Asked about the report, Mr. Shapiro declined to comment.
The Qassam Brigades’ latest statement underscored the ongoing challenge of matching international diplomacy to the asymmetrical combat on the ground. Mr. Kerry had said that during the 72-hour cease-fire, Israel could continue operations to destroy tunnels into its territory – the stated goal of the ground campaign that it began on July 17. Hamas had rejected an earlier pause in the fighting because of this condition demanded by Israel, which many in Gaza find fundamentally unfair, viewing it as essentially saying that one side can continue its operation and the other cannot.
Qassam said it had only agreed to stop firing rockets on “Zionist towns and cities” for the 72-hour pause. “On the operational level, we can’t cease firing against the troops advancing into Gaza, which work and move all the time so they could collide with our ambushes,” the statement said. “This will definitely lead to clashes.”
Fares Akram reported from Gaza City and Jodi Rudoren from Jerusalem. (NY Times)
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