CAIRO,
November 17 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - "What happened in
al-Khalil Friday night was not a "massacre," as claimed by the
(Israeli) spokespeople, nor was it an attack on "peaceful Jewish
worshippers" returning from prayers at the Tomb of the Patriarchs,
an Israeli writer wrote Sunday, November 17, referring to the
Palestinian ambush that claimed 12 Israeli soldiers and armed settlers.
Ha'aretz
correspondent Amos Harel said, "The attack actually began several
minutes after all of the worshippers had already returned safely to
Kiryat Arba. The twelve Israeli casualties in Hebron were not murdered.
Those killed Friday were killed in combat".
All
of the victims were armed fighters, who were more or less trained. They
fell victim to a well-planned ambush that included both machine-gun fire
and grenades, which trapped them in a compromising situation they found
hard to overcome.
"The
ambush actually took place in the 'Israeli' section of
al-Khalil, dozens of meters from the Kiryat Arba security fence, in an
area occupied by the Israeli forces before the withdrawal, and where
soldiers have continued to operate since the withdrawal."
Meanwhile,
the successful Islamic Jihad resistance attack in al-Khalil (Hebron)
showed the Palestinians have adopted welcome new tactics against Israeli
occupation by targeting soldiers and settlers in the occupied
territories, Gulf newspapers said Sunday.
Condemnation
in Europe and the United States as well as by UN Secretary-General Kofi
Annan, who spoke of "the despicable terrorist attack", was
criticized by several dailies, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).
In
Qatar, Al-Sharq said the "Sabbath massacre" Friday
night, November 15, was "a qualitative leap forward in resistance
operations" since soldiers and settlers were attacked rather than
civilians within Israel.
"A
new stage has begun in the Palestinian resistance", said Al-Watan,
also published in Doha.
The
daily urged Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon "to draw a
lesson" from the raid and order an unconditional withdrawal from
occupied territory.
"This
is a precedent in the history of the Intifada since the operation was
launched in a zone under Israeli security control and against occupation
soldiers," said Al-Raya, another Qatari newspaper.
In
Saudi Arabia, Al-Jazira said "the operation cannot be
classified among the attacks on civilians given there were nine troops
among the 12 dead."
A
spate of Palestinian attacks on Israeli civilians this year provoked
international outrage and divided the Palestinian society.
Al-Khaleej
in the United Arab Emirates deplored Annan's statement, noting "he
rushed to condemn the operation, calling it terrorist despite the fact
it took place in an occupied town".
The
Dubai government daily Al-Bayan also regretted "numerous
voices raised in Europe to deny the Palestinians the right to
resist".
Al-Ittihad
of Abu Dhabi warned against the
consequences and voiced fears that Israel could "put an end to the
Palestinian presence in al-Khalil".
Sharon
said Sunday that Israel must enlarge the zone it administers in the
divided West Bank city, home to 120,000 Palestinians and 600 Jews,
following the attack which triggered a major reoccupation of al-Khalil