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No negotiations for cease-fire, Israel says

Fresh killings bring Palestinian death total to 1,712 – most of them civilians
A Palestinian looks for his belongings after a house was destroyed Saturday in an Israeli strike in Rafah, southern Gaza Strip.

JERUSALEM – Israel signaled Saturday it plans to scale back its military operation in the Gaza war and will not participate for now in any cease-fire negotiations in Cairo with Hamas. Hamas suggested it won’t hold its fire in the case of a unilateral Israeli pullout, raising the prospect of renewed hostilities in the future.

Israel continued to pound Gaza with airstrikes Saturday, killing at least 72 Palestinians, many in the southern border town of Rafah, where Israeli troops searched for a soldier feared captured by militants.

In a televised address, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu suggested the Israeli military will reassess its Gaza operation once troops complete the demolition of Hamas tunnels under the Gaza-Israel border. Once the tunnels are demolished, “the military will prepare for continuing action according to our security needs,” he said, stressing all options remain on the table.

“We promised to return the quiet to Israel, and that is what we will do. We will continue to act until that goal is reached, however long it will take and with as much force needed,” Netanyahu said. “Hamas needs to understand that it will pay an intolerable price as far as it is concerned for continuing to fire.”

Since the Gaza war began July 8, at least 1,712 Palestinians – most of them civilians – have been killed and more than 9,000 have been wounded, Palestinian health official Ashraf al-Kidra said. Israel has lost 63 soldiers and three civilians, its highest death toll since its fighting in 2006 with Lebanon’s Hezbollah. Hundreds of soldiers have been wounded.

Large swaths of Gaza have been destroyed, and 250,000 people have been forced to flee their homes.

Earlier Saturday, Cabinet Minister Yuval Steinitz said Israel won’t send a delegation to proposed truce talks in Cairo for now.

Already, there were signs of troop redeployments in Gaza.

Israeli troops and tanks also started a gradual pullback from the area east of the Gaza town of Khan Younis to the border with Israel, residents and police officials there said.

Israel ended a previous major military operation in Gaza more than five years ago with a unilateral pullback.

From an Israeli perspective, a unilateral pullout or troop redeployment to the strip’s fringes is that it can do so on its own terms. Hamas has said it will only halt fire if Israel and Egypt lift their 7-year-old border blockade of the territory.

However, a unilateral pullback does not address the underlying causes of cross-border tensions and carries the risk of a new flare-up of violence in the future.

News of a possible reduction in Israeli military operations in Gaza came as troops continued their search for infantry 2nd Lt. Hadar Goldin. The military has said it believes Goldin was captured in a Hamas ambush east of Rafah about an hour after Friday’s internationally brokered and failed cease-fire took effect.

Hamas has distanced itself from the purported capture, saying it was “not aware until this moment of a missing soldier or his whereabouts or the circumstances of his disappearance.”

Meanwhile, the extent of destruction around Rafah became clear after intense Israeli shelling, which killed 70 and wounded 450.

Entire apartment buildings in Rafah were flattened. Rescue teams sprayed water on charred rubble as families searched the wreckage for any salvageable belongings. Nearly two dozen bodies wrapped in blood-stained white cloth lay piled on the ground and the shelves of a cold storage room in a flower farm.

The farm’s owner, Ghazi Hijazi, said the Health Ministry asked him to keep the bodies.

Imad Baroud, his wife and three kids fled by foot from their home near the Gaza-Egypt border to his parents’ home in the center of Rafah to escape the shelling. He said his home was hit by artillery shells immediately after they left.

“The situation could not be described in words. The kids were yelling, they were scared, my wife was scared. I felt death was close,” Baroud said.

Palestinian officials reported more than 150 Israeli airstrikes Saturday across Gaza, including several against mosques and one against the Hamas-linked Islamic University in Gaza City. Heavy shelling also continued along the border areas.

The Israeli military said it struck 200 targets over the previous 24 hours.

Laub reported from Gaza City, Gaza Strip. Associated Press writers Ian Deitch and Yousur Alhelou in Jerusalem contributed to this report.



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