Israeli action in Gaza 'inevitable'

An Israeli cabinet minister has said that a military operation in the Gaza Strip is ‘inevitable‘ and called for tens of thousands of Nato troops to be deployed there afterwards.

Avigdor Lieberman, the minister for strategic affairs, raised the issue with Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state, during her visit to Israel on Saturday.
 
Irena Etinger, Lieberman‘s spokeswoman, said ‘he said a military confrontation in Gaza is inevitable‘ to fight Palestinian militants smuggling weapons from neighbouring Egypt and firing rockets at southern Israel.
 
She said he added that ‘the results of such a [military] action should be the entry of 30,000 Nato forces to deploy in Gaza‘ so as to prevent any further armed build-up.
 
Military occupation

Etinger would not say what Rice said in response.

The controversial leader of Yisrael Beiteinu became minister for strategic affairs after Ehud Olmert, the prime minister, signed a coaltion deal with the party last October.
 
On being named to the cabinet in November he called for Israel to recapture part of Gaza.

Israeli forces left the Palestinian territory in 2005 after 38 years of military occupation.

Israel has generally objected to proposals to deploy foreign forces in Gaza or the West Bank, out of concern such a presence would limit its ability to pursue Palestinian fighters.

Efraim Sneh, the deputy defence minister from the left-wing Labour party, rejected Lieberman‘s idea.
   
Nato troops in Gaza ‘wouldn‘t provide a solution but rather worsen the problem‘ because Palestinian fighters would probably regard them as an enemy, just as they do Israel, Sneh told Israel Radio.