roughly said a couple of years ago there was this period where Israel would assassinate a hamas leader, then hamas would announce a new one, then Israel would assassinate this one, then hamas would announce a new one, then Israel would kill this one; hamas stopped making the identity of those leaders public from then on
I would assume the core leadership of hamas is almost as untrackable as bin laden, relying on a select group of faithfulls, not using technology and moving around a lot... if Israel knew where to find them I'm sure they'd be dead
the figure of 200 civilian casualties is incorrect I believe... this news report (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7801657.stm) speaks of 250 casualties with up to a third of those being civilians.
while I deplore the loss of civilian life I do consider Israel's point valid that just because the rocket attacks on Israel weren't very deadly (only one killed), that doesn't negate the fact that they were intended to be so; if my general surrounding was shelled every day I would demand my government to take action and if the enemy happens to let civilians running around its facilities then that's too bad for them
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