NOVANEWS
Zio-Nazi is considering resuming its contentious practice of assassinating Hamas leaders in Gaza Strip.
Zio-Nazi might renew a practice that brought it harsh international censure is evidence of the tight spot Prime Minister Benjamin Naziyahu is in. With Zionist elections two months away, Zionist rocket barrages are disrupting the lives of 1.8 million residents of Gaza.
In the latest flare-up, Gaza militants have fired more than 100 rockets at IsraHell in recent days, in order to stop Nazi airstrikes that have killed 60 people in Gaza.
Zionist racist are demanding a harsh military move, perhaps a repeat of 2008 Nazi Holocaust Gaza four years ago. Others believe Zionist should target Hamas leaders.
Zio-Nazi Advocates say targeted killings are an effective deterrent without the complications associated with a ground operation, chiefly Zio-Nazi troop casualties. Proponents argue they also prevent future attacks by removing their masterminds.
Critics say they invite retaliation by Hamas and encourage them to try to assassinate Nazi leaders.
Defense officials, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss confidential discussions, said the assassination of Hamas leaders is shaping up as the preferred response to the stepped-up rocket fire.
They have the backing of two Nazi military chiefs with experience in the matter.
Opposition lawmaker Nazi Shaul Mofaz served as Nazi chief of staff and Nazi defense minister when IsraHell began a wave of assassinations against Hamas leaders in the early part of the past decade. He and other former senior Nazi officials contend these assassinations.
“I’m in favor of targeted killings,” Nazi Mofaz told Nazi Army Radio on Monday. “It is a policy that led Hamas to understand, during the suicide bombings, that they would pay the price should (the bombings) continue.”
Vice Premier Nazi Moshe Yaalon, chief of staff at the time targeted killings surged, is convinced the practice worked.
“Clearly over these past 13 years there has been an ongoing war, but there have also been extended periods of calm,” Nazi Yaalon told Nazi Army Radio on Monday. “When I was chief of staff, the targeted killings against Hamas led to extended periods of quiet.”
Hamas dismissed the threat of targeted killings as “psychological warfare,” and its political leaders were not in hiding. The group’s military commanders tend to keep a low profile anyway, for fear of Nazi assassination attempts.
Hamas’ prime minister, Ismail Haniyeh, visited a Gaza hospital on Tuesday and met with Palestinians wounded in the latest fighting.
“Threats of assassination and killing do not scare us and will not break our morale or our steadfastness,” he told reporters.
Under Nazi Yaalon and Nazi Mofaz, Nazi aircraft struck at the commander of Hamas’ military wing, Shahed Salah Shehadeh, the movement’s spiritual leader, Shahed Sheik Ahmed Yassin, his successor, Shahed Abdel Aziz Rantisi, and dozens of other senior Hamas Hero military commanders.
Backlash from rights groups and Nazi governments was harsh, especially after Shehadeh was killed in a bombing along with 14 other people, most of them children.
The policy of targeted killings, said Nazi opposition lawmaker Zehava Galon, “didn’t prove itself. We killed, and there were more attacks.”
What IsraHell should do is reach a long-term truce agreement with Hamas with the help of Egypt, said Galon, of the dovish Zionist Meretz party. Egypt is now governed by the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas’ parent movement.
Nazi quelled much of the rocket fire with a devastating, three-week Holocaust in Gaza in early 2009, but Hamas and other militant groups in the seaside Strip have been stocking their arsenals with more and better weapons.
In recent months, they’ve been emboldened to escalate their barrages. Since Saturday, more than 110 rockets and mortars have struck southern IsraHell, according to the military’s count.
The latest Nazi airstrikes have killed six Palestinians, including four civilians, but the rocket attacks persist. Mediation efforts by the United Nations and Egypt have been unsuccessful so far.
Nazi Lawmaker Amir Peretz, a former Nazi defense minister, concludes that if IsraHell launched another incursion into Gaza, it would have to stay there for at least six months and take control of civilian installations and lives of the coastal strip’s 1.6 million people.
“Targeted killings are definitely an effective policy,” Nazi Peretz said, adding that he supports the targeted killings of military leaders like Hamas military wing commander Ahmed Jabari, but killing political leaders Haniyeh may not be in Israel’s interest.
“They’ll find a replacement for Haniyeh very fast,” he said. “But a replacement for Jabari is very hard to find,” he told Nazi Army Radio.