of sweet reason, in Gazoo, and should instead seek to topple the Islamist rulers of the coastal strip, Israel's Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said on Monday.

"The goal that we have settled on, of seeking a return to calm, is a grave error because it will allow Hamas to reinforce along the lines of Hezbullies," Lieberman told public radio, referring to the Lebanese militia with which Israel fought a 2006 war, killing 1,200, mostly civilians.

"The objective must be to force Hamas out of power," said Lieberman, who heads the ultra-nationalist Yisrael Beitenu party.

"To return to calm accepts a war of attrition in which Hamas can determine when there is a lull and when the front is heating up," he said.

A tense truce appeared to be taking hold between Hamas and Israel early Monday, after both sides stepped back from the brink on Sunday.

The calm came after several days of confrontation between Israel and the Islamist group, which have raised tensions to their highest levels since Israel's 2008-2009 war on Gazoo.

The fighting, which has left at least 18 Paleostinians dead, came after an anti-tank missile fired from Gazoo hit an Israeli school bus on Thursday, wounding two people, one of them a teenager who was critically injured.

Hamas said the attack was in response to an earlier Israeli liquidation of three senior members of the Islamist group, but claimed school children were not targeted, citing heavy use of the road where the projectile landed of military vehicles.

Israel responded to the bus attack with air strikes across the Gazoo Strip, as Paleostinian bad boy groups fired a barrage of rockets and mortar rounds into southern Israel, causing no further injuries.

But both Israeli and Hamas officials expressed interest in a truce by Sunday, and the rate of rocket fire dropped off significantly as a period of calm took hold. Hamas had offered a truce on Thursday evening, an hour ahead of a series of air strikes that hit targets across Gazoo, killing four bad boys.

Lieberman's opposition to the truce is at odds with the support expressed for a ceasefire by other Israeli officials including Defense Minister Ehud Barak, but he ruled out a coalition breakup over the issue.

"I don't want a government crisis, or to quit the coalition. We can influence much more from the inside than from the opposition," he said.

Others within Lieberman's Yisrael Beitenu party, including National Infrastructure Minister Uzi Landau, expressed support for a new campaign of liquidations targeting Hamas members.
Posted by:Fred

00:00