Israel threatened Wednesday to widen the conflict over the abduction of one 
of its soldiers, sending thousands of troops into Gaza, arresting a Palestinian 
Cabinet minister and buzzing the summer home of Syria's president, who is blamed 
for harboring Hamas leaders. 
 
 
 |  Palestinian militants 
 patrol the streets of Jabalya refugee camp in northern Gaza Strip as 
 Israel launched a ground and air assault on the Strip to rescue an Israeli 
 soldier captured by Palestinian militants. The body of an Israeli settler 
 kidnapped at the weekend by Palestinian militants was recovered overnight 
 by Israeli troops in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Palestinian security 
 sources said, without providing further details. 
[AFP]
 | 
No deaths or injuries were reported in the incursion, launched early 
Wednesday in southern Gaza. But Palestinians filled up on basic supplies after 
warplanes knocked out electricity, raising the specter of a humanitarian crisis. 
The Hamas-led government warned of "epidemics and health disasters" because of 
damaged water pipes to central Gaza and the lack of power to pump water.
Israel's concern goes beyond the rescue of the soldier and the negative 
precedent abducting soldiers would set. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's 
government is alarmed by the firing of homemade rockets on Israeli communities 
around Gaza and support for Hamas in the Arab world, especially from Syria.
In a clear warning to Syrian President Bashar Assad, Israeli airplanes flew 
over his seaside home near the Mediterranean port city of Latakia in 
northwestern Syria, military officials confirmed, citing the "direct link" 
between his government and Hamas. Israeli television reports said four planes 
were involved in the low-altitude flight, and that Assad was there at the time.
Syria confirmed Israeli warplanes entered its airspace, but claimed its air 
defenses forced the Israeli aircraft to flee.
Increasing pressure on Hamas within the Palestinian territories, Israeli 
forces arrested the Palestinian labor minister, Mohammed Barghouti, early 
Thursday in the West Bank city of Ramallah, Palestinian security officials said. 
The Israeli military refused to comment, saying the operation was still in 
progress.
In Gaza, Israeli missiles also hit two empty Hamas training camps, a 
rocket-building factory and several roads. Warplanes flew low over the coastal 
strip, rocking it with sonic booms and shattering windows. Troops in Israel 
backed up the assault with artillery fire.
The area's normally bustling streets were eerily deserted, with people taking 
refuge inside their homes.
Witnesses reported heavy shelling around Gaza's long-closed airport, which 
Israeli troops took over. Dozens of people living near the airport fled to 
nearby Rafah.
In Rafah, Nivine Abu Shbeke, a 23-year-old mother of three, hoarded bags of 
flour, boxes of vegetables and other supplies. "We're worried about how long the 
food will last," she said. "The children devour everything."
There was no sign of ground troops moving into northern Gaza. But late 
Wednesday, the Israeli army dropped leaflets urging residents to avoid moving in 
the area because of impending military activity. Three gates in a border fence 
were open, in apparent preparation for the Israeli forces, and Israeli 
helicopters hovered at low altitudes.
Dozens of Palestinian militants - ed with automatic weapons and grenades - 
took up positions, bracing for attack.
Anxious Palestinians pondered whether the incursion, the first large-scale 
ground offensive since Israel withdrew from Gaza last year, was essentially a 
"shock and awe" display designed to intimidate militants, or the prelude to a 
full-scale invasion.
Olmert threatened harsher action, though he said there was no plan to 
reoccupy Gaza. Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas deplored the incursion as a 
"crime against humanity."
Further complicating the situation were militant claims that they had 
kidnapped two more Israelis: an 18-year-old Jewish settler in the West Bank 
named Eliahu Asheri and a 62-year-old Israeli from the central Israeli city of 
Rishon Lezion. Asheri's mother confirmed her son was missing, and police said 
they had a missing person's report that matched the older man.
The Israeli assault came as diplomatic efforts to free the 19-year-old 
Israeli soldier, Cpl. Gilad Shalit, bogged down with Hamas demanding a prisoner 
swap and Israel refusing, demanding Shalit's unconditional release. Shalit was 
abducted by Hamas-linked militants on Sunday and is believed to be in southern 
Gaza.
"We won't hesitate to carry out extreme action to bring Gilad back to his 
family," Olmert declared.
Abbas and Egyptian dignitaries tried to persuade Assad to use his influence 
with Khaled Mashaal, the Hamas leader exiled in Syria, to free Shalit. Assad 
agreed, but without results, said a senior Abbas aide. 
As for Mashaal, Israeli Justice Minister Haim Ramon said the hard-line Hamas 
leader, who appears to be increasingly at odds with more moderate Hamas 
politicians in Gaza, is in Israel's sights for assassination. 
"Khaled Mashaal, as someone who is overseeing, actually commanding the terror 
acts, is definitely a target," Ramon told Army Radio. 
Israel tried to kill Mashaal in a botched assassination attempt in Jordan in 
1997. Two Mossad agents injected Mashaal with poison, but were caught. As 
Mashaal lay in a Jordanian hospital, King Hussein of Jordan forced Israel to 
provide the antidote in return for the release of the Mossad agents. 
The European Union on Wednesday urged both Israel and the Palestinians to 
"step back from the brink" and, echoing a statement from Secretary of State 
Condoleezza Rice, to give diplomacy a chance. 
The White House kept up its pressure on Hamas, saying the Palestinian 
government must "stop all acts of violence and terror." But the U.S. also urged 
Israel to show restraint. 
"In any actions the government of Israel may undertake, the United States 
urges that it ensures that innocent civilians are not harmed, and also that it 
avoid the unnecessary destruction of property and infrastructure," said White 
House press secretary Tony Snow. 
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan urged restraint in a phone call to Olmert, 
saying he had spoken with Assad and Abbas and asked them to do everything 
possible to release the soldier. Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa called 
on the U.S. to assume its role as "honest broker" and to make the 
Palestinian-Israeli conflict its top priority in the Middle East. 
Hamas' negotiators' tentative acceptance Tuesday of a document that Abbas 
allies claimed implicitly recognizes Israel appeared beside the point a day 
later, with Israel saying no political agreement can substitute for Shalit's 
freedom. 
On Wednesday, Palestinian militants braced for a major strike, fanning out 
across neighborhoods, taking up positions behind sand embankments and firing 
several rockets into Israeli communities bordering Gaza. Civilians stockpiled 
food, water, batteries and candles after warplanes destroyed the coastal strip's 
only power plant, and main roads linking north to south. 
Gaza's economy was already in the doldrums before the Israeli assault, a 
result of five years of Israeli-Palestinian violence and an international aid 
boycott that followed Hamas' parliamentary election victory in January. The 
Israeli assault threatened to turn a bad situation into a disaster - 
underscoring the extent to which hopes have been dashed following the optimism 
that accompanied Israel's pullout. 
Palestinian plans for high-rise apartments, sports complexes and industrial 
parks in lands evacuated by Israel have given way to despair, with rising 
poverty, increasingly violent relations with Israel and a looming threat of 
civil war.