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Analysis

The rocket from Gaza that struck an Israeli home and almost caused a war

Seconds made the difference between conflict and containment on Wednesday, Anshel Pfeffer writes

October 17, 2018 18:27
A policeman examines the Beer Sheva house struck by Wednesday’s rocket
2 min read

Seconds made the difference early on Wednesday morning between a new war in Gaza and retaining Israel’s present policy of containment and negotiation.

It was 3.39am in Beer Sheva when the air raid sirens went off. Miri Tamano rushed to get her children — aged 9, 10, and 12 — into the reinforced shelter, moments before a Grad mid-range missile, launched from Gaza, struck their house, half-destroying it.

The Tamano family emerged, shocked but unscathed, and Israel responded with 20 air strikes on Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad targets along the Gazan coastal strip. 

Their targets included a weapons manufacturing facility, an attack tunnel and other military installations — all of which showed Israel was sticking to its practice of the last three-and-a-half years by attacking only unmanned targets, so as not to escalate matters with Hamas.

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