JERUSALEM March 27 —
Israel is staying on high alert against an Iraqi strike despite a
British assertion that coalition forces have disabled Saddam
Hussein's ability to launch missiles from western Iraq, an Israeli
government official said Thursday.
Thousands of Palestinians demonstrated in the West Bank, pleading
with Saddam Hussein to strike Israel with missiles and chemical
weapons. In the 1991 Gulf War, the Jewish state was hit with 39
conventional Scud missiles, which caused heavy damage and hundreds
of injuries but few deaths.
"We have disabled Iraq's ability to launch external aggression
from the west," British Prime Minister Tony Blair said Thursday in a
joint news conference with President Bush.
Western Iraq is the part of the country closest to Israel and the
launching point of the missiles fired in the previous war.
But an Israeli government official who declined to be identified
said Israel still could come under attack from elsewhere in Iraq and
will remain under high alert until the threat of missiles or "other
attacks" is removed completely.
Israelis have been told to keep gas masks with them and to
prepare sealed rooms in case of a chemical or biological attack.
The war in Iraq, which began a week ago, has fueled anger in the
Gaza Strip and West Bank, where Saddam has doled out $35 million to
Palestinian families with relatives killed during the uprising
against Israel.
Meanwhile, military raids continued Friday when Israeli army
officials said troops operating in the Tulkarem refugee camp killed
an armed Palestinian and wounded another.
On Thursday, an Israeli attack helicopter fired two missiles at a
northern town in the Gaza Strip, killing two Palestinian policemen
and injuring more than a dozen. Three Palestinians were captured,
allegedly for firing homemade rockets at Israeli towns.
Also Thursday, Israeli troops raided the West Bank offices of the
International Solidarity Movement, a Palstinian-backed peace group,
and arrested a wanted member of the militant Islamic Jihad group,
the army said. The group's spokesman, Tom Wallace, said the members
did not know the man's identity.
"Strike, strike Tel Aviv with chemicals!" more than 4,000 people
chanted in the West Bank towns of Tulkarem and Tubas on Thursday.
"Bush, the little one, you are a coward! The land of Iraq is not for
you!"
Palestinians in the West Bank, holding posters of Saddam and
waving Iraqi flags, stomped on Israeli and American flags.
The show of support for Saddam came as Bush and Blair stressed
the importance of a "road map" to Palestinian statehood on
Thursday.
The plan will be presented when Palestinian prime
minister-designate, Mahmoud Abbas, is officially confirmed. Under
intense international pressure, Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat
agreed to create the position of premier and introduce other key
reforms.
Without a halt in violence, though, the road map cannot go
forward, said Raanan Gissin, an aide to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
About 2,200 Palestinians have been killed during nearly 30 months of
fighting about a third of the Israeli toll.
"The first stage is the cessation of violence," Gissin said.
"Israel is not afraid of the road map. It is a sequential
process."
The Palestinian Authority has been careful to distance itself
from the Iraqi leader.
photo credit
and caption:
The body of Palestinian
policemen Khalil Fayad, 30, is carried by friends during his
funeral after he died when Israeli troops raided the northern
Gaza town of Beit Hanoun in a hunt for suspected militants
killing two Palestinian policemen with a pair of missiles
fired from a helicopter Thursday March 27, 2003. (AP
Photo/Karel Prinsloo)
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