Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

Militants and Mullahs will never let Palestinians set up their own rule. Since 1946 they have used violance instead of negotiations. And the result has been gradual loss of Palestinian rule.

Off course Israel can plan a security zone militarily. However the political cost will be tremendous, making it harder for Israel to get back to negotiating table.

In the short term, there is no hope for Palestinian rule or peace in this gad-awful area.

http://english.people.com.cn/200607/05/eng20060705_280342.html

Israel decides to set up security zone in northern Gaza

Israeli security cabinet authorized the army on Wednesday to set up a “security zone” in the northern Gaza Strip to prevent Palestinian militants from firing rockets onto Israel, Israel Radio reported.
The report said that the decision was made at a security cabinet meeting which was convened by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert earlier on Wednesday after a rocket fired by Palestinian militants from Gaza landed in Israel’s coastal city of Ashkelon on Tuesday.
No injuries were reported, but damage was caused to the school building which was hit by the rocket with a 9 km range, the Israeli army said.
Izz el-Deen al-Qassam Brigades, Hamas’ armed wing which also took part in a June 25 cross-border raid during which an Israeli soldier was kidnapped, claimed responsibility for the rocket attack.
Israeli troops continued a broad offensive in the Gaza Strip on Wednesday in a bid to rescue the abducted soldier.
Palestinian militants have stepped up rocket firing on Israel during the past few months, but the rockets seldom land in Ashkelon and rarely result in casualties.
Source: Xinhua

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

The Real Reasons for Israel’s Invasion of Gaza
An Experiment in Human Despair
By JONATHAN COOK
One needed only to watch the interview on British television this week with Israel’s ambassador to the UK to realise that the Israeli army’s tightening of the siege on Gaza, its invasion of the northern parts of the Strip today, and the looming humanitarian crisis across the territory, have nothing to do with the recent capture of an Israeli soldier – or even the feeble home-made Qassam rockets fired, usually ineffectually, into Israel by Palestinian militants.
Under questioning from presenter Jon Snow of Channel Four news on the reasons behind Israel’s bombing of Gaza’s only power station – thereby cutting off electricity to more than half of the Strip’s 1.3 million inhabitants for many months ahead, as well as threatening the water supply – Zvi Ravner denied this action amounted to collective punishment of the civilian population. Rather, he claimed, the electricity station had to be disabled to prevent the soldier’s captors from having the light needed to smuggle him out of Gaza at night. It was left to a bemused Jon Snow to point out that smugglers usually prefer to do their work in the dark and that Israel’s actions were more likely to assist his captors than disadvantage them. The Alice Through the Looking Glass quality of Israeli disinformation over the combined siege and invasion of Gaza – and its widespread and credulous repetition by the Western media – is successfully distracting attention from Israel’s real goals in this one-sided war of attrition. The current destruction of Gaza’s civilian and administrative infrastructure is reminiscent of the Israeli army’s cruel rampages through the streets of West Bank cities in the repeated invasions of 2002 and 2003, and the Jewish settlers’ malicious attacks on Palestinian farmers trying to collect their olive harvests.
The relative absence of these horror stories today is simply a reflection of the terrible success of the wall Israel has built across Palestinian farmland and around Palestinian population centres in the West Bank. Settlers no longer need to plunder the olive harvest when the fruit is being left to rot on the trees because farmers can no longer reach their groves.

In the case of the West Bank invasions, Israeli tanks rolled easily into Palestinian cities that had already been isolated and crippled by the [stranglehold of checkpoints and roadblocks all over the territority. **Israeli heavy armour knocked down electricity pylons as though they were playing a game of ten-pin bowling, snipers shot up the water tanks on people’s roofs, soldiers defecated into office photocopiers and the army sought out Palestinian ministries so that their confidential records and documents could be destroyed or stolen. **Notably, only in the warren of alleys in the overcrowded refugee camps of Jenin and Nablus did the army find the going far tougher and suffer relatively high casualties. Which may explain the military caution that has been exercised by Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in regard to the ground invasion of Gaza. The tiny Strip, besieged on its land borders by the Israeli army behind an electronic fence and on the seafront by the Israeli navy, is one giant, overcrowded refugee camp. The past week has seen Gaza “softened up” with airstrikes on its infrastructure and government ministries. Today, land forces began wreaking more death and destruction – fourteen killed at the time of writing – in “mopping up” exercises in the pattern established earlier in the West Bank.

Three long-standing motives are discernible in Israel’s current menacing of Gaza. First, Israel is determined to continue its campaign of impairing the Palestinian Authority’s ability to govern. This has nothing to do with the recent election of Hamas to run the Palestinian Authority. Israel’s official policy of unilateralism – ignoring the wishes of the Palestinian people – began long before, when Yasser Arafat was in charge. It has continued through the presidency of Mahmoud Abbas, a leader who is about as close to a quisling as Israel is likely to find.](“Blood and Religion: The Unmasking of the Jewish and Democratic State: Cook, Jonathan: 9780745325552: Amazon.com: Books”)
Hamas’s electoral success has merely supplied Israel with the pretext it needs for launching its invasion and the grounds for demanding international support as it chokes the life out of Gaza. Israel doubtless hopes that at the end of this process it will be left with Abbas, a figurehead president backed into a corner and ready to put his name to whatever agreement Israel imposes.
Second, the attack on Gaza – as ever – is partly a distraction from the real battle. It was widely recognised that Ariel Sharon’s dogged pursuit of his Gaza disengagement policy last year was designed to free his hand for the annexation of large chunks of a greater prize, the West Bank, and for securing the biggest prize of all, East Jerusalem. Nothing has changed on this front.
As Israel keeps all eyes directed towards the suffering in Gaza, it is starting to make significant moves in the West Bank and Jerusalem.
[size=]It is preparing for the much-delayed evacuation of a handful of illegal West Bank hilltop settlements – known in Israel as “outposts” – demanded as the first stage of the implementation of the almost-forgotten US-sponsored peace process called the Road Map. These outposts are tiny, often just a few caravans. It will be much to Israel’s advantage if the world fails to examine too closely the miserly act of evacuating these places, which doubtless will later be presented both as Israel having made a huge sacrifice for peace and as having satisfied its side of the Road Map’s conditions.

**The loss of these outposts and a few larger settlements will pave the way for international acceptance of Olmert’s convergence plan, his unilaterally imposed expansion of Israel’s borders at the expense of a viable Palestinian state. ** Equally significant are the overlooked manoeuvres Israel is undertaking in East Jerusalem as it beats a warpath towards Gaza. Last week Israel stripped four Hamas MPs of their right to live in East Jerusalem, effectively expelling them to the West Bank. It also showed that it could lock up them and dozens of other democratically elected Palestinian representatives with barely a peep from the international community.

In yet another dose of Alice in Wonderland, Israel’s policy of making hostages of these MPs was referred to as “arrests” by the Western media. Few bothered to report that the MPs are being deprived of even their most basic rights, such as meeting with their lawyers.

As the four Jerusalem MPs’ lawyers have argued, it is a nonsense that Israel allowed these Hamas politicians to stand in the recent elections and now, after their victory, it calls their membership of the party “support for terrorism”. It is also a disturbing sign of how easily Israel will be able to begin ethnically cleansing East Jerusalem of its Palestinian inhabitants using the flimsiest of excuses.

And third, and perhaps most significantly of all, Israel is using the siege and invasion of Gaza as a laboratory for testing policies it also intends to apply to the West Bank after convergence. Gazans are the guinea pigs on which Olmert can try out the “extreme action” he has been boasting of.

The destruction of Gaza’s power plant and loss of electricity to some 700,000 people; the consequent scarcity of water, build-up of sewage that cannot be disposed of, and inevitable spread of disease; the shortages of fuel and threats to the running of vital services such as hospitals; the sonic booms of Israeli aircraft that terrify Gaza’s children and unpredictable air strikes that terrify everyone; the inability of Palestinian officials to run bombed ministries and provide services; the constant threat of invasion by massed Israeli troops on the “border”; and the breakdown of law and order as Fatah and Hamas gunmen are encouraged to turn on each other. All these factors are designed to one end: the slow demand by Palestinians, civilians and militants alike, to clear out of the hell-hole of Gaza.

The traffic through the tunnels that once served Gaza’s smugglers will change directions: where once cigarettes and arms came into Gaza, the likelihood is that soon it will be people passing through those underground passages to leave Gaza and seek a life outside. If this experiment in human despair works in the small Gaza Strip, its lessons can be applied to much bigger effect in the West Bank ghettoes left behind after convergence. This is how ethnic cleansing looks when it is designed not by butchers in uniforms but by technocrats in suits.[/size]

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

Ethnic cleansing at its "best". Great analysis, right on the button. The zionist entity has no restraint. Yesterday's victims, today's butchers. State terrorism, perhaps?

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

^^ Ethnic cleansing reduces the target population. Palestinian population on the other hand has grown by leaps and bounds.

Real reason for Israeli attack is simple. They want their soldier released without giving Palestinians any break.

Modern warfare is unequal in favor of the one with technology and know-how. Palestinians don't quit using their Qassam rockets, then why to complain about sidewinders coming down from Israeli planes.

Palestinian tribals do not have sophisticated plan to live in modern world. I wish they had leaders like Jinnah and Liaqat Ali Khan. Only such suited booted leaders can get these Palestinians out of trouble.

One day when Palestinians can present power at least one tenth of Israel, I'll take sides. Right now the ratio is worse than 1 to 10,000 against Palestinians. So there is no question of protest or complaints. The only way out is to save as many Palestinians as possible from this never ending circle of violence. Right now it is the only way out for Palestinians to stop their attacks immediately.

There is no point for a single-pusly (emaciated) man to continue pin-pricking a giant.

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

Oh the great "peaceful Israel". Who is there for the Palestinians...? Where is United States, the "champion of peace and democracy"? Where is Europe and their response to the siege of Gaza? Its a collective punishment, Israel has not taken the precautions. Well, what "precautions" were there to begin with?

Palestinian militants kill two soldiers and take one prisonar. Response; Power stations blown away, sweage and water systems grind to hald, bridges and building destroyed and the random killing of civilians. What is the response from the world? Nothing, zero...for them this is a fair play. This is acceptable, this is how Israel exists. This is how they "protect themselves".

Is this the way to react, by destroying insfrastructure, by cutting down electricity, by calling over 15,000 people to run from their homes? Palestinians are on the streets and you have a government that has been kidnap. Israel is threathing to kill PM and their leaders and it is all OK with the world...!

Where is the "partner in peace"? Where are United States and Europe who want to see peace in the Middle East? The number of innocent civilians killed in the attacks are alone over the number of Israel victims. This is not "retaliation", this is terrorism....and then they calim to be "morally bright".

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

OK, please enlighten us as to "what is the way to react?"

Is there a rule book written by you or Arabs that describes how Israel should react in a given situation?

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

antiobl, does your train of thought have a caboose?

If you think the current strong-arm approach from Israel is going to ensure their safety, than you are amazingly wrong. This is only going to verfiy the on-going violence. With each act of aggression by Israel is going to be met by retaliation.

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

Well the strong arm approach has helped Israel increase it's area many times over. Sure there are suicide bombers, and occasional rocket attack. But the ultimate losers so far are arabs.

People who complain about "strong arm" tactics of Israel are funny people! Dare I say!

Israel Palestinian conflict is a serious business and not some Boxing match.

Boxing matches have referees and there are rules such as not hitting under the belt. Unfortunately Arabs and their supporters treat Palestinian-Israeli conflict as some kind of Boxing match. Well it is not a game man! It is not a game!

Palestinians are losing every day, every hour, every minute, and every second. There must be a change of course. Otherwise 10 years from now what little is left in the form of Palestinian camps will be gone too.

It is not a time to prove who is right and who is wrong. That time is long gone. Our effort is to save Gaza for self rule of Palestinians who respect the boundaries of Israel for at least 20 years. Only after that time, we will see reduction in hostilities.

If we can make Palestinian militants stop now, we may be able to save Gaza and West Bank. Otherwise the next Palestine may be formed in the middle of Sinai desert and even that enclosed by barbed wire.

So look at practicalities man! Leave your emotions home when it comes to saving lives.

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

Jews are a vile and evil people. Thats the long and short of it. They are enemies of God, and seek to humiliate Palestinians.

Such articles seek only to strengthen pro Palestinian feeling.

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

^ And such ignorant, racist comments only strengthen anti-Palestinian/anti-Arab/anti-Muslim sentiment and pro-Israeli feeling.

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

We are well aware of your anti Islamic hate. Our's is simply the hate that hate makes.

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

Here is an interesting piece from the Jerusalem Post. More than a few grains of truth. The author rightly points out that the rest of the Arab world has moved past the wars of the past, and that not a single Arab country is rushing to the defense of the Palestinians during this current Israeli incursion. Thus far, very little money has been collected by Hamas to run the governement. Wealthy oil states have proven less generous than the EU and the US were previously. Irans’ big commitment of $50Million either has not shown up, or was spent the first month to pay half a months back wages. Now Hamas is calling on the unpaid security services to fight against the Israelis. It’s more than pathetic.

Rattling the Cage: Giving up on the Palestinians

None of these kidnappings, bombings and killings would be going on now if the Palestinians hadn’t welcomed Israel’s exit from Gaza, settlers and soldiers, with only more rockets aimed at Israeli civilians.
If the Palestinians had taken last summer’s disengagement as a confidence-building measure and responded in kind by suspending attacks, instead of taking it as a sign of weakness that vindicated those attacks, things could have been different.
If someone had told me in the 1980s or ‘90s that Israel would one day get out of Gaza, I would have predicted that this would definitely soften the Palestinians’ attitude, that it would bring the two sides closer together.
I would have said the same thing if someone had told me Israel would one day offer the Palestinians 100 percent of Gaza and 97% of the West Bank, including much of Arab east Jerusalem, in peace negotiations.
But by the time Israel left Gaza, I realized the Palestinians - as a whole, not Mahmoud Abbas and the other powerless moderates - would conclude from this that terror works, and go out to do more. By last summer I looked to IDF retaliations, not territorial concessions, to bring Israel peace. I still do - on the border with Gaza, and one day on the border with a post-occupation West Bank.
I still believe what I’ve always believed - that Israel has no right to rule the Palestinians, that ruling them is bad, not good, for Israeli security, so it’s both immoral and impractical for Israel to gobble up the only territory the Palestinians have for their own.
However, the belief I’ve lost is that the Palestinians are a basically rational, reasonable nation, that they can be talked into putting down their weapons and making peace with Israel - if not out of goodwill, than out of their own self-interest.
What I believe now is that only Israeli military deterrence, which will no doubt require the periodic use of force, can get the Palestinians to stop fighting.
MY DISILLUSIONMENT with them began after the 2000 Camp David talks - but not because they didn’t accept Israel’s offer. They had no obligation to accept it, and refusing it didn’t make them into warmongers. What appalled me, instead, was how triumphant Arafat and the Palestinians were after the talks failed. “Saladin” they were calling Arafat as they carried him on their shoulders. The Israeli peace camp was stunned and trying not to despair, while our “partners” were exultant.
Something was wrong here. Something was out of whack.
After the intifada got under way, what embittered me was not that the Palestinians had gone to war. Tension was high after Camp David, Ariel Sharon and a thousand cops went up to the Temple Mount, the riot ended with a half-dozen Palestinians dead - I could understand a spasm of rage lasting a week or two.
What blighted my view of the Palestinians was that the intifada didn’t stop - because they were having too glorious a time killing and dying. For them it wasn’t the tragedy that Bill Clinton and the Europeans were moaning over - it was the greatest thing they’d ever done. They just got crazier and crazier. (Again, Abbas and a few others were speaking against the terror from the beginning, but they didn’t count.) At the same time came another source of disillusionment. After the intifada began, the Palestinians themselves declared proudly that their role model was Hizbullah. As with the disengagement from Gaza, they’d welcomed Israel’s withdrawal from Lebanon as a “prize for terror” instead of a signal that Israel was serious about peace. (Unlike those who still regret that the IDF left Lebanon, I don’t think this was the catalyst for the intifada, but only one of many.)

Finally, what caused me to give up on the Palestinians was watching Yasser Arafat in action - without giving him every benefit of every doubt, but rather just taking him at face value. What a gargoyle, what a caricature of a corrupt, violent, temperamental, megalomaniacal dictator. The one time I saw him in person was in early 2001 at the Mukata, when US secretary of state Colin Powell came to visit, and, after addressing Powell as “general,” he smiled that hideous smile of his and said, “But then, I am a general too.” And all his lackeys in the hall exploded in laughter at the rais’s legendary wit.
This was the symbol of the Palestinian people. This was their leader, their inspiration, since 1969. The character of Yasser Arafat wasn’t incidental to the national character of the Palestinians, it was a reflection of it. Which is a very depressing realization.
SO WHY are they like this? Because they’re Arabs, because they’re Muslims, because they’re a nation of the Middle East? No, not at all. We’ve made peace with Egypt. We’ve made peace with Jordan. The other Arab countries may not like us, but they’re not fighting us.
Look at what’s been going on in this crisis with Gaza - while the Palestinians are being the Palestinians, Egypt has objectively taken Israel’s side. Hosni Mubarak tried to broker a prisoner exchange for Gilad Shalit that I’m sure Ehud Olmert would have gone for, but this meant, of course, that Hamas and its partners never would have considered it. (The deal was for Israel to release prisoners due to be released within the year anyway, in return for Shalit.)
Right after the kidnapping, Egypt put 2,500 soldiers along the border with Gaza - to keep the kidnappers from smuggling Shalit into Sinai, and to keep masses of Palestinians from stealing into Sinai themselves.
So the Palestinians’ problem isn’t that they’re Arab or Muslim. It’s not that they don’t accept Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state in the Middle East - which Arab or Muslim around here does? But the other Muslims aren’t fighting Israel over it; only the Palestinians are.
The difference, the thing that’s unique about the Palestinians in this region, is that they alone have had to build their nation in direct competition with a people that runs circles around them at nation-building.
The other Arabs can hate Israel and go on with their lives. The Palestinians can’t. The other Arabs can forget their losses in war to Israel; their countries are intact. The Palestinians’ losses in war to Israel have left their country in pieces, and themselves scattered. They live with the results of their war losses to Israel every day.
Evidently they can’t forget, they can’t move on.
Nobody wants them for neighbors, either; Israel is determined to separate from them, while Egypt and Jordan are more determined to stay separate from them.
This is another belief I’ve lost - in the possibility of a “viable” Palestinian state. With whom for leaders - Hamas and the Army of Islam and Islamic Jihad and al-Qaida? With half the state in the West Bank and the other half in Gaza, with nothing but “Keep Out” signs in the middle and all around?
I still think Israel, because of its military superiority over the Palestinians, will one day leave the West Bank and live more or less in peace. But even if and when this conflict ends or at least winds down happily for Israel, I don’t see a happy anything in store for the Palestinians. They’re unlucky. History found them in the wrong place at the wrong time.
http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?apage=1&cid=1150885927302&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:


You are right, I do hate anti-Islamic, just as I hate anti-Jewish.

Sorry, but there is no justification for calling the follwers of a religion vile, evil and enemies of God. If were trying by your inarticulate post to say that your hatred is justified by some Jews' hatred of Palestinians, then you are saying it is ok for the non-Muslim world to hate Muslims because of the hatred and actions of some Muslims.

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

The Arab league $50 million to Palestinian authority earlier this week.

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

The non Muslim world (the leaders) do hate Muslims. As do you.

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

Not quite. There is a big difference between the amount of money pledged, and the amout that was actually given. The operations of the PA costs about $50 per month. Earlier this week government employees were paid the equivalent of one half months pay. They have been unpaid for over four months. Saudi and some other states pledged over $100 million this week, but seldom does the PA collect half of that, and then it is frequently months later when the collections actually arrive. This far $50 Million has been pledged by the Arab League, $50 Million has been pledged by Iran. $100 Million has been pledged by Saudi and others, totalling pledges of a little over $200 Million. Last year the cash contributed by the EU and US totaled close to a billion, and taxes collected by the Isrealis was over half a billion. This geve the PA a total budget of $1.5 Billion, and inactuality the PA borrowed money and paid out more than it collected.

In other words, Hamas has no funds to run a government, and the big sources of money have either dried up, or have already pledged. Hamas is a month or two from collapse. No one supports Hamas' radical agenda, and no one is willing to provide any funds other than the most basic of subsistance. They have already lost, they just don't know it.

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

$50 Million pledged and wired to the PA this week. Also, in June, Mahmoud Zahar, the Palestinian Foreign Minister, brought $20m into Gaza through the border crossing with Egypt, collected from Muslim countries. Not bad going so far, and more money will be on it's way. It's not through want of trying by Muslim countries to give money to the PA, just Israel blocking it. Your earlier predictions that money pledged would not be delivered has been proven wrong.

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

Here is the breakdown. $50 million, even $300 Million barely makes a dent. Teachers have been unpaid for nine months. Unemployment is up 6% to 34%. “Not bad going so far?” you have no idea how much is needed, and how little has been delivered. A pittance. The entire Palestinian economy is gone, devastated to less than 20% of what it was pre-Intifada. As long as people think a trickle of donations is “not bad so far”, you will not understand that Hamas policies and Arafats’ Intifada have brought the Palestinian people to the brink of a collapsed state. Fatah and Hamas are no better than warlords at this point. Utter defeat.

“Some 700,000 Palestinians depend on PA wages. The PLC secretary general, Mahmoud Ramahi, said: “The number of PA employees grew from 120,000 in 2000 to 167,000 in 2006”; 10,000 of them were hired in the last three months of the previous government, intended to ensure Fatah’s electoral victory. Of the PA’s $1.8 billion budget for 2005, $790m came from customs revenues from Israel, $360 million from internal taxes and the rest from international aid.”
http://www.pej.org/html/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=4959&mode=thread&order=0&thold=0

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

Dear SB, it is time to move away from this "Arab League" or other Arab organizations. These are all bunch of sheep, who can easily do Ba Ba

Ba Ba Palestinian Sheep, have you any money?
Yes Al, Yes Al! 3 Bags and that's all!
One for the qassam rockets,
One for the suicide bombers,
One for the crazy and corrupt leaders,
Ba Ba Ba.

The poem then continues on

Ba ba black sheep, I am the Palestinian sheep
Nothing for the poor Palestinian sheep,
They don't even matter,
We the Arabs want them to live in Gaza Ghettos
So we can beat the anti-Semitic drums
So we can beat Islamic drums
So we can ba ba against USA,
and then some more ba ba.

On a serious note, Palestinian people have been pushed to militancy by these ba ba leaders for the last 60 years.

*Had these poor Palestinians blessed with Jinnah and Liaqat Ali Khan,
they would have accepted the borders in 1940s. By now they would have had their own country, and living side by side with Israelis.
*

Sure it wouldn't have been a love-feast in the area. Still Palestinians would have their own country.

Unfortunately commie and Arab ba ba black sheep have destroyed every hope of peace in the Middle East. Why?

Because Arab leaders and Arab league are just Ba Ba.

Re: Sad and shortlived Palestinian rule in Gaza:

antiobl, your excuse regarding "saving Israel" is pathetic and lame. Palestinians are the victims here, they are getting killed. Their land is being invaded and their lives are made a living hell. Amnesty International calls Israel's brutal response in Gaza "war crimes". If that's fair to people than I feel sorry for their existance. These are not over-blown emotions rather than facts.

If United States demands Hamas to recongnize Israel and renounce violence than they need to say the same things to the Israelis. Why the special treatment? Israeli soldiers and settlers continue to attack, terroirze and kill Palestinian civilians and this is how you save Gaza?

According to the World Health Organization, the essential medical supplies have run down because Isreal have made it impossible for the doctors and nurses to have the access. We are talking about serious humanitarian consequences for people living in the region. This is the way to "ensure security"?

Bottom line is this, Palestinians and their democratically elected government are backed by the internatinal law; whereas Israel by the United States. If people have any values and morals, they'll wholeheatdly reject this invasion and killing of innocent civilians by Israel.