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Topic: Israel begins retreat!
Fanta46's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:29 PM
Edited by Fanta46 on Sun 01/18/09 12:31 PM
Gaza Strip – Hamas offered Israel an immediate weeklong truce Sunday, hours after Israel silenced its guns and grounded its aircraft, but the Islamic militant group conditioned long-term quiet on a complete Israeli withdrawal from the territory.

Israeli tanks rolled out of Gaza Sunday, and infantry soldiers walked across the border to Israel, their guns and packs slung over their shoulders. The withdrawal left wide scenes of destruction in its wake, with buildings flattened, and dozens of bodies recovered from the rubble.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said Israel would leave Gaza quickly if the cease-fire holds.

"We didn't set out to conquer Gaza, we didn't set out to control Gaza, we don't want to remain in Gaza and we intend on leaving Gaza as fast as possible," Olmert said at a dinner with the leaders of Britain, France, Germany and Spain.

He also expressed sorrow over the deaths of civilians in Gaza, calling them "hostages of the Hamas murders" and vowed to prevent a humanitarian crisis in the territory.

Militant rockets peppered southern Israel ahead of the Palestinian truce offer, threatening to re-ignite three weeks of violence that killed more than 1,200 Palestinians — more than half of them civilians, Gaza officials said — and turned the streets of Hamas-ruled Gaza into battlegrounds.

In Gaza, Palestinians loaded vans and donkey carts with mattresses and ventured out to see what was left of their homes after Israel's punishing air and ground assault. Bulldozers shoved aside rubble in Gaza City to clear a path for cars. Medical workers sifting through mounds of concrete said they recovered 100 bodies amid the debris.

Israel mounted the offensive three weeks ago to halt years of rocket attacks, but despite the latest barrage, government spokesman Mark Regev said Israel's cease-fire offer stood. Thirteen Israelis died during the offensive, including four killed by rocket fire.

At least a dozen tanks and armored personnel carriers rumbled back into Israel, with relieved crews waving "victory" signs with their fingers. Hundreds of soldiers, laden with equipment, walked through the rain. Some smiled, others looked weary, their faces smeared with war paint. Israeli flags poked out of their packs and were attached to the tops of radio antennas.

The Israeli army refused to say how many troops had withdrawn.

The Palestinian cease-fire was announced by military leaders in Gaza and in Damascus, Syria, the base of Gaza's exiled Hamas leaders. They did not set a time, but it appeared to be effective immediately.

In Damascus, Moussa Abu Marzouk, Hamas' deputy leader, told Syrian TV that the cease-fire would last a week to give Israel time to withdraw and open all Gaza border crossings to let humanitarian aid into the embattled seaside territory.

"We the Palestinian resistance factions declare a cease-fire from our side in Gaza and we confirm our stance that the enemy's troops must withdraw from Gaza within a week," Abu Marzouk said.

Hamas, which rejects Israel's right to exist, violently seized control of Gaza in June 2007, provoking a harsh Israeli blockade that has deepened the destitution in the territory and confined 1.4 million Palestinians to the tiny coastal strip. Egypt has also kept its border with Gaza largely sealed.

Militants did not back down from their demand that Israel ultimately open blockaded crossings, which serve as economic lifelines for Gaza.

The Hamas offer raised hopes that the cease-fire would stick more than a few hours. Militants had fired 17 rockets into Israel on Sunday, slightly injuring three people, police said, even as foreign leaders tried cement an end to the war in Egypt. Israel briefly retaliated against the rocket assaults with air and artillery strikes.

In Gaza City, the Shahadeh family was loading mattresses into the trunk of a car in Gaza City, preparing to return home to the hard-hit northern Gaza town of Beit Lahiya.

"I've been told that the devils have left," said Riyadh Shahadeh, referring to the Israelis. "I'm going back to see how I'm going to start again. I don't know what happened to my house. ... I am going back there with a heart full of fear because I am not sure if the area is secure or not, but I have no other option."

In southern Israel, residents who have endured rocket attacks for eight years accused the government of stopping the offensive too soon. Israel declared the cease-fire before reaching a long-term solution to the problem of arms smuggling into Gaza, one of the war's declared aims.

Schools in southern Israel had remained closed in anticipation of the rocket fire that was swift to come. Shortly before the rocket fire resumed, the head of a parents association in the town of Sderot faulted the government for not reaching an agreement directly with Hamas, which Israel shuns.

"It's an offensive that ended without achieving its aims," Batya Katar said. "All the weapons went through Egypt. What's happened there?"

"The weapons will continue to come in through the tunnels and by sea," she said.

Before Hamas made its cease-fire offer, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert warned militants not to attack: "This cease-fire is fragile and we must examine it minute by minute, hour by hour."

The Israeli operation outraged the Muslim world, sparking dozens of demonstrations. On Sunday, Qatar announced that it had closed Israel's trade office in the small Gulf Arab state and ordered its staff to leave within seven days.

Qatar is the only Gulf Arab state that has ties with Israel.

Leaders of Germany, France, Spain, Britain, Italy, Turkey and the Czech Republic — which holds the rotating European Union presidency — headed for Egypt to lend international backing to the cease-fire. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon were also expected to attend.

Ban welcomed the Israeli move and called on Hamas to stop its rocket fire. "Urgent humanitarian access for the people of Gaza is the immediate priority," he said.

Israel said it was not sending a representative to the meeting. But Sunday evening, leaders from Britain, Germany, Spain, Italy and France and the European Union were coming to Jerusalem for a working dinner with Olmert.

Hamas, shunned internationally as a terrorist organization, was not invited to the summit in Egypt. But the group has been mediating with Egypt, and any arrangement to open Gaza's blockaded borders for trade would likely need Hamas' acquiescence.

Abbas, too, echoed Hamas' call for a total Israeli withdrawal and the lifting of bruising Israeli sanctions.

Israel's cease-fire "is an important and necessary event but it's insufficient," said Abbas, Hamas' bitter rival and the top leader in the West Bank, the larger of the two Palestinian territories. "There should be a comprehensive Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, a lifting of the siege and a reopening of crossings" to aid, he said, speaking from Egypt.

Under the truce plan, Hamas would not rearm, as militants did during a 6-month truce that preceded the war. In a step toward achieving those guarantees, Israel on Friday won a U.S. commitment to help crack down on weapons smuggling into Egypt and from there, to Gaza.

But Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit said Saturday that his country would not be bound by the agreement. Egypt's cooperation is essential if the smuggling is to be stopped.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090118/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_israel_palestinians

MirrorMirror's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:30 PM


Slideshow: Israeli troops invade Gaza Play Video Video: Israel declares unilateral cease-fire in Gaza AP Play Video Mideast Video: Hamas announces own ceasefire terms Reuters AP – A Palestinian carries a mattress and pillows out of a destroyed house in the Zeitoun neighborhood in … GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip – Hamas offered Israel an immediate weeklong truce Sunday, hours after Israel silenced its guns and grounded its aircraft, but the Islamic militant group conditioned long-term quiet on a complete Israeli withdrawal from the territory.

Israeli tanks rolled out of Gaza Sunday, and infantry soldiers walked across the border to Israel, their guns and packs slung over their shoulders. The withdrawal left wide scenes of destruction in its wake, with buildings flattened, and dozens of bodies recovered from the rubble.

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said Israel would leave Gaza quickly if the cease-fire holds.

"We didn't set out to conquer Gaza, we didn't set out to control Gaza, we don't want to remain in Gaza and we intend on leaving Gaza as fast as possible," Olmert said at a dinner with the leaders of Britain, France, Germany and Spain.

He also expressed sorrow over the deaths of civilians in Gaza, calling them "hostages of the Hamas murders" and vowed to prevent a humanitarian crisis in the territory.

Militant rockets peppered southern Israel ahead of the Palestinian truce offer, threatening to re-ignite three weeks of violence that killed more than 1,200 Palestinians — more than half of them civilians, Gaza officials said — and turned the streets of Hamas-ruled Gaza into battlegrounds.

In Gaza, Palestinians loaded vans and donkey carts with mattresses and ventured out to see what was left of their homes after Israel's punishing air and ground assault. Bulldozers shoved aside rubble in Gaza City to clear a path for cars. Medical workers sifting through mounds of concrete said they recovered 100 bodies amid the debris.

Israel mounted the offensive three weeks ago to halt years of rocket attacks, but despite the latest barrage, government spokesman Mark Regev said Israel's cease-fire offer stood. Thirteen Israelis died during the offensive, including four killed by rocket fire.

At least a dozen tanks and armored personnel carriers rumbled back into Israel, with relieved crews waving "victory" signs with their fingers. Hundreds of soldiers, laden with equipment, walked through the rain. Some smiled, others looked weary, their faces smeared with war paint. Israeli flags poked out of their packs and were attached to the tops of radio antennas.

The Israeli army refused to say how many troops had withdrawn.

The Palestinian cease-fire was announced by military leaders in Gaza and in Damascus, Syria, the base of Gaza's exiled Hamas leaders. They did not set a time, but it appeared to be effective immediately.

In Damascus, Moussa Abu Marzouk, Hamas' deputy leader, told Syrian TV that the cease-fire would last a week to give Israel time to withdraw and open all Gaza border crossings to let humanitarian aid into the embattled seaside territory.

"We the Palestinian resistance factions declare a cease-fire from our side in Gaza and we confirm our stance that the enemy's troops must withdraw from Gaza within a week," Abu Marzouk said.

Hamas, which rejects Israel's right to exist, violently seized control of Gaza in June 2007, provoking a harsh Israeli blockade that has deepened the destitution in the territory and confined 1.4 million Palestinians to the tiny coastal strip. Egypt has also kept its border with Gaza largely sealed.

Militants did not back down from their demand that Israel ultimately open blockaded crossings, which serve as economic lifelines for Gaza.

The Hamas offer raised hopes that the cease-fire would stick more than a few hours. Militants had fired 17 rockets into Israel on Sunday, slightly injuring three people, police said, even as foreign leaders tried cement an end to the war in Egypt. Israel briefly retaliated against the rocket assaults with air and artillery strikes.

In Gaza City, the Shahadeh family was loading mattresses into the trunk of a car in Gaza City, preparing to return home to the hard-hit northern Gaza town of Beit Lahiya.

"I've been told that the devils have left," said Riyadh Shahadeh, referring to the Israelis. "I'm going back to see how I'm going to start again. I don't know what happened to my house. ... I am going back there with a heart full of fear because I am not sure if the area is secure or not, but I have no other option."

In southern Israel, residents who have endured rocket attacks for eight years accused the government of stopping the offensive too soon. Israel declared the cease-fire before reaching a long-term solution to the problem of arms smuggling into Gaza, one of the war's declared aims.

Schools in southern Israel had remained closed in anticipation of the rocket fire that was swift to come. Shortly before the rocket fire resumed, the head of a parents association in the town of Sderot faulted the government for not reaching an agreement directly with Hamas, which Israel shuns.

"It's an offensive that ended without achieving its aims," Batya Katar said. "All the weapons went through Egypt. What's happened there?"

"The weapons will continue to come in through the tunnels and by sea," she said.

Before Hamas made its cease-fire offer, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert warned militants not to attack: "This cease-fire is fragile and we must examine it minute by minute, hour by hour."

The Israeli operation outraged the Muslim world, sparking dozens of demonstrations. On Sunday, Qatar announced that it had closed Israel's trade office in the small Gulf Arab state and ordered its staff to leave within seven days.

Qatar is the only Gulf Arab state that has ties with Israel.

Leaders of Germany, France, Spain, Britain, Italy, Turkey and the Czech Republic — which holds the rotating European Union presidency — headed for Egypt to lend international backing to the cease-fire. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon were also expected to attend.

Ban welcomed the Israeli move and called on Hamas to stop its rocket fire. "Urgent humanitarian access for the people of Gaza is the immediate priority," he said.

Israel said it was not sending a representative to the meeting. But Sunday evening, leaders from Britain, Germany, Spain, Italy and France and the European Union were coming to Jerusalem for a working dinner with Olmert.

Hamas, shunned internationally as a terrorist organization, was not invited to the summit in Egypt. But the group has been mediating with Egypt, and any arrangement to open Gaza's blockaded borders for trade would likely need Hamas' acquiescence.

Abbas, too, echoed Hamas' call for a total Israeli withdrawal and the lifting of bruising Israeli sanctions.

Israel's cease-fire "is an important and necessary event but it's insufficient," said Abbas, Hamas' bitter rival and the top leader in the West Bank, the larger of the two Palestinian territories. "There should be a comprehensive Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, a lifting of the siege and a reopening of crossings" to aid, he said, speaking from Egypt.

Under the truce plan, Hamas would not rearm, as militants did during a 6-month truce that preceded the war. In a step toward achieving those guarantees, Israel on Friday won a U.S. commitment to help crack down on weapons smuggling into Egypt and from there, to Gaza.

But Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit said Saturday that his country would not be bound by the agreement. Egypt's cooperation is essential if the smuggling is to be stopped.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090118/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_israel_palestinians
glasses Thanks for sharing thatglasses

Fanta46's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:33 PM
Mirror,
You are a trip!laugh laugh laugh

adj4u's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:34 PM
why using the word retreat

and you wonder why they retaliate in high force

this is ludacris

they are condemned for fighting back after being attacked

and when they let up it is called a retreat

get real lets pizz them off enough to call it off

how stupid is it to agitate some one you are try to get to do something


Fanta46's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:38 PM
Edited by Fanta46 on Sun 01/18/09 12:39 PM
Because that's what it is!
They killed more than 1200 Palestinians, destroyed hundreds of houses, and achieved nothing!
Are we supposed to be congratulatory?

They retreated from International pressure and criticism.


cdanny47's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:38 PM
I don't think RETREAT is the word I would use either!!!!!!

Fanta46's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:41 PM
Edited by Fanta46 on Sun 01/18/09 12:42 PM

I don't think RETREAT is the word I would use either!!!!!!


What would you call it?
Victory?noway
A sudden act of conscience?laugh laugh

No they retreated from International criticism and condemnation!

FedGuyB16's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:45 PM

Because that's what it is!
They killed more than 1200 Palestinians, destroyed hundreds of houses, and achieved nothing!
Are we supposed to be congratulatory?

They retreated from International pressure and criticism.

The word is WITHDRAWL. Hamas has been picking a fight for years and then when they finally get one...they want to cry foul! You mentioned that over 1200 Palestinians were killed...it's called war. Isreal is doing what everyone else is too afraid to do...they're making people pay for their constant harassment and instigation.

boredinaz06's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:46 PM



This Mercy Israel is Showing will only Last until Hamas gets Stupid and Fires More rockets into Israel!

adj4u's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:46 PM
Edited by adj4u on Sun 01/18/09 12:48 PM

Because that's what it is!
They killed more than 1200 Palestinians, destroyed hundreds of houses, and achieved nothing!
Are we supposed to be congratulatory?

They retreated from International pressure and criticism.





could isreal ever possibly do anything to make you happy

what would you do if yer nieghbor killed someone in your family after you gave them back land you won from them in an earlier contest

and no one would act on their actions

it is a good thing the u s retreated from vietnam isn't it noway




Fanta46's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:47 PM


Because that's what it is!
They killed more than 1200 Palestinians, destroyed hundreds of houses, and achieved nothing!
Are we supposed to be congratulatory?

They retreated from International pressure and criticism.

The word is WITHDRAWL. Hamas has been picking a fight for years and then when they finally get one...they want to cry foul! You mentioned that over 1200 Palestinians were killed...it's called war. Isreal is doing what everyone else is too afraid to do...they're making people pay for their constant harassment and instigation.


That was no war my friend.
It was murder.

FedGuyB16's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:49 PM

That was no war my friend.
It was murder.

And what would you call all of the instigation and rocketing by Hamas??? Improving relations????

adj4u's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:50 PM
Edited by adj4u on Sun 01/18/09 12:51 PM
it was not murder it was retaliation

Fanta46's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:50 PM


Because that's what it is!
They killed more than 1200 Palestinians, destroyed hundreds of houses, and achieved nothing!
Are we supposed to be congratulatory?

They retreated from International pressure and criticism.





could isreal ever possibly do anything to make you happy

what would you do if yer nieghbor killed someone in your family after you gave them back land you won from them in an earlier contest

and no one would act on their actions






I think you are confused adj!
What land did Israel ever give back?
60 years ago they didnt even exist.

They did kill many an Arab through their use of terrorisim in stealing the land they now call Israel!

Fanta46's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:51 PM


That was no war my friend.
It was murder.

And what would you call all of the instigation and rocketing by Hamas??? Improving relations????


Fighting for their life.
Fighting for their Freedom.
Fighting for their rites!

FedGuyB16's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:54 PM

That was no war my friend.
It was murder.

That's what happens when cowards choose to wage a war while hiding behind the "safety" of their populace. You wage enough insurgent battles, you're eventually going to have to deal with the consequences.

adj4u's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:54 PM
i think you are confused

isreal did not decide it would be a country

the world did after ww2

and gaza was captured after war war in 60s

and you still never answered
can they do anything to make you happy

Fanta46's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:55 PM
Hamas is the Democraticly elected gov of the Palestinian people.



Schools in southern Israel had remained closed in anticipation of the rocket fire that was swift to come. Shortly before the rocket fire resumed, the head of a parents association in the town of Sderot faulted the government for not reaching an agreement directly with Hamas, which Israel shuns.

Fanta46's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:59 PM

i think you are confused

isreal did not decide it would be a country

the world did after ww2

and gaza was captured after war war in 60s

and you still never answered
can they do anything to make you happy


Study your history.
You are wrong!

However it would make me happy to see them act responsibly and retreat back to the UN Mandate, which unfairly at the time, divided the land 70% to 30% of the population - Israel, and 30% to 70% of the population Palestine. Then the US quit giving them total economic and military support.

adj4u's photo
Sun 01/18/09 12:59 PM

Hamas is the Democraticly elected gov of the Palestinian people.



Schools in southern Israel had remained closed in anticipation of the rocket fire that was swift to come. Shortly before the rocket fire resumed, the head of a parents association in the town of Sderot faulted the government for not reaching an agreement directly with Hamas, which Israel shuns.



"""""""""""""Hamas is the Democraticly elected gov of the Palestinian people."""""""""""""

thus making the people responsible for the actions of hamas

hamas attacked and isreal retaliated

war is he11

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