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Anshel Pfeffer

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Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

Analysis

Battle over? Few even know when it began

April 14, 2011 11:11
Soldiers next to the school bus which was hit by a rocket at the Sa’ad Juntion, badly injuring two people
2 min read

Establishing the time frame of the latest round of hostilities around the Gaza Strip appears simple. They began a week ago, on Thursday afternoon, when an advanced anti-tank missile slammed into a school bus at the Sa'ad Junction, 3km from the Gaza border. If the bus had not just disgorged its load of children three minutes earlier, casualties would have been much higher than the wounded driver and sole passenger, who is still in a critical condition. And as a senior IDF officer said: "We would have been now in a totally different place, with forces in Gaza on the ground." As it is, the direct targeting of civilians was serious enough: "A red line has been crossed, that is the message Hamas has to understand now."

To reinforce that message, the IDF unleashed the widest and deadliest wave of airstrikes since the end of Operation Cast Lead 25 months ago, targeting missile launch teams, arms depots, command posts and a number of mid-level commanders of Hamas's military wing. Twenty Palestinians were killed, including at least two civilians.

Meanwhile, in the space of three days, Hamas and other Palestinian organisations launched over 130 mortar bombs and rockets at Israeli towns and villages around the Strip.

The damage was negligible, but would have been considerably worse if it were not for the Iron Dome missile defence system that, in its first operational deployment, intercepted and destroyed eight Grad missiles launched at Ashkelon and Beer Sheva.

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