Israeli troops entered southern Gaza and planes attacked three bridges and a 
power station, knocking out electricity in most of the coastal strip early 
Wednesday and stepping up the pressure on Palestinian militants holding captive 
a 19-year-old Israeli soldier. 
 
 
 |  Palestinian militants 
 prepare an explosive device with a gas tank in preparation for a possible 
 Israeli army ground operation in the Khan Younis refugee camp in southern 
 Gaza Strip Tuesday June 27, 2006. Later, Israeli planes attacked two 
 bridges and a power station, knocking out electricity in most of the Gaza 
 Strip and stepping up the pressure on Palestinian militants holding 
 captive a 19-year-old Israeli soldier. As tanks were seen moving along the 
 Israeli side of the border fence with Gaza, Palestinians dug in behind 
 mounds of dirt, preparing for a possible Israeli 
 offensive.[AP]
 | 
Israeli troops began taking up positions in two locations east of the Gaza 
town of Rafah under the cover of tank shells, according to witnesses and 
Palestinian security officials. Palestinians dug in behind walls and sand 
embankments, bracing for a major Israeli offensive. 
The Israeli strikes came amid intensive diplomatic efforts in the Arab world 
and by the United Nations. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice urged Israel to 
"give diplomacy a chance." 
Trying to defuse building tensions, negotiators from the ruling Hamas 
movement said Tuesday they had accepted a document implicitly recognizing 
Israel. But two Syrian-based Hamas leaders denied a final deal had been reached. 
Israel said only freedom for the captive soldier, Cpl. Gilad Shalit, could 
defuse the crisis, not a political agreement. 
The group holding the soldier released a statement early Wednednesday 
threatening to kill a Jewish settler it claimed it was also holding unless 
Israel stops its military action. 
The Israeli military said in a statement that the object of the attacks on 
the bridges late Tuesday and early Wednesday was "to impair the ability of the 
terrorists to transfer the kidnapped soldier." Knocking down the bridges cut 
Gaza in two, Palestinian security officials said. 
Early Wednesday, Israeli planes fired at least nine missiles at Gaza's only 
power station, cutting electricity to much of the Gaza Strip, Palestinian 
security officials said. The station's three functioning turbines and a gasoline 
reservoir were engulfed in enormous flames that firefighters were unable to 
control. 
The attack raised the specter of a humanitarian crisis in Gaza, as water 
pumps in the strip are powered by electricity. Some electricity in Gaza City was 
restored by tapping into electricity supplied by Israel in northern Gaza. 
Masked militants from various armed factions took up defensive positions 
around Gaza City, instructing drivers to turn their headlights off. Militants 
from three armed factions said they fired a rocket early Wednesday at the 
Israeli village of Nahal Oz. No casualties were reported. 
Israeli military officials said Prime Minister Ehud Olmert approved a 
"limited operation" for southern Gaza, aimed at "terrorist infrastructure." The 
officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to 
talk to reporters. 
Palestinian security forces said Israeli tanks were on the move near Nahal 
Oz, a main Israeli staging area just outside Gaza, but that they had not yet 
entered the territory. An Associated Press reporter saw tanks moving on the 
Israeli side of the border fence. 
Some Israeli troops crossed the border into southern Gaza, near the site of 
Sunday's militant attack in which Shalit was abducted. It was not immediately 
clear how many soldiers entered Gaza, though the army confirmed its soldiers 
were crossing the border. A number of Israeli soldiers had been in Gaza since 
Sunday's assault. 
In the Shajaiyeh neighborhood of Gaza City, not far from the fence, armed 
militants took up positions across from the blaring headlights of Israeli 
vehicles, and Israeli attack helicopters hovered overhead. The roar of Israeli 
fighter planes reverberated throughout Gaza City. 
The militants told residents to leave the area. They piled gasoline-soaked 
tires in the streets. Earlier, bulldozers blocked some of the main roads with 
piles of sand and dirt to try to slow down Israeli tanks. 
There were no reports of casualties in the Israeli strikes. 
Palestinian TV showed pictures of the first bridge hit, with fallen concrete 
blocks, twisted metal and protruding water pipes. Children walked in the 
wreckage. 
Shalit's abduction Sunday by Hamas' military wing and two other Hamas-linked 
groups has threatened to turn already devastated relations between Israel and 
the Hamas-led government into an all-out war. Hamas took over the Palestinian 
Authority after winning parliamentary elections in January, and has been under 
international pressure to renounce violence and recognize Israel. 
White House press secretary Tony Snow said he had only seen media accounts of 
the Hamas-Fatah accord, but reiterated that Hamas had to meet three conditions 
before a crippling aid boycott could be lifted. 
"Once again, we can all recite from memory now: recognize Israel's right to 
exist, renounce terror, and abide by all past agreements. Those are the 
preconditions," Snow said in Washington. 
Complicating matters was a new claim by the Hamas-linked Popular Resistance 
Committees, one of the three groups that carried out Sunday's assault, that it 
had also kidnapped the Jewish settler in the West Bank. The group later issued 
the death threat. 
Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said the report was being taken "very 
seriously," and military officials said there was "rising fears" the claim was 
true. 
The fate of the abducted soldier has riveted Israelis, with Shalit's face 
plastered on newspapers and callers to talk shows praying for his safety. 
In an interview Tuesday with The Associated Press, Noam Shalit begged the 
captors of his wounded son's to provide medical care and asked "to hear his 
voice and to see his face." 
Olmert rejected the kidnappers' demands to free Palestinian prisoners and 
instead approved plans for a military push into Gaza. About 3,000 soldiers, 
along with tanks and armored vehicles, massed along Israel's border with the 
territory, and commanders said they were awaiting orders to move in. 
Hamas' Web site said there were "back channel" negotiations with Israel over 
a prisoner release. 
Israeli military officials said a negotiating team has been activated, but 
declined to release further information. 
The kidnappers did not say where Shalit was being held or release any photos 
of him. Israeli officials said they believed the soldier suffered light wounds 
to his stomach and was being held in southern Gaza. 
On Tuesday, for the first time since Sunday's assault, in which two Israeli 
soldiers and two militants were killed, militants acknowledged they were holding 
Shalit and said he was alive. 
"The soldier is in a secure place that the Zionists cannot reach," said 
Mohammed Abdel Al, spokesman for the Popular Resistance Committees. He said his 
group also took a West Bank settler hostage. 
Mohammad Nazal, a Damascus-based member of the Hamas politburo, said the 
militant group would not agree to free the Israeli soldier "without a deal." 
"No release without something in return," he told AP. "This is the popular 
demand and we cannot let down our people." 
Israel's Channel 2 TV reported that international mediators involved in talks 
with the kidnappers had given up, saying negotiations were going nowhere. An 
Egyptian official concurred that talks with Hamas officials in Gaza were "on 
hold," but insisted negotiations were still taking place with Hamas leaders in 
Syria. 
Egyptian officials said their government asked Hamas to release the soldier 
and deployed 2,500 extra soldiers along the border with Gaza to prevent an 
influx of Palestinians if Israel invaded. Egypt also imposed a nighttime curfew 
on residents along the border.