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WAR REPORT
EU warns Israel, Palestinians of 'price to pay' if talks fail
by Staff Writers
Jerusalem (AFP) Jan 22, 2014


Israel hits Gaza as fears rise of new conflict
Gaza City, Palestinian Territories (AFP) Jan 22, 2014 - Increased violence in and around the Gaza Strip, where an overnight air strike killed a Palestinian militant, have prompted blunt warnings from Israel as fears grow of another major confrontation.

The latest Israeli raid -- one of nearly a dozen this month -- comes after cross-border exchanges killed several Palestinians and one Israeli little more than a year after a November 2012 conflict forced Gaza's Islamist rulers Hamas into a fragile ceasefire.

Israel warned it will use "any means" to stop rocket fire from the besieged Palestinian territory, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu holding Hamas entirely responsible for such attacks, and threatening to teach it a lesson "very soon".

Medics said an Israeli air strike killed two Palestinians including one militant in northern Gaza early Wednesday.

Ahmad al-Zaanin, 21, and Mahmud al-Zaanin, 23, died when a missile struck their car as they were driving around the northern town of Beit Hanun, a spokesman for the Hamas-run health ministry said.

Israel's military said the attack targeted Ahmad al-Zaanin and described him as "a senior operative in the PFLP terror organisation" responsible for recent anti-Israeli attacks and who posed an "imminent threat" to civilian lives.

It said Zaanin was behind rocket fire on January 15 which struck open ground shortly after the funeral of former premier Ariel Sharon, which took place several kilometres (miles) from the Gaza border.

A separate Palestinian militant group, Islamic Jihad, claimed Ahmad al-Zaanin as a member, confirming his death and that of "one of his relatives Mahmud al-Zaanin" in the strike "near his home".

The PFLP did not immediately claim Zaanin as a member.

Israel has continued to target Islamic Jihad, Hamas weapons stockpiles and training camps since a ceasefire with Gaza's ruling movement took effect after a bloody eight-day conflict in November 2012.

Netanyahu vowed to teach Hamas a lesson "very soon" if attacks continue, saying that Israel's policy of retaliating "forcefully" against rocket fire from Gaza had produced "a quiet year in 2013".

"If Hamas and the terror organisations have forgotten this lesson, they will learn it again powerfully very soon," he said on Tuesday.

Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon echoed Netanyahu's remarks, saying Israel would use "any means" against Gaza.

"We will not hesitate to use force to combat those who threaten our security, and we will do this using any means we possess," he said in a statement, calling Wednesday's strike "another stage in our fight against rocket fire".

Yaalon's deputy Danny Danon said: "Those who engage in terrorism will pay a high price for their actions."

Israel has insisted that Hamas will be held entirely responsible for any rockets fired from the enclave.

On Tuesday, Hamas said it had deployed forces to "preserve the truce."

But experts said the Islamist movement might have trouble restraining rocket fire from Gaza, given the pressure it is under not to kowtow to its sworn enemy.

"Israel's decision to go back to a policy of targeted assassinations, targeting Palestinians who are suspected of launching rockets... will gradually lead to a dangerous escalation between the Gaza Strip and Israel," said Mkhaimer Abu Saada, a political science professor at Gaza's Al-Azhar University.

"There will be retaliation from other groups, but Hamas will even find it difficult to control its own (armed wing the) Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades."

Over the past month, tensions have soared in and around Gaza after more than a year of relative calm.

A top European Union official warned on Wednesday that both Israel and the Palestinians would have a "price to pay" if US-led peace talks collapse.

Speaking to reporters in Jerusalem, Lars Faaborg-Andersen, the EU's ambassador to Israel, also rebuffed charges by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that Europe was showing a pro-Palestinian bias.

And he warned that persistent Israeli construction on land seized during the 1967 Six Day War was fuelling private European moves to boycott products and services linked to the settlements.

"It is obvious, and we have made it clear to the parties, that there will be a price to pay if these negotiations falter," he said.

US Secretary of State John Kerry coaxed the two sides back to the negotiating table in July with the aim of securing an agreement within nine months. But the talks have shown very little visible progress, overshadowed by disagreements on security and a flurry of settlement announcements.

Since January 1, Israel has pushed ahead with plans for another 2,791 new settler homes in the West Bank, including annexed east Jerusalem, sparking a wave of international condemnation.

By continuing to build up the settlements at the expense of a peace agreement, Israel was likely to find itself more and more shunned by the European public, the envoy warned.

"If Israel were to go down the road of continued settlement expansion and were there not to be any result of the current talks, I'm afraid that what will transpire is a situation in which Israel will find itself increasingly isolated," he said.

"Not necessarily because of any decisions taken at a governmental level but because of decisions taken by a myriad of private, economic actors, be it companies, pension funds or consumers, who will be choosing other products on the supermarket shelves."

Faaborg-Andersen said moves within Europe to require separate labelling for goods manufactured in the settlements were gathering pace every time Israel announced a new round of construction.

"I think it is gaining momentum every time there is a settlement announcement here, and that's one of the reasons why these are very counterproductive, both for the negotiations but also because they don't play in a good way with the public and also the political class in Europe."

So far, such initiatives are in place in Britain and Denmark, and Sweden, Finland and the Benelux countries are looking into it, he said.

Last week, four key European states summoned Israeli ambassadors to protest over new settlement construction, which Netanyahu denounced as "hypocritical," saying the EU was unfairly singling out Israel and lacked "balance and fairness."

But Lars Faaborg-Andersen denied the charge.

"We are passing on messages to both parties, so I don't see any basis for the allegation that we are being one-sided, of not being even-handed on this issue," he said.

"Given this very delicate stage and the high stakes, we are very critical of any developments on the ground that could threaten this very fragile process, and that cuts across the board," he said, citing EU criticism of Palestinian rocket fire from Gaza and incitement.

Asked what kind of price the Palestinians could be expected to pay if the talks failed, he said: "It has been made very clear to the Palestinians that the option of just sitting around waiting isn't really an option."

Although he did not comment directly on press reports suggesting the EU could cut aid to the Palestinian Authority, he noted the "very substantial hole" in the Palestinian budget due to a drop in funding from the Arab states and said the prospect of the EU picking up the tab "might not be very realistic."

"We would like to continue on the basis of what we're doing, but we would like to see a political perspective," said his colleague John Gatt-Rutter, the EU representative to the West Bank and Gaza, noting the economic situation in Europe and competing demands for funds, particularly from Syria and Egypt.

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