Isreal PM Benjamin.
Palestinians hold up national and Fatah flags during a rally marking the anniversary of the founding of the movement
Palestinians remove a body from a smuggling tunnel after the tunnel was hit by an Israeli airstrike near the border between the Gaza Strip and Egypt
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has come under international pressure to change his mind and meet Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, an official said Sunday.
Asked about that, Saeb Erekat, the chief Palestinian negotiator, said that "there are no politics without pressure."
President Abbas refuses to meet Netanyahu, who took office last April, unless he stops Jewish settlement in the West Bank and East Jerusalem and endorses the two-state solution.
Erekat reiterated that the halting of settlement activities "is an Israeli obligation that must be carried out," explaining that this demand is not a Palestinian precondition on the resumption of the talks that have been stalled when Israel launched Gaza military operation in December 2008.
Egyptian and Jordanian officials visited the United States recently to discuss Washington's efforts to restart the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.
Following his meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmed Abul Gheit ruled out hosting a meeting between Abbas and Netanyahu in the near future.
Israel complains to US over 'Palestinian incitement'
Israel has complained to the United States that the Palestinian leadership is glorifying those involved in attacks against the Jewish state, officials said on Thursday.
"Over the last few days the Israeli government has raised serious concerns with Washington over incitement in the Palestinian Authority," a senior Israeli official told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The official said Israel took its concerns to Washington -- which has been mediating between the two sides, trying to get them back to long-stalled peace talks -- in the hope that they would take up the issue with the Palestinians.
Israel was angered when Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas reportedly endorsed the naming of a public square in the West Bank city of Ramallah after Dalal Mughrabi, a woman who led an attack on a bus in 1978 that killed 38 Israelis, the official said.
Palestinian prime minister Salam Fayad reportedly referred to three Palestinians killed by Israeli forces last week as martyrs. Israel said they launched an attack that killed a settler driving in the occupied West Bank.
Israel's complaints were conveyed to the White House and State Department, the official said without providing further details.
"These people are terrorists and murderers, not martyrs," Ron Dermer, an aide to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, told AFP.
"We expect the Palestinian Authority to prepare the Palestinian people to live in peace with Israel, not to glorify killers and name public squares after them," he said.
Palestinian attacks test Israel's quick-retaliation policy
Israeli military planes target Gaza sites in response to mortar and rocket strikes a day earlier. It's unclear whether the strategy will prevent more violence, analysts say.
Reporting from Jerusalem - A recent spate of cross- border and mortar attacks by Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip -- the worst in a year -- is testing Israel's resolve to strike back hard against such provocation. But it remains to be seen whether the get-tough approach will hinder or escalate violence, analysts and officials said Friday.
Israeli military planes struck several Gaza targets early Friday, including what Israeli officials described as the first air attack on Gaza City in nearly a year.
Three Palestinians were killed, including a 14-year-old boy working inside an Egypt-to-Gaza smuggling tunnel targeted in the raid, Palestinian officials said. The tunnels are used to import weapons to Gaza and help sneak militants into Israel.
Israel said it was retaliating for the firing a day earlier of nearly a dozen mortar rounds and one Kassam rocket into southern Israel. The attacks, on various locations near the Gaza border, caused no casualties.
The longer-range Kassam rocket hit near the city of Ashkelon, the farthest strike from the seaside enclave since Israel's three-week offensive in Gaza last winter, officials on both sides said. Gaza is under the control of the Islamic militant group Hamas.
Israel launched that operation after repeated cross-border rocket attacks by Hamas and other militant groups based in Gaza. Experts said it was unclear whether the recent volley of air attacks marked a crack in the cease-fire between Hamas and Israel or was an isolated outburst.
"It's a very worrying phenomenon," said retired Israeli military commander Jonathan Fighel. "There is a need for both sides to remain calm and maintain the cease-fire."
He said the standoff marked one of the first major tests of an Israeli deterrence strategy, adopted after the Gaza offensive, to retaliate immediately and strongly to rocket strikes against southern Israel. Previously, Israel sometimes waited weeks or months to react.
"The shift in strategy is to hit hard to show that Israel is not going to sit quietly while its cities are attacked and that those who attack will pay a heavy price," Fighel said.
But representatives of an armed wing of the Popular Resistance Committees, which claimed responsibility for the mortar strikes, vowed to respond to Israel's attack with more violence.
"We will meet escalation with escalation, shelling with shelling, and we have the right to choose the correct time and place to do so," according to a statement from the group, quoted by the Palestinian news agency Maan.
Later Friday, three mortar rounds reportedly were fired toward Israeli positions east of the Rafah checkpoint.
Hamas has attempted to discourage other armed groups in Gaza from attacking Israel unless they are attacked first. The Popular Resistance Committees said its mortar barrage Thursday came in response to an Israeli drone strike earlier in the week that killed one of its leaders.
Hamas officials Friday accused Israel of inciting violence. "The Israelis don't need an excuse to attack us," said Ismail Radwan, a Hamas spokesman. "But these attacks will not terrify or shake us. We will respond to all attacks."
Shalom Harari, an Israeli counter-terrorism expert, said the attacks against Israel might also reflect growing divisions in Gaza among Hamas and rival Islamist groups, some of which have continued to launch sporadic strikes.
"It might be a test for [Israel], but it's also a test for Hamas and its system of control," said Harari, a former Defense Ministry advisor who now works at Israel's International Institute for Counter-Terrorism. "They might be trying to see how Hamas will react."
Hamas, he said, is probably not interested in resuming hostilities with Israel at this time. The group is angry at the government of Egypt over construction of a wall aimed at blocking tunnels used to bring weapons and goods through Egypt into Gaza, whose borders have been sealed by Israel and Egypt since Hamas seized control of the Palestinian territory in 2007.
Hamas is also engaged in negotiations with Israel over the possible release of Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, who was captured by Hamas-affiliated militants in June 2006.
"I don't see a lot of passion from Hamas to try to widen the front," Harari said. "I don't think they feel prepared for another clash with Israel."
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