News | Kislev 6, 5770 / November 23, '09 | |
![]() Egypt's Sinai: red triangle in center ![]() Check It Out More ![]() | Published: 01/07/09, 2:21 PM Sarkozi: Israel Has Accepted Ceasefireby Hillel Fendel (IsraelNN.com) French President Nicolas Sarkozy has announced that Israel has agreed to a ceasefire with Hamas. Israel has not confirmed. According to the plan, Egypt agrees, for the first time, with Israel's demand to deploy international observers on the Egypt-Gaza border to help stop the wholesale arms-smuggling into Gaza. It insists, however, that Israel must cease its fire immediately and then discuss the details of a full-scale truce. The plan is backed by Sarkozy and Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas. Army Radio reports that Israeli officials rejected the idea out of hand. "We didn't start this offensive in order to buy a cat in a sack [an unknown quantity]," is the Israeli position. Officially, Israel welcomes the Egyptian and French "efforts." A statement released Wednesday afternoon states, "Israel thanks the presidents of Egypt and France for their efforts to advance a solution for the cessation of terrorism from Gaza and an end to arms/weapons smuggling from Egypt into Gaza. Israel views positively dialogue between Egyptian and Israeli elements for the purpose of advancing the matter of a ceasefire." Rice in Favor Ex-Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Danny Ayalon (now a Knesset candidate for the Yisrael Beiteinu party of Avigdor Lieberman) said he does not think the Americans "are really pushing us for a ceasefire. They just don't want a repeat of the Second Lebanon War, when even after 33 days we were not able to categorically defeat Hizbullah. They just want us to provide some good answers about our plans." "I really don't see Bush in his last 13 days in office pushing us to accept a ceasefire," Ayalon said. "They want us to correct the impression left from the previous war in which we didn't deal a crushing blow to the Iranian terror axis." Rice: Give Gaza to Abbas Israeli Soldiers Die for Abbas? The fact that Israel may soon find Abbas's Fatah back in charge of Gaza did not seem to perturb Shteinitz, in keeping with his support for a withdrawal from Gaza. He objected to the unilateral aspect of the 2005 Disengagement, as well as to giving up Israeli control of the Philadelphi Route between Gaza and Egypt, but voted in favor of it in most, if not all, Knesset votes. Shteinitz: Egypt Should Control Smuggling Itself "Egypt is responsible for the arms that have been smuggled into Gaza," he told IsraelNationalNews, "and they can stop it relatively easily in one of two ways: by placing checkpoints on the two roads leading to Gaza through Sinai, or by declaring a three-kilometer area near the border a closed military zone. The border is only 14 kilometers long. They can put a fence around it and allow only residents to come through. An Egyptian general once told Israel that if his government would allow, that's what he would do in order to stop the arms-flow into Gaza." "They don't need any help from the UN to fence off an area about the size of an airport," Shteinitz reiterated. "Notice that in Jordan, where the border is ten times longer - 140 kilometers - there is no arms-smuggling from Jordan into Judea and Samaria." The Chill Zone - Funny, Entertaining Videos (Updated daily) © IsraelNN Syndications - This article may not be republished freely. Review what you can publish free of charge and what requires a syndication payment on the Syndications Page.
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